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Great article on the previously unattributed genius behind the Statue of Freedom

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by tampagtr, Jul 9, 2023.

  1. tampagtr

    tampagtr VIP Member

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    Enslaved artist Phillip Reed, exploited and enslaved by Clark Mills, who received the formal credit. We only know of Reed’s outsized role because of Mills’ claims after Reed was emancipated that Mills deserved greater compensation due to Reed’s skill.

    Thanks to Mr. Phillip Reed, we have an enduring memorial to the freedom he was denied atop our Capitol.

    This history should be taught.

    The government hired Mills to complete the job — casting the plaster model in bronze — paying him a huge sum of $400 (nearly $15,000 today) a month, plus expenses for materials and labor. Mills, though, immediately ran into a big problem: The Italian artist, betting that only he could find the delicate seams to cut it into pieces small enough for the foundry, refused to help without a major financial windfall. How Reed saved the day became legendary. The most detailed account comes from the writer S.D. Wyeth, who heard the story from Mills’ son Fisk. The “highly intelligent” Reed had an idea, Wyeth wrote:

    “His plan of working was this: A pulley and tackle was brought into use, and its hook inserted into an iron eye affixed to the head of the figure — the rope was then gently strained repeatedly until the uppermost joining of the top section of the model began to make a faint appearance. This gave some indication as to the whereabouts of its bolts inside, lead(ing) to their discovery; and thus, finally, one after another of the sections was discovered, their bolts unloosed, and the model, uninjured, made ready for the foundry.”

    Once in the foundry, Reed worked seven days a week for nine months while the bronze was cast. We know this because Mills kept detailed records and charged the government $1.25 a day — more than his free laborers made — for Reed’s wage. Mills pocketed Reed’s wage six days a week; Reed later filed for and received his wage for 33 Sundays between July 1860 and May 1861, when he was “keeping up fires under the moulds.”

    The bronze statue was completed by February 1862. Two months later, an act of Congress freed all enslaved people in Washington, including Reed. Much of what we know about him comes from Mills’ petition to be compensated for the loss of his “property.” Describing Reed as “aged 42 years, mulatto (mixed-race) color, short in stature, in good health, not prepossessing in appearance but smart in mind,” he asked to be compensated $1,500 for Reed — three times the amount he asked for the other people he had enslaved. (Mills received only a fraction of his request, about which he “fumed,” Colletta wrote.) According to Wyeth in 1865, “Mr. Reed, the former slave, is now in business for himself, and highly esteemed by all who know him.” Census records show that he soon married and had a son. Historians have noted that before his emancipation, his last name was spelled “Reid” in official records, while afterward it was spelled “Reed,” suggesting a personal preference. Colletta noted that after Mills’ 1862 compensation hearing, during which Reed had to testify, there’s no evidence the two ever saw each other again, suggesting there was no love lost between them.





    How an enslaved genius saved the Capitol dome’s Statue of Freedom
    How an enslaved genius saved the Capitol dome’s Statue of Freedom - Tampa Bay Times

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  2. WarDamnGator

    WarDamnGator GC Hall of Fame

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    The new Florida schools “moms for liberty version” …. Reed loved being slave and would often sing happy songs and whistle as he worked hard. He was happy to let Mills steal his wages, and wanted Mills to take all credit, too, because Reed knew his place and believed strongly in state’s rights. He was sad to be emancipated because he loved his slave master and knew that he loved him right back. If Reed were alive today, he’d proudly fly the confederate flag and vote for Ron DeSantis.
     
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  3. tampagtr

    tampagtr VIP Member

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    I wish I thought that was pure parody, but I could see it happening
     
  4. VAg8r1

    VAg8r1 GC Hall of Fame

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    Not as absurd as it appears.
    The rightwing US textbooks that teach slavery as ‘black immigration’
     
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  5. Trickster

    Trickster VIP Member

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    Isn't teaching that kind of stuff CRT, and isn't that verboten?
     
  6. tampagtr

    tampagtr VIP Member

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    Pretty much. They have left the terms undefined, other than any type of material that makes some white kids parents uncomfortable with them thinking about. So I think it fits well within that definition.
     
  7. Trickster

    Trickster VIP Member

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    You know, thinking about it, what kind of adults are these kids going to become after a childhood of not feeling "uncomfortable"? I predict not the Greatest Generation. Perhaps the Whimp Generation.
     
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