Heroes: Inspiration for All Ages by Robert S. Swiatek - HTML preview

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Marian Anderson

Born on February 27, 1897, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to John Berkley Anderson and Anna  Delilah Rucker,  Marian had two younger sisters, Alyse and Ethel.  Anna had been a teacher  in Virginia but because of education requirements, couldn‟t teach in Philadelphia.  This  restriction only  applied  to  blacks,  not  whites. She  supplemented  the  family  income  by providing  day care  for children,  working  in  a  factory,  scrubbing  floors  and  taking  in laundry. John sold coal and  ice at a railroad terminal in town and later had a small liquor trade.  All Marian‟s grandparents had been slaves.  Benjamin  Anderson  and  Mary  Holmes  Anderson  moved from Virginia to Philadelphia in the 1890s a few years before their granddaughter  was  born.  They  may  have   lived  in  the  City  of Brotherly Love, but racism there wasn't  much different  from the South, as witnessed by the Plessy v. Ferguson decision of 1896.

Marian had musical talents at the age of two, banging on a toy piano and singing songs she made up. Two years later, family members recognized her talent. After she turned six, she became a member of the Union Baptist junior choir and then played a violin that her Aunt Mary gave her. She played it until the strings broke. She had the ability, but funds weren't available for music lessons – something   that   she   would   experience   again.   Choir   director Alexander Robinson was the first musician to realize her voice was unlike  any other  and  inspired  her.  The  group  sang before  older children  in  Sunday school  and  Marian stood  out.  Soon she  was singing in a quartet, in duets and solos, all over the city.

She  entertained  at  gatherings  for  charity,  the  YWCA  and YMCA at the  age of eight.  Marian was the  youngest  member of the People‟s Chorus, under the direction of founder Emma  Azalia Hackley.  She  had  solos  with the  group,  which traveled  to  white neighborhoods as well as black, enlarging her experience. Marian attended an integrated school in the early 1900s and was a happy child.   The   Andersons   may   have   lived   in   poverty,   but   they supported each other and enjoyed security in spiritual, cultural and emotional  ways.  Tragedy  struck  when  John  had  an  accident  at work and  then died  at age 34 of  heart  failure a  month later.  The family  moved  into  the  home  of  Benjamin  and  Mary  Anderson, which   already   housed   boarders,   children   and   grandchildren.

Somehow    they    managed,    but    Marian‟s    grandmother    was dictatorial. Marian became close with Benjamin, but sadly, he died not  long after John perished. Mary  made  the  young singer  find a job  rather  than attend  high  school,  much  to  Marian and  Anna‟s dismay.  One  thing  Mary  couldn‟t  do  was  to  prevent  Anderson from singing.

In 1910, she joined the senior Union Baptist choir and met singer  extraordinaire  Roland   Hayes  through  Reverend  Wesley Parks, which made a  huge difference  in her  life.  He  followed  her mentor until he died in 1977. Hayes encouraged her and hoped she could be trained professionally, particularly by a white  instructor. When  she  initiated  efforts  to  follow  Roland‟s  advice,  she  saw racism,  or  maybe  the  money  issue  came  into  play,  once  more. Receiving assurance that the people of Union Baptist would handle the costs, she  tried  to apply to  the Philadelphia Music Academy. She waited in line but was ignored when her term came. She was soon told, we don’t take colored. She was to see much more racism throughout  her  life.  She  and  her  family  had  to  wait  longer  for service. There were places in town where all people could go, and there were others where some of us could not go. There were girls we played with and others we didn’t. There were parties we went to and some we didn’t.

The racism of Philadelphia followed in the footsteps of the Jim Crow South, Social Darwinism and tensions brought about by the  increasing  African  American  population.  Blacks  more  than tripled compared  to only a sixty percent  growth of  whites  in the city. The First World War provided jobs  for blacks, overseas and in factories. When it ended,  work was  hard  to  find  for people of color and those who had served their country returned to find more discrimination in employment. In Coatesville, not far from the city, a young black was taken from jail and burned to death in August 1911.  Seven  years  later,  a  race  riot  began  in  Philadelphia  when rocks were thrown at probation officer Adelia Bond.

