Sarah and Angelina Grimke were born
in Charleston, South Carolina; Sarah, Nov 26, 1792;
Angelina, Feb 20, 1805. They were the daughters
of the Hon. John Fauchereau Grimke, a colonel in the
revolutionary war, and judge of the Supreme Court
of South Carolina. His ancestors were German
on the father’s side, French on the mother’s;
the Fauchereau family having left France in consequence
of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685.
From his German father and Huguenot
mother, Judge Grimke inherited not only intellectual
qualities of a high order, but an abiding consciousness
of his right to think for himself, a spirit of hostility
to the Roman Catholic priesthood and church, and faith
in the Calvinistic theology. Though he exhibited,
during the course of his life, a freedom from certain
social prejudices general among people of his class
at Charleston, he seems to have never wavered in his
adhesion to the tenets of his forefathers. That
they were ever questioned in his household is not
probable.
From a diary kept by him, it appears
that his favorite subject of thought for many years
was moral discipline, and he was fond of searching
out and transcribing the opinions of various authors
on this subject.
His family was wealthy and influential,
and he received all the advantages which such circumstances
could give. As was the custom among people of
means in those days, he was sent to England for his
collegiate course, and, after being graduated at Oxford,
he studied law and practised for a while in London,
having his rooms in the Temple. With a fine person,
a cultivated mind and a generous allowance, he became
a favorite in the fashionable and aristocratic society
of Great Britain; nevertheless, he did not hesitate
to quit the pleasant life he was leading and return
home as soon as his native country seemed to need
him. He speedily raised a company of cavalry in
Charleston, and cast his lot with the patriots whom
he found in arms against the mother-country.
We have no record of his deeds, but we know that he
distinguished himself at Eutaw Springs and at Yorktown,
where he was attached to Lafayette’s brigade.
When the war was over, Col. Grimke
began the practice of law in Charleston, and rose
in a few years to the front rank at the bar. He
held various honorable offices before he was appointed
judge of the Supreme Court of the State.
Early in life Judge Grimke married
Mary Smith of Irish and English-Puritan stock.
She was the great granddaughter of the second Landgrave
of South Carolina, and descended on her mother’s
side from that famous rebel chieftain, Sir Roger Moore,
of Kildare, who would have stormed Dublin Castle with
his handful of men, and whose handsome person, gallant
manners, and chivalric courage made him the idol of
his party and the hero of song and story. Fourteen
children were born to this couple, all of whom were
more or less remarkable for the traits which would
naturally be expected from such ancestry, while in
several of them the old Huguenot-Puritan infusion
colored every mental and moral quality. This
was especially notable in Sarah Moore Grimke, the
sixth child, who even in her childhood continually
surprised her family by her independence, her sturdy
love of truth, and her clear sense of justice.
Her conscientiousness was such that she never sought
to conceal or even excuse anything wrong she did,
but accepted submissively whatever punishment or reprimand
was inflicted upon her.
Between Sarah and her brother Thomas,
six years her senior, an early friendship was formed,
which was ever a source of gratification to both,
and which continued without a break until his death.
To the influence of his high, strong nature she attributed
to a great extent her early tendency to think and
reason upon subjects much beyond her age. Until
she was twelve years old, a great deal of her time
was passed in study with this brother, her bright,
active mind eagerly reaching after the kind of knowledge
which in those days was considered food too strong
for the intellect of a girl. She begged hard to
be permitted to study Latin, and began to do so in
private, but her parents, and even her brother, discouraged
this, and she reluctantly gave it up.
Judge Grimke’s position, character,
and wealth placed his family among the leaders of
the very exclusive society of Charleston. His
children were accustomed to luxury and display, to
the service of slaves, and to the indulgence of every
selfish whim, although the father’s practical
common sense led him to protest against the habits
to which such indulgences naturally led. He was
necessarily much from home, but, when leisure permitted,
his great pleasure was teaching his children and discussing
various topics with them. To Sarah he paid particular
attention, her superior mental qualities exciting his
admiration and pride. He is said to have frequently
declared that if she had been of the other sex she
would have made the greatest jurist in the land.
