Columbus & Dayton African American_February 2021 Edition

Page 8

THE EARLY YEARS OF CLEVELAND’S FIRST ELECTED OFFICIAL OF AFRICAN DESCENT, JOHN PATTERSON GREEN By Suzanne Parks, MEDL

Bede and Alice later gave birth to a daughter each, which they had by two white men who happened to be brothers.

The Early Years of Cleveland’s First Elected Official of African Descent, John Patterson Green

Anyway, one of the colored daughters of one of the two sisters whose mothers got pregnant by the same slave and who turned around and then themselves got pregnant by two brothers who happened to be white, Obedience or Bede for short, gave birth to Temperance.

Depending upon who you ask or which resource you access your information from, there are many who are credited with the establishment of Labor Day. But in the State of Ohio, the “Daddy of Labor Day,” was a black man by the name of John Patterson Green.

Temperance married John Green. Their union produced a son, John Patterson Green.

A Negro, Green hailed from New Bern, North Carolina during slavery times. Born in 1845, he was the son of free persons of color. However, in North Carolina, whether born free, enslaved, manumitted, well to do, impoverished, aware of one’s lineage or not; educated, illiterate, and regardless of one’s skin tone varying from blue-black to white likeness, life was perilous for persons with African DNA. And not unlike today, there was this constant quest to become meritorious in spite of unrelenting oppression based upon one’s genetic composition.

In those days as well as today, John Patterson Green is a reputed descendent of these two European-Americans, great-grandson and grandson respectively. Much like the Hemings of Thomas Jefferson fame, John Green who was John Patterson Green’s father was the son born of an enslaved woman, which means he was born into slavery. He was later manumitted and became a tailor by John Patterson Green was the grandson of trade. a man by the name of John Wright Stanly (sometimes spelled Stanley), who was a man Stanly summoned John Green to his death bed of noble British birth and later a privateer where he acknowledged paternity and gifted who owned a fleet of 14 merchant ships, John Green with a steel engraved portrait of which were commissioned by the patriots himself. But John Green was never legally during the American Revolution. Because legitimized as one of John Stanley’s heirs. of his war efforts, the English Crown placed a bounty upon his head, as if he were a pirate, John Patterson Green’s grandmother, Sarah which is what a privateer is before being Rice was a beloved “servant” in the Speight commissioned by a government, to further household at the time when the notorious their cause. Fabulously wealthy, he once exchange of bullets between Stanly and loaned General Nathaniel Greene during Speight commenced. a despairing period during the American Revolution when things we not going well, John Patterson Green’s mother, Temperance forty thousand pounds, in order to strengthen Burden Green, a quadroon whose story the war effort. This sum is worth $1,224,800 further questions the morality of North in today’s market. Greene nor the new Carolinians during that era. Now bear with government repaid him. But JW Stanly and me and try to keep up while I attempt to his descendants can claim they are true sons retell this tale of “unprotected women,” elicit and daughters of the American Revolution. love, the sister/cousin phenomena and race mixing. JW Stanly’s son and heir, John Stanly became a renowned lawyer and a savvy politician Long story short, Temperance’s grandmother in North Carolina and within the federal and her great-aunt, sisters, were part of the government. He served seven consecutive Chestnut (nee Chestnutt) lineage. Both terms in the North Carolina House of were beautiful and desirable by many of Representatives, was Speaker of the House the young suitors of the day. But the ladies and served as a member of Congress. John grew impatient and weary because no Stanly was also a scoundrel of sort because proposals of marriage were forthcoming. he killed Richard Dobbs Speight,a member So, the sisters sought the advice and found of the Democratic-Republican Party and one solace from a likeable colored man, their of the signers of the Constitution, during a father’s slave. Dude must have been some duel. Speight at the time was the governor kind of something else, because he fathered of North Carolina. the daughters of both sisters. The two little colored babies were named Obedience or Stanly was later pardoned.by Governor Bede for short and Alice. Benjamin Williams.

The Columbus African & Dayton American African American News Journal • February • February 20212015

8

John Patterson Green lived in the lap of pre-civil war Colored folks well-to-doness during the first five years of his life in New Bern, North Carolina. His father John Green became a highly skilled tailor who was able with his earnings to not only provide a more than comfortable lifestyle for his family, but was able to purchase many of his relatives from the enslavers. John Stewart Stanley, another free person of color (FPOC) and second cousin of Green became an educator and founded a school for the free persons of color and poor whites in the area. He was John Patterson Green’s first teacher. At the age of five, John Patterson Green’s father died an early death. Life after his father’s passing was difficult. At a tender age John Patterson Green became the man of the family by helping his mother with tasks that required manly strength and endurance. He took on odd jobs that today might be construed as child labor. There were many nights when the family went to bed hungry. Or they subsisted on meager meals made of little more than corn meal and water. As a young boy in New Bern, John Patterson Green was constantly warding off cruelty from the cruder members of the white race or free persons of color. Once he witnessed white rage and presumably the birth pangs of mob justice directed at the enslaved black man who had ran afoul of the so-called white law. In his autobiography, Green recalled how as a young boy working in the Cooper House an enraged white man came in demanding that the colored coopers put holes in his paddle. They refused. Since the white man who called himself the law, knew that their master would back them up and not punish them for refusing to help this cruelty to unfold, commandeered the shop and perforated the paddle himself. He left in an even more Continued on Page 9


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Articles inside

James R. Williams: Pioneering Akron Judge and Civic Leader

6min
page 37

HBCU’s, COVID and You

8min
pages 35-36

A Crisis Within a Crisis: Police Killings of Black Emerging Adults

6min
page 34

Columbus State Earns Placement in Inaugural Year-Long Racial Equity Leadership Academy

4min
page 33

How Black Lives Matter Came to the Academy

12min
pages 31-32

The Kroger Co. Foundation Announces Racial Equity Fund Build It Together Partners

5min
page 29

Book Bags & E-Readers

4min
page 30

NMA Covid-19 Task Force on Vaccines and Therapeutics

7min
pages 26-28

Deja Vu: The Persisent Time Loop of Race, Inequality, Liberty and the Enduring Struggle to Create a More Perfect Union

7min
page 22

Study Shows When Housing Quality Is Poor, Children Suffer

3min
page 24

Work On Your Pandemic Recovery

4min
page 25

The Next Chapter

4min
pages 18-19

COVER STORY

4min
page 20

Legislative Update

4min
page 17

Infrastructure Pipeline, Not Just Create New Jobs Community Update from Franklin County Auditor’s Office

3min
page 16

Eugene Goodman: The Man Who Saved The Senate

5min
page 6

Black History Is About More Than Oppression

7min
pages 9-10

New HEAP Assistance Available

4min
page 12

Ohio History Connection Celebrates Black History Month

3min
page 11

Volunteers Stay Connected with Children Amid Pandemic

3min
pages 13-14

The Columbus Division of Police and Our City Need Prophetic Leadership With Vision

5min
page 7

Cleveland’s First Elected Official of African Descent

5min
page 8

Racial (In)Justice In Small Town Rural America

5min
page 5
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