Anderson  decided  that  she‟d  find  an  African  American voice  teacher  and  she  wouldn't  settle  for  second  best.  She  and Mary Saunders Patterson both knew Roland Hayes. An interview between instructor and pupil was arranged by John Thomas Butler, who  knew  of  Anderson‟s  ability  and  offered  to  pay  her  tuition. They bonded  and  with Paterson‟s  guidance,  Marian  improved  in many areas and was encouraged  in her  musical career.  Living  in Harlem  at  the  age  of  18,  she  sang  at  the  Abyssinian  Baptist Church. Many felt she  needed a  more  formal education.  Through the efforts of Philadelphia Tribune  editor G.  Grant Williams and the People‟s Chorus, a benefit concert in June 1915 was set up to raise funds for a young singer who Williams said, without a doubt, possesses one of the best contralto voices ever heard in this city for one of her years.

The benefit  brought  in $250,  enabling  her  to  study  under contralto   Agnes   Reifsnyder,   who   was   influential   in   Marian enrolling  at  William  Penn  High  School  as  an  eighteen-year-old freshman.  She  didn't  do  well  in  the  business  courses  but  music kept  her  there.  Eventually,  she  transferred  to  South Philadelphia High School for Girls. With the People‟s Chorus, she sang the solo contralto part of Handel‟s  Messiah with Roland Hayes in the lead. A  writer   from  the  Crisis,  the  NAACP   magazine,  praised  the chorus,  adding,   but   most   exquisite  was  the  dark,  sweet   full- blossomed contralto.

Hayes  was  impressed  and  invited  Anderson to  join  him, Harry Burleigh and a black chorus  in Boston that was to perform Felix   Mendelssohn‟s   Elijah.   After   Roland‟s   instructor   Arthur Hubbard  heard  Anderson  sing,  he  thought  she  should  move  to Boston and become  his student.  In order  to cover  the tuition,  he offered her the chance for her to stay at his home and work. When her grandmother heard of this possibility, she nixed the deal, even with the  fact that Marian would be working off her  tuition. Mary felt that a young girl shouldn‟t be far from home.

The  young singer  returned  to  Philly.  Invited  to  sing  at  a Christmas concert  in Savannah, Georgia,  in December  1917, she and  her  mother  boarded  a  train  headed  for  DC.  In  the  nation‟s capital, they changed trains and were led to the Jim Crow car. The car  was  filthy  and  you  could  barely  see  out  the  windows.  The lighting   and   ventilation   were   bad.   It   was   a   horrible   ride. Fortunately,  when  they  arrived  in  Savannah,  they  were  greeted with a warm welcome.

Having  been  in  integrated  schools  and  living  in  mixed neighborhoods, Marian noticed that the audience in Savannah was no  different,  as  about  a  third  of  the  people  at  the  concert  were white.  However,  the  blacks  were  seated  in  the  back  while  the others  were  near  the  singers.  She  impressed  the  listeners  and critics.  The Savannah Press offered:  Her voice is exquisitely  rich and  full  and  mellow.  Her  control  is  marvelous,  the  music  just seeming to come without any effort from the singer. The Savannah Morning News said she had one of the most remarkable voices ever heard in Savannah.

She performed at the Academy of Music in early 1918 and one  white  critic  praised  her  while  cautioning that  she  needed  to continue in her music study. She heeded the advice of the reviewer and a year later sang again at the same venue. This  was followed up  with  another  trip  down  south  when  she  appeared  at  Fisk University  in  Tennessee  and  other  black  churches  and  schools. While on the  train  her accompanist,  Billy King, asked  the porter about  the  possibility of some  food.  He  was  kind  enough to  seat Anderson and  King  in the  dining car,  but  behind  some  curtains. This  is where  the waiters ate, but the portions were  large and the chef  and  waiters  gave  it  something  extra.  The  crew  and  the musicians appreciated what the others had done.

The  next  stop  was  Chicago  in  June  1919  to  attend  an operatic  course  of  study by Oscar  Saenger.  July  27  brought  the worst  race  riot  in  the  history  of  Chicago  on  a  Lake  Michigan beach, resulting in 500  injuries and forty deaths. It started when a black student on a raft was harassed by a while policeman. Soon he was  hit by a  rock  that  someone  tossed and  knocked off  the raft. Lifeguards were prohibited from saving him and he drowned. This occurred while a recital was about to begin at Grace Presbyterian Church with Marian and others  from the National Association of Negro  Musicians.  All  the   vocalists   performed  splendidly,  but Anderson stood  out.  Chicago  defender  critic  Nora  Douglas  Holt mentioned,

The greatest height was reached when Marian Anderson, a high  school  girl,  exhibited  a  voice  equal  to  that  of  Rosa Raisa,   the  wonderful  contralto  of   the  Chicago  Grand Opera  Company,  and  everyone  stood  and  acclaimed  her with cries of bravos, while tears of joy were in the eyes of many of the musicians who felt that a new era in music has arisen for our people.