In his own habits, Judge Grimke was prudent and singularly economical, and,
in spite of discouraging surroundings, endeavored to instil lessons of
simplicity into his children. An extract from one of Sarahs letters will
illustrate this. Referring in 1863 to her early life, she thus writes to a
friend:
“Father was pre-eminently a
man of common sense, and economy was one of his darling
virtues. I suppose I inherited some of the latter
quality, for from early life I have been renowned
for gathering up the fragments that nothing be lost,
so that it was quite a common saying in the family:
‘Oh, give it to Sally; she’ll find use
for it,’ when anything was to be thrown away.
Only once within my memory did I depart from this
law of my nature. I went to our country residence
to pass the summer with father. He had deposited
a number of useful odds and ends in a drawer.
Now little miss, being installed as housekeeper to
papa, and for the first time in her life being queen at
least so she fancied of all she surveyed,
went to work searching every cranny, and prying into
every drawer, and woe betide anything which did not
come up to my idea of neat housekeeping. When
I chanced across the drawer of scraps I at once condemned
them to the flames. Such a place of disorder
could not be tolerated in my dominions. I never
thought of the contingency of papa’s shirts,
etc., wanting mending; my oversight, however,
did not prevent the natural catastrophe of clothes
wearing out, and one day papa brought me a garment
to mend, ‘Oh,’ said I, tossing it carelessly
aside, ‘that hole is too big to darn.’
“‘Certainly, my dear,’
he replied, ’but you can put a piece in.
Look in such a drawer, and you will find plenty to
patch with.’
“But behold the drawer was empty.
Happily, I had commuted the sentence of burning to
that of distribution to the slaves, one of whom furnished
me the piece, and mended the garment ten times better
than I could have done. So I was let to go unwhipped
of justice for that misdemeanor, and perhaps that
was the lesson which burnt into my soul. My story
doesn’t sound Southerny, does it? Well,
here is something more. During that summer, father
had me taught to spin and weave negro cloth. Don’t
suppose I ever did anything worth while; only it was
one of his maxims: ’Never lose an opportunity
of learning what is useful. If you never need
the knowledge, it will be no burden to have it; and
if you should, you will be thankful to have it.’
So I had to use my delicate fingers now and then to
shell corn, a process which sometimes blistered them,
and was sent into the field to pick cotton occasionally.
Perhaps I am indebted partially to this for my life-long
detestation of slavery, as it brought me in close
contact with these unpaid toilers.”
Doubtless she had many a talk with
these “unpaid toilers,” and learned from
them the inner workings of a system which her friends
would fain have taught her to view as fair and merciful.
Children are born without prejudice,
and the young children of Southern planters never
felt or made any difference between their white and
colored playmates. The instances are many of their
revolt and indignation when first informed that there
must be a difference. So that there is nothing
singular in the fact that Sarah Grimke, to use her
own words, early felt such an abhorrence of the whole
institution of slavery, that she was sure it was born
in her. Several of her brothers and sisters felt
the same. But she differed from other children
in the respect that her sensibilities were so acute,
her heart so tender, that she made the trials of the
slaves her own, and grieved that she could neither
share nor mitigate them. So deeply did she feel
for them that she was frequently found in some retired
spot weeping, after one of the slaves had been punished.
She remembered that once, when she was not more than
four or five years old, she accidentally witnessed
the terrible whipping of a servant woman. As soon
as she could escape from the house, she rushed out
sobbing, and half an hour afterwards her nurse found
her on the wharf, begging a sea captain to take her
away to some place where such things were not done.
She told me once that often, when
she knew one of the servants was to be punished, she
would shut herself up and pray earnestly that the
whipping might be averted; “and sometimes,”
she added, “my prayers were answered in very
unexpected ways.”
Writing to a young friend, a few years
before her death, she says: “When I was
about your age, we spent six months of the year in
the back country, two hundred miles from Charleston,
where we would live for months without seeing a white
face outside of the home circle. It was often
lonely, but we had many out-door enjoyments, and were
very happy. I, however, always had one terrible
drawback. Slavery was a millstone about my neck,
and marred my comfort from the time I can remember
myself. My chief pleasure was riding on horseback
daily. ‘Hiram’ was a gentle, spirited,
beautiful creature. He was neither slave nor slave
owner, and I loved and enjoyed him thoroughly.”
