Overview
Dark Midnight When I Rise tells the story of a troupe of young ex-slaves and freedmen whose odyssey from cotton field and auction block to concert stage and throne room is one of the most remarkable trajectories in American history. Singing the sacred hymns of their ancestors, the Fisk Jubilee Singers introduced the world to African American music. They enchanted such luminaries as Ulysses S. Grant, Frederick Douglass, Mark Twain, Queen Victoria, and Prime Minister William Gladstone, and demonstrated to millions of white Americans and Europeans the courage, dignity, and intelligence of African Americans.
The Jubilees set out in the fall of 1871 to raise money for Nashville's nearly bankrupt Fisk University, one of many black schools established after the Civil War to teach reading and writing to the tens of thousands of emancipated slaves who clamored for an education. Ejected from hotels and railroad cars, shivering in the winter cold, the bedraggled singers performed along the route of the old Underground Railway to Brooklyn, where, a few days before Christmas, they sang for Henry Ward Beecher's Plymouth Church congregation. They caused such a sensation that soon they were raising thousands of dollars a week performing to overflow audiences up and down the Eastern Seaboard. After tours of Great Britain, Holland, Switzerland, and Germany, they not only rescued Fisk but built it into one of the nation's preeminent African American institutions of higher learning.
The Jubilees introduced scores of spirituals, from "Steal Away" to "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot," with such soulful artistry they moved throngs to tears. But their contribution extended beyond their music. Forced to do daily battle with American racism in the dark midnight of Reconstruction, they bravely denounced segregation from choir lofts and concert stages, forcing the issue of discrimination onto the world's front pages. In their wake, Northern hotels, railroads, and schools opened their doors to blacks.
Their success came at great cost. The eloquent Benjamin Holmes, who had taught himself to read as a slave, died of tuberculosis. Pious Julia Jackson, who as a small girl had helped her relatives escape from bondage, suffered a paralytic stroke. Frail, stalwart Ella Sheppard, the matriarch of the Jubilees, nearly died of pneumonia after seven years of unceasing toil. As they struggled to overcome exploitation and prejudice, the Jubilees transformed American music forever, foreshadowing the triumphs and travails of thousands of black performers.
Based on the singers' own letters, memoirs, and diaries, Dark Midnight When I Rise is a compelling and deeply moving testament to the inherent decency of all men and women, and the power of art to change the heart of a nation.
Andrew Ward is the author of numerous books, including Out Here: A Newcomer's Notes from the Great Northwest and, most recently, Our Bones Are Scattered, his acclaimed account of the Indian Mutiny of 1857 for which he won the Washington Governor's Award. A former contributing editor at The Atlantic Monthly, commentator for National Public Radio's All Things Considered, and columnist for The Washington Post, Ward originated and cowrote a documentary about the Jubilee Singers for WGBH's The American Experience. He lives with his wife in Seattle, Washington.
"A remarkable book...sheds vivid light on the post-Civil War experience of America's blacks. Ward doesn't flinch from telling the truth about prejudice and hostility to blacks, North and South. But the power of the music in these singers' hearts makes their story β and Dark Midnight When I Rise β a triumph." βThomas Fleming, author of Hours of Gladness
Editorials
Library Journal
Seattle-based writer Ward (Our Bones Are Scattered) has given us an intricately detailed account of the career of the Fisk University Jubilee Singers, who introduced Negro spirituals to much of white America while barnstorming on behalf of this private black university in Nashville, TN. The singers toured America and Europe between 1872 and 1903 to raise money for the institution and the American Missionary Association, which sponsored the group. Attracting ever larger and increasingly enthusiastic audiences, mainly white, the singers both raised considerable funds and helped many whites appreciate black American music, especially spirituals. (New York's celebrated minister Henry Ward Beecher was among their many converts.) The author writes well, focusing wisely on the people involved in the enterprise and not ignoring the tragic side of the Jubilee Singers' accomplishments: The strains of the group's touring killed one singer and ruined the voices of several others. Highly recommended for most public and academic libraries.--A.O. Edmonds, Ball State Univ., Muncie, IN Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\School Library Journal
Adult/High School-An incredible story of perseverance, courage, and determination. Established in the wake of the Civil War with a mission to teach emancipated slaves to read and write, Fisk University found it difficult to collect tuition from its desperately poor students. In 1871, needing to raise money to keep the school alive and operating, Fisk's treasurer and choirmaster, George White, organized a group of singers who would tour the eastern United States and, later, Europe. These nine students, the Fisk Jubilee Singers, took the music of black America and, in particular, the spiritual, to people of all different backgrounds, from queens to Supreme Court Justices to the common man. However, their efforts, and their success, did not come without a price. The singers faced heart-wrenching discrimination and, in some cases, such poor physical conditions that their health and voices were greatly compromised. Ward has done a wonderful job of relaying the events of the times and the history of the Jubilee Singers. Worthwhile reading about these ambassadors of music.-Peggy Bercher, Fairfax County Public Library, VA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.A fascinating tribute to a group of enterprising you men and women ... Ward describes the Singers' three grueling tours, providing intimate portraits of each member of the group as well as their famous patrons and the besieged administrators and teachers back home at Fisk.