Almost  $200  was  raised  for  a  scholarship  fund  for  her. There was talk of having her attend the Yale School of Music, but she   replied   that   she   still   had   some   time   in   high   school. Nevertheless, she was determined to succeed. She was fortunate to have  so  much support and  in early 1920s,  she  met  voice teacher Giuseppe  Boghetti,  formerly  known  as  Joe  Bogash,  who  came from a Russian-Jewish family. At  first  he admitted that he wasn't accepting any more students, but that changed when Marian sang “Deep River.” Lessons didn't begin at once  for her, but  Boghetti dedicated himself to her talents. After graduation from high school, most of Anderson‟s time was  in her music. At graduation, one of her classmates gave an address entitled, we have music and Marian Anderson. A decade later, many others in the nation and the rest of the world would know of her. For now, she was on her way.

Anderson    faced   numerous   challenges,    especially    her grandmother Mary. Somehow  her  friends and  family provided so much support that this relative didn't bother  her. Marian managed to  go  to  school  and  was  blessed  with  great  music  teachers  and guidance.   The   Great  Depression  of  the  1930s   posed  another obstacle.  Discrimination didn't change as she  grew older, but she did her best to not let it affect her as she traveled and performed in Europe, Asia and South America to thunderous appreciation many times. On those trips, she witnessed a difference in the way people treated her, as opposed to her homeland, even if at times there was no prejudice.

Nonetheless,  the  United  States  was   her  home  and  she returned  there.  With rampant  racism  in  the  North as  well  as  the South, arranging concerts was  not easy, but she still earned  great reviews   when   she   sang.   In   1939,   plans   were   made   for   a performance  for  her  in the  nation‟s capital, either  at Constitution Hall or Central High School. For reasons of race, both proprietors turned   her  down:  the   Daughters  of  the   American   Revolution (DAR) and the Board of Education, respectively. This was despite repeated  efforts  to  be at each  venue.  Eleanor  Roosevelt resigned from  the  DAR  in  protest.  You  might  think  that  the  two  groups were despicable and  un-American in their actions – deservedly so  but actually, we should thank both the board and the DAR. As a result,  Marian sang outdoors  at  the  Lincoln  Memorial on  Easter Sunday,   April   9,  1939.   The   weather  could   have   been   more accommodating with nasty winds blowing, but that didn't prevent 75,000  people  from  attending  the  five  pm  concert.  They  were young, old, black, white, rich and poor, all savoring a day of unity, understanding,  integration,  love  and  hope  for  what  the  United States could be. That day, when Anderson sang “My Country „Tis Of Thee”, she sang the words, of thee we sing, rather than of thee I sing.

The concert was broadcast over CBS radio and was over by six pm. It  featured half a dozen works including Franz Schubert‟s “Ave Maria,"

"America,"

"My Soul Is Anchored in the Lord” and “Nobody Knows the Trouble I‟ve Seen” as an encore. On the day commemorating  Christian  rebirth  at  the  memorial  for  the  Great Emancipator who  freed the slaves, it was such a  memorable event that a mural was created to honor that late afternoon proceeding. In a letter to Charles Houston, described as The Man Who Killed Jim Crow, Mary McLeod Bethune related what people felt on that day:

It  cannot  be described in words. There is no way. History may and will record it, but it will never be able to tell what happened in the hearts of thousands who stood and listened yesterday  afternoon.  Something  happened  in  all  of  our hearts. I came away almost walking on air. We are on the right  track   –  we  must  go  forward.  The  reverence  and concentration  of  the  throngs  told  a  story  of   hope  for tomorrow – a story of triumph – a story of pulling together  a  story  of  splendor  and  real  democracy.  Through  the Marian Anderson protest concert we made our triumphant entry into the democratic spirit of American life.

