Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception Across the Color Line
Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception Across the Color Line book cover

Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception Across the Color Line

Hardcover – Bargain Price, February 5, 2009

Price
$60.96
Format
Hardcover
Pages
384
Publisher
Penguin Press HC, The
Publication Date
Dimensions
6.28 x 1.3 x 9.32 inches
Weight
1.35 pounds

Description

From Booklist During America’s Gilded Age, Clarence King was a famous geologist, friend of wealthy, famous, and powerful men. He was a larger-than-life character whose intellect and wanderlust pushed him to survey far-flung regions of the western U.S. and South America and develop an abiding appreciation of non-Western culture and people. What his family and wealthy friends did not know was that for 17 years, King lived secretly as James Todd, a black Pullman porterxa0withxa0a black wife and mixed-race children residing in Brooklyn.xa0Devotedxa0to his mother andxa0half-siblings, restless and constantly in need of money, King relied on the largesse of his wealthy friends to help him support both families, never revealing his secret until he was near death. Sandweiss relies on letters, newspaper accounts, and interviews to chronicle the extraordinary story of an influential blue-eyed white man who passed for black at a time when passing generally went the other way.xa0An engaging portrait of a man who defied social conventions but could not face up to the potential ruin of an interracial marriage. --Vanessa Bush x93One of the best-known men of his time crosses the racial dividex97in reverse. Well-born traveler, scientist, explorer and writer Clarence King enjoyed great privilege. In the words of Western historian Sandweiss (American Studies/Amherst Coll.; Print the Legen: Photography and the American West, 2002, etc.), he went through life x91tempted by risk and attracted to the exotic but fearful of losing the social prerogatives that defined his place in the world.x92 When King returned from his globetrotting expeditions and settled down in New York to enjoy his fame as the bestselling author of Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada, he embarked on a romance with an African-American woman named Ada Copeland. A young nursemaid who moved north from Georgia in the mid-1880s, she apparently met King sometime in 1887 or early 1888 while he was out x91slumming.x92 That word, the author explains, denoted a class-crossing x91fashionable amusement,x92 according to the Saturday Evening Post. King was serious about his courtship of Copeland, but it was fraught with peril for all concerned, presenting threatening possibilities for blackmail on the one hand and abandonment on the other. He decided to present himself to her as a Pullman porter named James Todd, an invented identity that x91hinged not just on one lie but a cluster of related, duplicitous assertions.x92 As Sandweiss notes in this sturdy work, which blends elements of social and intellectual history with biography, thousands of light-skinned blacks in that era tried to pass for white, but the number of those who did the opposite must have been tiny. Yet King married Copeland and gave up his cherished social privileges. She had borne him five children, and he was on his deathbed in 1901, when he finally told her the truth. An intriguing look at long-held secrets, Jim Crow, bad faithx97and also, as Sandweiss observes, x91love and longing that transcends the historical bounds of time and place.x92x94x97 Kirkus Reviews x93Sandweiss ( Print the Legend ) serves a delicious brew of public accomplishment and domestic intrigue in this dual biography of the geologist-explorer Clarence King (1842-1901) and Ada Copeland (c. 1861-1964), a x91black, working-class womanx92 who was x91born a slave.x92 Rendered as fiction, this true tale, would seem quite implausible-x91a model son of Newport and one of the most admired scientists in America,x92 Clarence kept secret for 13 years his marriage to Ada and their apparently contented domestic life. He kept his patrician past and celebrated present concealed as well from his wife, who believed herself the wife of James Todd, a black Pullman porter. Sandweiss provides a fascinating account of King's x91extraordinary double life as an eminent white scientist and a black workingmanx92; Ada's struggle x91through the legal system to assert her rightful name, give her children their true familial history, and [unsuccessfully] claim the trust fund she believed to be hersx92; and rich insights into the x91distinctive American ideas about racex92 that allowed King to x91pass the other way across the color line, claiming African ancestry when he had none at all.x92 A remarkable feat of research and reporting that covers the long century from Civil War to Civil Rights, Passing Strange tells a uniquely American story of self- invention, love, deception and race.x94 x97 Publishers Weekly (starred review Feb.) x93 Passing Strange tells an astounding true story that would beggar most novelistsx92 imaginationsx85 A fine, mesmerizing account.x94 x97Janet Maslin, The New York Times x93[Sandweiss is] a curious, talented writerx85 she tells [Clarence Kingx92s story] with a scholarx92s rigor and a storytellerx92s vervex85 A sophisticated work of scholarship.x94 x97 Columbia Journalism Review x93Elaborate and incrediblex85 Remarkable.x94 x97 Bookpage x93Sandweiss serves a delicious brew of public accomplishment and domestic intriguex85 Fascinating.x94 x97 Publishers Weekly, starred review x93One of the