When she was quite young her father
gave her a little African girl to wait on her.
To this child, the only slave she ever owned, she became
much attached, treating her as an equal, and sharing
all her privileges with her. But the little girl
died after a few years, and though her youthful mistress
was urged to take another, she refused, saying she
had no use for her, and preferred to wait on herself.
It was not until she was more than twelve years old
that, at her mother’s urgent request, she consented
to have a dressing-maid.
Judge Grimke, his family and connections,
were all High-Church Episcopalians, tenacious of every
dogma, and severe upon any neglect of the religious
forms of church or household worship. Nothing
but sickness excused any member of the family, servants
included, from attending morning prayers, and every
Sunday the well-appointed carriage bore those who
wished to attend church to the most fashionable one
in the city. The children attended Sabbath-school
regularly, and in the afternoon the girls who were
old enough taught classes in the colored school.
Here, Sarah was the only one who ever caused any trouble.
She could never be made to understand the wisdom which
included the spelling-book, in the hands of slaves,
among the dangerous weapons, and she constantly fretted
because she could only give her pupils oral instruction.
She longed to teach them to read, for many of them
were pining for the knowledge which the “poor
white trash” rejected; but the laws of the State
not only prohibited the teaching of slaves, but provided
fines and imprisonment for those who ventured to indulge
their fancy in that way. So that, argue as she
might, and as she did, the privilege of opening the
storehouse of learning to those thirsty souls was
denied her. “But,” she writes, “my
great desire in this matter would not be totally suppressed,
and I took an almost malicious satisfaction in teaching
my little waiting-maid at night, when she was supposed
to be occupied in combing and brushing my long locks.
The light was put out, the keyhole screened, and flat
on our stomachs before the fire, with the spelling-book
under our eyes, we defied the laws of South Carolina.”
But this dreadful crime was finally
discovered, and poor Hetty barely escaped a whipping;
and her bold young mistress had to listen to a severe
lecture on the enormity of her conduct.
When Sarah was about twelve years
old, two important events occurred to interrupt the
even tenor of her life. Her brother Thomas was
sent off to Yale College, leaving her companionless
and inconsolable, until, a few weeks later, the birth
of a little sister brought comfort and joy to her
heart. This sister was Angelina Emily, the last
child of her parents, and the pet and darling of Sarah
from the moment the light dawned upon her blue eyes.
Sarah seems to have felt for this
new baby not only more than the ordinary affection
of a sister, but the yearning tenderness of a mother,
and a mysterious affinity which foreshadowed the heart
and soul sympathy which, notwithstanding the twelve
years’ difference in their ages, made them as
one through life. She at once begged that she
might stand godmother for her sister; but her parents,
thinking this desire only a childish whim, refused.
She was seriously in earnest, however, and day after
day renewed her entreaties, answering her father’s
arguments that she was too young for such a responsibility
by saying that she would be old enough when it became
necessary to exercise any of the responsibility.
Seeing finally that her heart was
so set upon it, her parents consented; and joyfully
she stood at the baptismal font, and promised to train
this baby sister in the way she should go. Many
years afterwards, in describing her feelings on this
occasion, she said: “I had been taught
to believe in the efficacy of prayer, and I well remember,
after the ceremony was over, slipping out and shutting
myself up in my own room, where, with tears streaming
down my cheeks, I prayed that God would make me worthy
of the task I had assumed, and help me to guide and
direct my precious child. Oh, how good I resolved
to be, how careful in all my conduct, that my life
might be blessed to her!”
Entering in such a spirit upon the
duties she had taken upon herself, we cannot over
estimate her influence in forming the character and
training the mind of this “precious Nina,”
as she so often called her. And, as we shall
see, for very many years Angelina followed closely
where Sarah led, treading almost in her footsteps,
until the seed sown by the older sister, ripening,
bore its fruit in a power and strength and individuality
which gave her the leadership, and caused Sarah to
fall back and gaze with wonder upon development so
much beyond her thoughts or hopes.