Marian sang at  the World‟s Fair  in New York on May 28 and  followed  this  up  with  attending  the  premier  of  the  movie, Young   Mr.   Lincoln.   She   performed   four   songs   that   day.   In Richmond,  Marian  was  given  the  Spingarn  Medal,  personally presented  to  her  by Mrs.  Roosevelt  on July 2.  Eleanor  extended praise   to  an   individual  who   had  the  courage  to  meet   many difficulties.  Your  achievement  far  transcends  any  race  or  creed. This  took place at  the NAACP  convention in what  had been the capital of the Confederacy.  Two years  later, she was the recipient of the  Bok  Award,  which brought  with it $10,000.  She  used  the money  to  established  the  Marian  Anderson  Scholarship  Fund, which would help young singers  from the age of sixteen to thirty realize their dreams.

Anderson   was   always   generous   to   others   and   would continue doing this through benefit performances for the National Urban   League,   NAACP,   International  Committee   of   African Affairs  and  other  organizations.  I  doubt  this  included  the  DAR. The  audiences  at  these  events  were  overflowing  –   12,000  at Fairmount Park in Philadelphia and more than 25,000 at Lewisohn Stadium in New York – so they raised vast amounts of cash. For a few years, Anderson visited hospitals and military bases in order to comfort the wounded  as  well as those  fighting  in World  War  II, both  black  and  white.  In  late  1942,  she  was  invited  to  sing  at Constitution Hall.  Even though the  DAR  hadn't abandoned  their evil, prejudiced ways, she agree to sing because it was for the men and women in war. It wouldn't be until 1953 that the DAR finally welcomed  all,  regardless  of  color.  The  next  year,  the  Board  of Education in DC followed suit.

When the  mural was presented on January 6, 1943, a day before  her Constitution Hall  gig, Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes praised the singer:

There is only one Marian Anderson, whose voice has given life to a new concept of human relationships in millions of hearts.  Marian  Anderson’s  voice  and  personality  have come to be a symbol – a symbol of American unity at a time when a lack of it might well prove fatal to us as a people; a symbol of the willing acceptance of the immortal truth thatall  men  are  created  equal’.  She  used  the  rich  gift  with which  genius  has  endowed  her  to  make  an  indifferent people  realize  that  if  the  possession  and  cultivation  of  a voice  are  not  related to the  color  of  one’s  skin,  then the same  must   be  equally  true  of   other  human  gifts  and qualities.

She performed at Carnegie Hall a few times, even as early as  1928.  In the  years  after  the  Easter  Sunday Lincoln Memorial event,  the  NAACP  felt  her  vertical  integration  idea  wasn't  quite enough, since  it was still segregation. Eventually she agreed with them. She kept singing and recording, even though she performed less than in the 1930s and 1940s. In Bethel, Connecticut, Marian married Orpheus H. Fisher on July 17, 1943, in a small ceremony. After being refused to buy a home, the couple bought a 100-acre farm in  nearby Danbury.  The Marianna Farm was to be  home to numerous farm animals as well as dogs and cats.

Anderson  influenced  many  women,  not  only  artists.  The Kennedy Center showcased  her  life  in the play My Lord, What  a Morning: The Marian Anderson Story in 1999. Two years later, the 1939  documentary,   Marian   Anderson:   The  Lincoln  Memorial Concert, was preserved by the Library of Congress. You can find her  image on a  U. S. postage stamp, Savings Bond and  Treasury Department   half-ounce   gold  coin.  Some  of   her  other  awards include:  University  of  Pennsylvania  Glee  Club,  1973;  Handel Medallion, Peace Prize of the United  Nations and  Congressional Gold Medal, all in 1977; Honors from the Kennedy Center, 1978; George Peabody Award, 1981;  Eleanor  Roosevelt  Human Rights Award   of  New   York,   1984;   National  Medal  of  Arts,   1986; Grammy  Award,  1991.  She  has  honorary  degrees  from  Smith College, Temple and Howard Universities.

On April 8, 1993, Marian died of heart failure in Portland, Oregon,  at  the   house  of  her  nephew,   noted  conductor  James DePriest.  James  had  continued  in  the  Anderson  music  tradition. His  mother,  Ethel,  and  his  aunt  Alice,  were  not  only  sisters  of Marian, but singers as well. You can read more on Anderson in her autobiography and  in the 2009 book by Raymond  Arsenault,  The Sound Of Freedom: Marian Anderson, The Lincoln Memorial, And The Concert That Awakened  America. A quote of hers  from 1956 follows:

There is  hope for America.  Our  country and people have every reason to be generous and good. All the changes may not  come  in  my  time;  they  may  even  be  left  for  another world. But I have seen enough changes to believe that they will occur in this one.