best-known men of his time crosses the racial dividex97in reverse. As Sandweiss notes in this sturdy work, which blends elements of social and intellectual history with biography, thousands of light-skinned blacks in that era tried to pass for white, but the number of those who did the opposite must have been tiny. An intriguing look at long-held secrets.x94 x97 Kirkus Reviews x93Although Passing Strange reads like a suspenseful novel, it introduces us to a real American hero who lived a fascinating life on both sides of the color line. Sandweiss gives us a great lesson in American history that spans three generations.x94 x97Lawrence Otis Graham, author of Our Kind of People: Inside America's Black Upper Class x93 Passing Strange combines remarkable detective work, riveting storytelling, and the enduring question of race to fashion a most unusual but very American family saga about a famous white man and a heretofore unknown black woman. This book is a stunning achievement and example of just how deeply race is woven into our history, our imaginations, and our lives. Ada Copeland, who became a Todd, and then a King, rescued from obscurity by a talented historian, steals the show.x94 x97David W. Blight, Yale University, and author of A Slave No More: Two Men Who Escaped to Freedom, Including Their Narratives of Emancipation x93 Passing Strange is a masterful work of scholarship, and a deeply moving human story well told. Here is a riveting new narrative about a hidden history of American race relations, one filled with love, deception and utmost tragedy on both sides of the color line.x94 x97Neil Henry, Dean, Graduate School of Journalism, University of California at Berkeley, author of Pearl's Secret x93 Passing Strange is an irresistible story of love and deception beautifully told. But it is also a major contribution to our understanding of race, class, and gender. This biography of a secret interracial marriage also tells more about the social experience of big city lifex97New York in this casex97than a shelf full of urban histories.x94 x97Thomas Bender, New York University, author of The Unfinished City: New York and the Metropolitan Idea x93This is a wonderfully intelligent and haunting book about love and race and secrets and revelations. The secrets were personal, and closely guarded. In showing how and why they remained secret, Marni Sandweiss reveals much about the American past and the American present.x94 x97Richard White, Margaret Byrne Professor of American History, Stanford University, author of The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires and Republic in the Great Lakes Region, 1650-1815 x93If you drop the name Clarence King to almost any group of Americans today, it is unlikely they will have heard of him. This was not always so. During the final decades of the 19th century, King strode across the national scene as the scion of a prominent family and a Yale-trained geologist who mapped the American West. When he published a collection of vivid essays about his exploits, " Mountaineering in the Sierra Nevada ," the book was an instant hit. King gained further fame when he exposed a fraudulent scheme to sell interests in diamond fields whose purported value was greater than all the silver and gold in Nevada's celebrated Comstock Lode. By proving that the fields had been artificially "salted" with precious gems, he halted investments in the project, forestalling the economic bubble that would certainly have formed around it. For this he was nicknamed the King of Diamonds. "We have escaped, thanks to God and Clarence King, a great financial calamity," one newspaper editorial said. King often inspired such talk. He was a close friend of the writer Henry Adams and the diplomat John Hay, both of whom thought him the most talented man of their generation. Although he was born in Newport, R.I., to an old and distinguished family -- a paternal ancestor came to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1637 and his mother could trace her ancestry back to signers of the Magna Carta -- King had little money for most of his life. Instead, he cobbled together income from government appointments, writing projects and loans from rich friends to support himself as a gentleman scientist. But there was another side to King that neither the public nor his glittering friends knew, a side that Martha A. Sandweiss explores with great sensitivity, insight and painstaking research in "Passing Strange." The title of this immensely fascinating work provides a broad hint: King lived a racial double life. It would be hard to imagine a man more "white," meaning a man who was more thoroughly steeped in the privileges available only to whites of his class during the Gilded Age. But he was also secretly married to Ada Copeland, a black woman who had been born a slave in Georgia. Even more astounding, she knew nothing of his life as Clarence King. Indeed, she did not even know that he was Clarence King. From the day they met in Manhattan in 1887 or 1888 until 1901, when King died, she knew him as "James Todd." When they married in 1888, she became Ada Todd. And when their five children were born over the next 13 years, their last name was Todd, too. " Passing strange " -- Sandweiss's play-on-words meaning both exceptionally odd and passing for black -- captures the situation precisely. King invented an ingenious identity, posing as a light-skinned Pullman porter. Why a porter? First, it was well known that Pullman hired only black men as porters and waiters on the company's trains. So his wife and neighbors assumed that if the