From the first, Sarah took almost
entire charge of her little god-daughter; and, as
“Nina” grew out of her babyhood, Sarah
continued to exercise such general supervision over
her that the child learned to look up to her as to
a mother, and frequently when together, and in her
correspondence for many years, addressed her as “Mother.”
It does not appear that Judge Grimke
entertained any views differing greatly from those
of intelligent men in the society about him. He
was a man of wide culture, varied experience of life,
and a diligent student. Therefore, as he made
a companion of his bright and promising daughter,
he doubtless did much to sharpen her intellect, as
well as to deepen her conscientiousness and sense
of religious obligation. Her brother Thomas,
too, added another strong influence to her mental
development. She was nearly fifteen when he returned
from college, bringing with him many new ideas, most
of them quite original, and which he at once set to
work to study more closely, with a view to putting
them into practical operation. Sarah was his confidante
and his amanuensis; and, looking up to him almost
as to a demi-god, she readily fell in with his opinions,
and made many of them her own.
Of her mother there is little mention
in the early part of her life. Mrs. Grimke appears
to have been a very devout woman, of rather narrow
views, and undemonstrative in her affections.
She was, however, intelligent, and had a taste for
reading, especially theological works. Her son
Thomas speaks of her as having read Stratton’s
book on the priesthood, and inferring from its implications
the sect to which the author belonged. The oldest
of her children was only nineteen when Angelina was
born. The burdens laid upon her were many and
great; and we cannot wonder that she was nervous,
exhausted, and irritable. The house was large,
and kept in the style common in that day among wealthy
Southern people. The servants were numerous, and
had, no doubt, the usual idle, pilfering habits of
slaves. All provisions were kept under lock and
key, and given out with scrupulous exactitude, and
incessant watchfulness as to details was a necessity.
As children multiplied, Mrs. Grimke
appears to have lost all power of controlling either
them or her servants. She was impatient with the
former, and resorted with the latter to the punishments
commonly inflicted by slaveowners. These severities
alienated her children still more from her, and they
showed her little respect or affection. It never
appears to have occurred to any of them to try to relieve
her of her cares; and it is probable she was more
sinned against than sinning, a sadly burdened and much-tried woman. From
numerous allusions to her in the diaries and letters, the evidence of an
ill-regulated household is plain, as also the feelings of the children towards
her. From Angelinas diary we copy the following:
“On 2d day I had some conversation
with sister Mary on the deplorable state of our family,
and to-day with Eliza. They complain very much
of the servants being so rude, and doing so much as
they please. But I tried to convince them that
the servants were just what the family was, that they
were not at all more rude and selfish and disobliging
than they themselves were. I gave one or two
instances of the manner in which they treated mother
and each other, and asked how they could expect the
servants to behave in any other way when they had such
examples continually before them, and queried in which
such conduct was most culpable. Eliza always
admits what I say to be true, but, as I tell her,
never profits by it.... Sister Mary is somewhat
different; she will not condemn herself.... She
will acknowledge the sad state of the family, but
seems to think mother is altogether to blame.
And dear mother seems to resist all I say: she
will neither acknowledge the state of the family nor
her own faults, and always is angry when I speak to
her.... Sometimes when I look back to the first
years of my religious life, and remember how unremittingly
I labored with mother, though in a very wrong spirit,
being alienated from her and destitute of the spirit
of love and forbearance, my heart is very sore.”
This unfortunate state of things prevailed
until the children were grown, and with more or less
amelioration after that time. Sarah’s natural
tenderness, and the sense of justice which, as she
grew to womanhood, was so conspicuous in Angelina,
drew their mother nearer to them than to her other
children, though Thomas always wrote of her affectionately
and respectfully. She, however, with her rigid
orthodox beliefs, could never understand her “alien
daughters,” as she called them; and she never
ceased to wonder how such strange fledglings could
have come from her nest. It was only when they
had proved by years of self-sacrifice the earnestness
of their peculiar views that she learned to respect
them; and, though they never succeeded in converting
her from her inherited opinions, she was towards the
last years of her life brought into something like
affectionate sympathy with them.