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Angels of Mercy

White Women and the History of New York's Colored Orphan Asylum

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

William Seraile uncovers the history of the colored orphan asylum, founded in New York City in 1836 as the nation's first orphanage for African American children. It is a remarkable institution that is still in the forefront aiding children. Although no longer an orphanage, in its current incarnation as Harlem-Dowling West Side Center for Children and Family Services it maintains the principles of the women who organized it nearly 200 years ago.
The agency weathered three wars, two major financial panics, a devastating fire during the 1863 Draft Riots, several epidemics, waves of racial prejudice, and severe financial difficulties to care for orphaned, neglected, and delinquent children. Eventually financial support would come from some of New York's finest families, including the Jays, Murrays, Roosevelts, Macys, and Astors.
While the white female managers and their male advisers were dedicated to uplifting these black children, the evangelical, mainly Quaker founding managers also exhibited the extreme paternalistic views endemic at the time, accepting the advice or support of the African American community only grudgingly. It was frank criticism in 1913 from W. E. B. Du Bois that highlighted the conflict between the orphanage and the community it served, and it wasn't until 1939 that it hired the first black trustee.
More than 15,000 children were raised in the orphanage, and throughout its history letters and visits have revealed that hundreds if not thousands of "old boys and girls" looked back with admiration and respect at the home that nurtured them throughout their formative years.
Weaving together African American history with a unique history of New York City, this is not only a painstaking study of a previously unsung institution of black history but a unique window onto complex racial dynamics during a period when many failed to recognize equality among all citizens as a worthy purpose.

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    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2011

      Founded in 1836, New York City's private Colored Orphan Asylum (COA) became the nation's first dedicated institutional home for otherwise abandoned black children. Seraile (African American history, emeritus, Lehman Coll., CUNY; New York's Black Regiments during the Civil War) traces the COA from its 25 mostly Quaker female founders to a broader post-World War II presence as the Harlem-Dowling West Side Center for Children and Family Services. He details complex racial and social dynamics and hostilities in analyzing actions, attitudes, and arguments over who should decide what was best for the more than 15,000 boys and girls the COA raised between 1836 and 1946. Seraile shows the COA's work as long undertaken by nurturing but paternalistic elite white women, whose self-assured benevolence immersed their wards in an acculturation that isolated the children from the black community, often even from their own relatives. VERDICT This penetrating case study nicely merges and extends discussions in works such as Anne M. Boylan's The Origins of Women's Activism: New York and Boston, 1797-1840 and Gunja SenGupta's From Slavery to Poverty: The Racial Origins of Welfare in New York, 1840-1918. Scholars and general readers interested in New York history, race relations, social services, philanthropy, or interracial child rearing will benefit from this work.--Thomas J. Davis, Arizona State Univ., Tempe

      Copyright 2011 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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