fair-complexioned, blue-eyed, blond- haired James Todd worked as a Pullman porter, he must be black. Second, the job provided an explanation for his frequent absences from home. And finally, stable employment was a way to attract young Ada. Clarence was 18 years older than she. He knew that she, like other black refugees from the South, was struggling. A Pullman porter would be able to provide a decent life for her and any children they might have -- and over the years, that is what he did. " Passing Strange " is ultimately a book about a couple, and Sandweiss has used her formidable skills as a researcher to reconstruct as much of their lives as possible. This was necessarily an uneven task. Much more is known about Clarence King than about Ada Copeland. Sandweiss succeeds admirably, however, in piecing together a portrait of a young woman who achieved stability in a domestic setup that would seem unendurable in today's world. One must remember the times and what Ada escaped when she came north and met her James Todd, under circumstances that remain mysterious. Perhaps the most powerful feature of this book is the way Sandweiss evokes the terrifying racial landscape of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Georgia of Ada's childhood was, quite simply, a deadly place for blacks. Terrorism was the order of the day; whites killed blacks almost at will. When schools were set up to teach black children to read, white townspeople occasionally burned them down. After enduring such a place, living with a somewhat wayward husband, who nevertheless loved her and provided for her, would seem rather easy. Raised by an abolitionist mother and grandmother, King romanticized blacks and believed, Sandweiss says, that racial mixing would "improve the vitality of the human race and create a distinctively American people." But his society friends lived by the racial order of the day. Although Adams and Hay were not the kind of men to burn down schools for black children, they might have cut their dear friend out of their lives had he been open about his relationship with a black woman. Instead, King strained mightily to hold on to the two worlds that he loved, terrified to lose either one. This story does not have a happy ending. King died penniless, wiped out by disastrous investments and poor career moves. There followed a long and very public court battle over a mysterious trust fund that he had supposedly left for Ada and their children. But King's talent for friendship stood him in good stead. His friends bought a house for Ada and provided the family with a monthly stipend, all anonymously; racial decorum had to be maintained. And, as Sandweiss notes, King's early biographers played along by pretty much writing Ada Todd out of her husband's life and treating their relationship as a distasteful lapse on his part. It was, of course, more than that. It was a tragedy, because all King wanted was to marry the woman he loved while maintaining the respect and amity of his white family and friends. That was too much to ask of his time. ·x97 Annette Gord on-Reed is the author of " The Hemingses of Monticello ." Martha A. Sandweiss received her Ph.D. in history from Yale University and worked for many years as a museum curator and director before becoming professor of American studies and history at Amherst College. She is the author of numerous works on western American history and the history of photography, including Print the Legend: Photography and the American West , winner of the Organization of American Historiansx92 Ray Allen Billington Award, and Laura Gilpin: An Enduring Grace and is the coeditor of the Oxford History of the American West . Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The secret double life of the man who mapped the American West, and the woman he loved
  • Clarence King is a hero of nineteenth century western history; a brilliant scientist and witty conversationalist, best-selling author and architect of the great surveys that mapped the West after the Civil War. Secretary of State John Hay named King “the best and brightest of his generation.” But King hid a secret from his Gilded Age cohorts and prominent family in Newport: for thirteen years he lived a double life—as the celebrated white explorer, geologist and writer Clarence King and as a black Pullman porter and steel worker named James Todd. The fair blue-eyed son of a wealthy China trader passed across the color line, revealing his secret to his black common- law wife, Ada Copeland, only on his deathbed. King lied because he wanted to and he lied because he had to. To marry his wife in a public way – as the white man known as Clarence King – would have created a scandal and destroyed his career. At a moment when many mixed-race Americans concealed their African heritage to seize the privileges of white America, King falsely presented himself as a black man in order to marry the woman he loved. Noted historian of the American West Martha Sandweiss is the first writer to uncover the life that King tried so hard to conceal from the public eye. She reveals the complexity of a man who while publicly espousing a personal dream of a uniquely American “race,” an amalgam of white and black, hid his love for his wife, Ada, and their five biracial children.
  • Passing Strange
  • tells the dramatic tale of a family built along the fault lines of celebrity, class, and race—from the “Todd’s” wedding in 1888, to the 1964 death of Ada King, one of the last surviving Americans born into slavery.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Dream Unfulfilled

