Author: Robbie Marsden
School/Organization:
Vaux Big Picture High School
Year: 2023
Seminar: W.E.B. Du Bois and Philadelphia’s Seventh Ward
Grade Level: 9-12
Keywords: Du Bois, Philadelphia Negro, Seventh Ward, Sociology
School Subject(s): Social Studies
This unit seeks to explore the historical significance of W.E.B. Du Bois’s 18-month residency in Philadelphia that resulted in the publication of his sociological study of the Seventh Ward’s African American population, the Philadelphia Negro. This unit is driven primarily by primary source exploration and analysis. This unit also aims to apply and connect issues and trends found in Du Bois’s 1896-97 study to the present day communities of students. The sequence and learning outcomes will be guided by the following four essential questions:
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From an outsider’s perspective, the inclusion of W.E.B. Du Bois in this list of Philadelphia specific unsung heroes may seem unusual. Du Bois is undoubtedly a well-known figure, even notorious for most history teachers and enthusiasts. While Du Bois remains celebrated to this day as a decorated civil rights activist, outspoken sociologist and educator, and founder of the NAACP—it is his time in Philadelphia that is often overlooked. After graduating as the first African American to receive his doctorate from Harvard, Du Bois struggled to get a teaching job in mainstream academia. Du Bois finally got his foot in the door when he accepted a position at Wilberforce University in Ohio. It was while he was at Wilberforce that he fielded another offer that he thought could be his gateway to bigger and better opportunities. The University of Pennsylvania had invited Du Bois to conduct a sociological study on the black population in Philadelphia’s Seventh Ward, the highest populated black community in the city. Du Bois credited Wharton School Professor Samuel McCune Lindsay for being the person to bring him to Philadelphia. It apparently did not take much to get him to leave Ohio, though, as Du Bois said as much in his autobiography, adding “that he probably would have accepted the terms, whatever they were—anything to escape Wilberforce!”[1] At the time of Du Bois’s tenure “in the late 1890’s, Philadelphia held the largest black community in the North.”[2] “Philadelphia, like other cities across the United States, became a key destination for black migrants following Emancipation and through the Great Migration.”[3] The Seventh Ward in specific “emerged as a neighborhood with one of the largest concentrations of blacks during the Great Migration.”[4] A center of black churches, social institutions, and eventually racial tension that led to riots—“‘this long and narrow ward, extending from South Seventh street to the Schuylkill river and from Spruce to South Street’ contained ‘a fifth of all Negroes’ in Philadelphia.”[5] Du Bois historian David Levering Lewis offers multiple motivations for Penn having brought Du Bois to Philadelphia for the study: one hidden and one communicated. Lewis suggests that Du Bois was suspicious of “the city’s reforming elites hatched the scheme of documenting the alarming moral and social conditions among them in order to mount a more effective campaign to recapture city hall” to appease Philadelphia’s black elite.[6] It is more often acknowledged that it was Quaker Susan P. Wharton, in a meeting with Penn’s provost Dr. Charles Harrison, who “urged a comprehensive study of the Negro population to be undertaken by the university in collaboration with the Philadelphia branch of the College Settlement Association of America,” which focused on educational and social services and programming in impoverished urban areas.[7] Regardless, it was widely communicated by the university and publications a like that Du Bois was being brought in to investigate the “negro problem,” hence code for Du Bois being “expected to take responsibility for diagnosing the exact nature of the virus among Philadelphia’s African Americans.”[8] Du Bois never felt completely welcomed or valued by the University, feeling more as though “university authorities had initially seen him as an expendable black person brought there to do a predictable job.”[9] The University of Pennsylvania consistently refused to recognize Du Bois as a professor or even a formal staff member. Even in their own press release via the New York Times, the publication described Du Bois merely as a “fellow,” and specifically stated that he “will not be considered a member of the Faculty, and will not lecture at college.”