Featured in chapter 3 of Innovation on Tap, James Forten (1766-1842) lived a rags-to-riches story so impressive that he became among the wealthiest businessmen in Philadelphia, and a powerful voice for African-American reform.
Forten’s
future was cast the moment he accompanied his father to work at the sail-making
business of Robert Bridges, a white Quaker. By age ten, Forten had acquired the
basic skills of his lifelong trade while learning to read at a nearby Quaker
school.
Anxious
to support the Revolution, Forten enlisted as a powder boy on the 450-ton
American Royal Louis. During Forten’s maiden voyage, the
Royal Louis captured four British vessels. His second
cruise was met by the British warship Amphion, however,
and in October 1782, Forten found himself a prisoner aboard the Jersey in Manhattan’s East River. He barely survived his
seven long months of captivity.
In
1785, Robert Bridges welcomed Forten back to his sail loft, and within a year
named the toughened, ambitious young man his foreman. In time, Forten learned
how to outfit and repair sails for every kind of vessel that appeared in the
port of Philadelphia. In return, Forten provided his older friend and boss with
leadership and the wisdom of someone whose own life had once depended upon
quality sails.
When
Bridges retired in 1798, he lent Forten the money to purchase his sail-making
business, ensuring he maintained the firm's customers. Bridges was clearly Forten’s
benefactor, but support from the greater Quaker community in Philadelphia helped
to level the playing field and made it possible for the talented Forten to excel.
By age thirty-two, he employed a biracial workforce of thirty-eight men, and in 1805 was operating the largest, most complex enterprise being run by a black man in Philadelphia.
Sail making was technologically intensive and highly competitive. Cutting-edge product gave mariners an advantage in trade and battle. Forten filed at least one patent, “an improvement in the management of sails which brought him a good deal of money.”
This
ability to innovate was also important after the War of 1812, when peaceful
waters allowed traders to build bigger vessels to accommodate larger cargoes,
requiring the design of a new generation of sails.
Forten
might have been even richer had he done business with slave traders, but that
was work he indignantly refused, abolitionist Lydia Child writes, “declaring
that he considered such a request an insult to any honest or humane man.”
By
1820, Forten had likely become the largest sailmaker in Philadelphia, his sail loft was a showplace, and he was a wealthy and admired man.
In
addition, he had become a writer and an important voice in the abolitionist
movement of the early republic, “the head of a generation of black reformers,”
historian Richard Newman writes, “who viewed the written word as a critical
part of the African-American struggle for justice.”
Forten
was able to negotiate both black and white communities in ways few others could, a
tribute to his own skill, the support and mentoring of Robert Bridges, the Quaker community, and the
cosmopolitan nature of Philadelphia, which, in
1830, was America’s largest northern urban black community.
He took advantage of this unique access, working to pass laws permitting black Americans to become citizens. “There was scarcely any initiative relating to the advancement of African Americans in Philadelphia from 1790 onward,” historian Julie Winch added, “that did not benefit in some way or another from James Forten’s input.”
His home on Lombard Street became a stop on
the Underground Railroad.
Sources
(footnoted in Innovation on Tap)
Julie
Winch, A Gentleman of Color: The Life of James Forten (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2002).
L.
Maria Child, “James Forten,” The Freedmen’s Book (Boston:
Tricknor and Fields, 1865).
Richard
Newman, “Not the Only Story in ‘Amistad’: The Fictional Joadson and the Real
James Forten,” Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic
Studies, Vol. 67, No. 2 (Spring 2000).
Emma
J. Lapansky-Werner, “Teamed Up with the PAS: Images of Black Philadelphia,” Pennsylvania Legacies, November 2005.
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