Through hagiographical works of admirers of Clarence King, much has been written about the white diminutive man who was the country's first director of the Geological Survey, who mapped the West after the Civil War, who dined with presidents, who exposed a diamond hoax in 1872, and who had even penned a short story--"The Helmet of Mambrino." But not much has been written about the hoax or sorts King played on the black woman he married just as the country was about to enter the mauve decade, until author Martha Sandweiss brings to life the roiling mind of King in her marvelous book--"Passing Strange."

Written in equal parts historical information and a storytelling narrative, the author expertly deconstructs King's dream of a "United States of the United Races." She weaves a plausible narrative of King being attracted to "dusky" women well before he married his wife, Ada, who knew him as James Todd. Before he met Ada, King's affinity for swarthy women apparently led him to cast aside his white persona, one that allowed him to be friends with such Brahmin luminaries as Henry Adams and John Hay, to go "slumming" in the black neighborhoods of New York.

The author allows the reader to witness the poseur King's internal struggle to love Ada, but to protect his white family and white friends from his black family. One quickly wanders whether King's dream of a race-blind society is all talk. He never revealed his true name to his wife until on his death bed.

For me, the story rises to a crescendo when the reader begins to see how King's widow fights to bring to life the fact that she was married to the notable King, a man who had a voluminous mind. With Ada's insuperable fight that ultimately lands her in court 30 years after King's death where she seeks money for a trust fund King promised her, she gains a measure of recognition that she was indeed married to King. But one wonders whether that recognition would ever have be good enough for King. What would he think of the fact that his dream of a raceless society never caught on with his children and grandchildren?

To borrow a phrase from the book, the author captured the zeitgeist of King's deception in the flask of her translucent storytelling.

The storytelling was good, but so too was the author's historical scholarship. She took an aspect of life for the King family, and weaved a plausible scenario with an historical event. For instance, the author recounts a time King may have worried about his family's safety while he was checking out some mines in the upper Columbia River region of the Pacific Northwest in mid-June because a landlord-tenant dispute near the King home had led to a fatal shooting in late May.

Some critiques focus on the fact that the author cannot plug the holes in many unanswered questions. I disagree with that because you can only work the information that is available. Of course the story would be a great novel, but I am glad it wasn't because I learned the truth based on all of the information the author possessed.

The book could have been tighter in places. There were a few times the author provided too much tangential information. For instance, while nice to know I suppose, but did the reader really need to know about the backgrounds of two of Ada's lawyers--Everett Waring and J. Douglas Whetmore? But the author is a historian!

After reading the book, I am left with wondering whether there was anything King could have done to tell his story beyond his grave. Since he never fully immersed himself in his utopian idea of a raceless society, perhaps he could have committed his true feelings and intentions to writing, with instructions to those who administered his estate to reveal his writings, say 20, 30, 50, or even 100 years (like Mark Twain) after his death.

All in all a good book, and I recommend it.
9 people found this helpful
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written in the gilded, very hard to ingest

First, I am a history teacher and a teacher of ethnic studies. I began to read Passing Strange in order to better understand America 130 years ago, especially in regards to racial conventions.

Second, perhaps some historical scholars would enjoy this book, but 1/2 way through I just had to slam on the brakes! It isn't that I resent the construct or pretext of the book it's the terrible writing. Bridging the gap between scholarly expository and sublime story telling is an art form that Passing Strange lacks. It is droll and the writer rehashes years, and topics and is much more taken by the gilded than the vernacular of that age.