[10] Du Bois and his recently married wife packed up and moved to Philadelphia, having lived there from August 1896 though December 1897. Du Bois and his wife moved into the Seventh Ward themselves, having lived at 617 Carver Street (now Rodman), where a historical marker stands today. Du Bois conducted his study by canvassing—knocking door to door, interviewing and gathering data on each individual in each household. The Philadelphia Negro was split into different sections, namely history of the Seventh Ward, methods and approach for the study, his findings within various categories (education, health, family, occupation, etc.), and his conclusion. At first glance, much of Du Bois’s finished product could be perceived as an passive, sugarcoated analysis filled with “one-sided, unthreatening interpretations.”[11] Over time, though, The Philadelphia Negro has been given credit for “its radical subtext” that exposed systemic “discrimination,” and “the causal linkage of race and class to economics.”[12] Du Bois gathered and presented information and analysis relating to family, gender, employment, economic status, property, and more. Despite all of his findings, his overarching conclusion was: “The most difficult social problem is the peculiar attitude of the nation towards the well-being of the race.”[13] Du Bois seemed genuinely perplexed: “There have been few other cases in the history of civilized peoples where human suffering has been viewed with such peculiar indifference.”[14] Du Bois completed his comprehensive study of the Seventh Ward, and read between the lines; the color line, that is. Despite all of the challenges that the black community of the Seventh Ward faced, the common denominator was the systemic discrimination the black community experienced, and frank refusal of the white community to acknowledge the burden these racial limitations could place on the figurative shoulders of said citizens. It is “this feeling,” Du Bois concludes, “widespread and deep-seated,” that is “in America, the vastest of the Negro problems.”[15] Du Bois’s Philadelphia Negro may not have put him on the map as he was hoping, but it truly aged like a fine wine—revealing harsh truths from 1890s Philadelphia that still remain today. Du Bois’s nearly two years in Philadelphia and his still-historically-relevant sociological study deserve to be taught in history classrooms. [1] David Levering Lewis, W.E.B. Du Bois: A Biography (1868-1963) (New York, NY: Holt Paperbacks, 2009), 128. [2] Ibid., 129. [3] Hunter, 9. [4] Ibid., 9. [5] Ibid., 10. [6] Lewis, 129-130. [7] Ibid., 133. [8] Ibid., 133. [9] Ibid., 129. [10] “First Colored ‘Fellow’ Appointed,” New York Times, September 30, 1896. [11] Lewis, 148. [12] Ibid., 151. [13] W.E.B. Du Bois, The Philadelphia Negro (Pantianos Classics, 1899). [14] Ibid.. [15] Ibid..
Lesson 1: EQ: Who was W.E.B. Du Bois? How did he want to be perceived? What did he believe?
Lesson 2: EQ: Who brought Du Bois in for this study? Why him?
Lesson 3: EQ: What was the purpose of the study? How did he conduct the study? What were Du Bois’s conclusions?
Lesson 4: EQ: What was life like in the Seventh Ward? How is Du Bois’s Philadelphia Negro remembered in Philadelphia?
LESSON FOUR SEVENTH WARD PHOTOGRAPH #1 (Courtesy of Temple University Library, Urban Archives) LESSON FOUR SEVENTH WARD PHOTOGRAPH #2 (Courtesy of Temple University Library, Urban Archives) Du Bois, W.E.B.. The Philadelphia Negro. Pantianos Classics, 1899. Hunter, Marcus Anthony. Black Citymakers: How the Philadelphia Negro Changed Urban America. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2013. Lewis, David Levering. W.E.B. Du Bois: A Biography (1868-1963). New York, NY: Holt Paperbacks, 2009. “List of W.E.B. Du Bois’s favorite things, ca. June 2, 1938 (https://credo.library.umass.edu/view/full/mums312-b085-i449)Primary Sources + Discussion Questions
Secondary Sources
Teacher Resources
8.5.9-10.D: Determine the meaning of words and phrases as they are used in a text, including vocabulary describing political, social, or economic aspects of history/social science. 8.4.12.D: Evaluate how conflict and cooperation among groups and organizations have impacted the development of the world today, including its effects on Pennsylvania. 8.4.12.A: Evaluate the role groups and individuals played in the social, political, cultural, and economic development throughout world history.