Middle
school named after abolitionist Maria Chapman
By Mark Goodman,
Weymouth News (MA), Wednesday, June 30, 2004. This article
was sent to UUWHS by Donna Ekstrand, Hingham, MA
It
is official.
After several weeks of meetings and
consideration, a committee to rename the Commercial Street school
has decided on Maria Weston Chapman, a Weymouth-born 19th-century
abolitionist.
The
process had garnered much publicity, as different groups vouched for
who they felt was the best candidate. The decision on Chapman was
announced at the June 10
school committee
meeting, and was approved by the committee last Thursday. School
committee chairwoman Diana Flemer, who oversaw the latter stages of
the name selection process said that after a period of research, the
field was narrowed down to three names. After making a list of pros
and cons for each, Flemer said the decision became easy. “I was
so impressed by who she was,” she said. “I couldn’t
believe how much she contributed to the abolitionist movement in
Boston.”
Flemer said she hopes that students at the newly formed middle
school, which will house students in grades five through eight
beginning in September, will be able to learn about Chapman and her
role in the abolitionist movement.
“I think she’ll
be a great role model for kids,” Flemer said. “She’s
on the same level as Abigail Adams.”
Maria
Weston was born in 1806. She was the first of eight children in her
family; she had five sisters and two brothers. Three of her sisters
also became active in the antislavery movement.
Chapman
grew up on the family farm and attended
local schools. She
finished her ion in England invitation from her uncle, Joshua Bates,
who was a London-based banker. She married Henry Grafton Chapman in
1830. Her father-in-law, Henry Chapman, supported the abolitionist
move.
In
1834, Chapman and 11 other women, including three of her sisters,
formed the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society (BFAS) :When Chapman
started attending anti-slavery meetings, other reportedly thought she
was a spy.
Even
after those suspicions disappeared, the life of an abolitionist -
particularly a female abolitionist - was not easy. During one
incident in 1835, a large mob formed at a building where the BFASS
was meeting. The women who had assembled there had to relocate, and
were escorted through the mob, who were yelling various epithets.
The
Weston sisters wou1d attend numerous Boston churches, and monitored
what ministers were saying about slavery. This led to negative
comments from other church-goers, which in turn led to Chapman’s
reported disliking for churches in general.
By
1840, Chapman and her family had stopped attending the Federal Street
Church, where they had regularly gone to Mass, mainly due to their
minister’s lack of anti-slavery efforts. Chapman found an
abolitionist minister, although even then, church was reportedly not
a big part of her life.
“Eternity
and infinity come in like a flood whenever I the gates,”
Chapman once wrote. “Although God immortality never were much
to me.”
In
1837, a group of clergy-men published a letter that sharply
criticized female abolitionists. Chapman wrote a in response,
entitled, “The Times that Try Men’s Souls.” It
read: “Confusion has seized us, and all things go wrong,/ The
women have leaped from ‘their spheres,’/ And instead of
fixed stars, shoot as comets along,/And are setting the world by the
ears!/ . . So freely they move in their chosen eclipse,/ The ‘Lords
of Creation’/ do fear an eclipse.”
It
was around this time that the BFASS experienced some eternal
conflicts of their own. Chapman’s sister, Anne Weston, thought
the group should continue to support famed abolitionist William Lloyd
Garrison. Garrison had become a controversial figure within the
abolitionist movement, and a majority of BFASS members voted to move
in a different direction. That left Chapman and her sisters , who
were the only’ women’s group to continue to support
Garrison.
One
of Chapman’s most famous appearances came during the
Philadelphia Anti-Slavery Convention in 1838. While she spoke, a
large mob threatened the interracial meeting, and later burned the
building where it was
held.
In
1840, Chapman was elected to the executive committee of the American
Anti-Slavery Society and was appointed a Massachusetts delegate to
the world convention in London. In 1844 she served as co-editor of
the National Anti-Slavery Standard published in New York. She also
took turns editing Garrison’s newspaper.
Her
reports for BFASS, entitled “Right and Wrong in Boston,”
appeared from 1836 to 1844 and would often express sentiments
different from those of other group
members. When “an
apparently irreconcilable difference of opinion” arose, Chapman
once said, she made it known that she would not change her own views.
“I shall never
submit to any creation of any society that interferes with my
righteous freedom,” she said.
Later
in the 1840’s, Chapman took her cause to Europe as her children
completed their studies there. While in England, Chapman renewed her
friendship with British writer Harriet Martineau, whom she had met in
Boston in 1835. Chapman would eventually edit Martineau’s
memoirs, published in 1877 and titled “The Autobiography of
Harriet Martineau with Memorials by Maria Weston Chapman.”
In
1855, Chapman returned to Weymouth, where she lived for the rest of
her life. Her sisters joined her here when the Civil War began. With
emancipation in 1863, Chapman agreed with Garrison that it was time
to close down the anti-slavery organizations.
At
that point, Chapman spent the rest of her life educating the former
slaves. She died in 1885 from a heart disease.
Research material
for this story was found at the website of the Unitarian Universalist
Association, www.uua.org.
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