I wanted to like this book, I did like the part about King's early survey days (I live in California and King, Humboldt, Powell, J.S. Smith, Brewer and the like are fascinating studies in applied territorial expansionism). The writer lets the reader down when it comes to the human interaction between King and his wife...... this could have been a compelling story but the author was afraid to imagine and was more reliant on those long winded exchanges of letters that so typified Hayes and Adams and the like.

So, my recommendation is forget it, or just read the part about the survey because the part about social inter-racial and economically stratified interaction is about as smooth going down as a rye tack cracker without water.
5 people found this helpful
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Excellent book for those interested in the history of racial relations

Martha Sandweiss's excellent account of the life of Clarence King, first head of the U.S. Geodetic Survey and his crossover into the black culture is a valuable contribution to the history of both King and "cross over" exploits in the late 1800's/early 1900's. It is exceptional in the details and research the author has gleaned from little known sources of information. A good read for those who enjoy little known historical facts of our nation.
4 people found this helpful
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A Riveting Narrative

Whites passing as black is not as common an occurrence as the reverse. But it has occurred at various times through history and for a variety of reasons--ranging from political statement to eccentricity or a mere lark.

Clarence King wasn't making an obvious political statement or exercising a lark. A respected geologist and U.S. government official, King appears to have acted from a motive of love. In what had to be a difficult and stressful effort, he moved somewhat successfully for a long period of time in two vastly different worlds.

In one he was a debonair member of a privileged white class, the provider and protector of a widowed mother and other family, and the cohort of Henry Adams, a descendant of presidents, and Secretary of State John Hay. In the other, an African-American James Todd, a Pullman porter, the husband of Ada Copeland, a former slave from Georgia, and the father of their five children.

Philosophically, King believed America should abolish the concept of race. In an 1885 article in the North American Review he wrote, "when the composite elements of American populations are melted down into one race alloy, when there are no more Irish or Germans, Negroes and English, but only Americans, belonging to one defined American race," could there be a true and distinctive form of cultural expression.

Unfortunately, society was not ready for such an amalgamation and he was unable to live up to his own ideal. He may have loved Ada. But not enough to risk his position in the white world and the opinion of his family and friends. He didn't reveal his deception to Ada until he was near death. He assured her he was leaving a trust to support her and the children. Rather than giving her full details, he left the matter in the hands of white friends and she eventually had to go to court to ascertain her rights.

Ada lost that lengthy court battle and was depicted by the press and representatives of King's friends as a "black mammy" trying to take advantage of a wealthy white man. Still, she lived out her long life in dignity, surrounded by family and certain of King's love for her.

Sandweiss has written an important and moving book which inspires the hope one day we might move above the minor differences which separate us, amalgamating even beyond King's ideal to a truly "human race."
3 people found this helpful
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Miscast, But Worth the Time

This is not a love story. This is not a biography. This is a social history. I have been listening to the audio version, which I commend to those not fascinated by the minutae of 19th Century life. I can immagine that trying to read the written version would have had me hating it as much as some reviewers have.

That said, this is an oddly miscast tale. It involves a love story, about which we have no personal details. It involves a fascinating life, about which we have tantilizingly few details. However, the extensive social history used to reconstruct the love story and the life of Clarence King might be of interest to other fans of American history at the turn of the 20th Century.

We get insights into the early workings of the U.S. Geologic Survey; life in upper middle class New York City; race relations and racial social customs; and many other areas of historical interest. The period covered, between the Civil War and WWI, is not well known outside of historical re-enactment circles.

What we don't get is a story with any personal passion or drama. It's all pretty dry.

I might note that the author seems to take everything about Clarence King at an almost naive face value. It seems to me that he might have simply been a very smooth con artist, using self promotion and charm to make his way in a world without too much work or social advantages. His double life may have indeed been an escape from a demanding and perhaps overbearing mother, as well as a way to meet personal needs without incurring personal attachments.

To assume that he was tortured by physical problems, when he might have been merely a malingerer; to assume he struggled with debts, when he showed obvious signs of fiscal mismanagement and irresponsibility; and to assume that his marriage was a romantic personal relationship in an age when many marriages were for the purposes of convenience--he acquired a sexual refuge, she acquired financial security--over extends the reader's or listener's credulity. Yes, and there are a lot of long, overblown sentences, just as this last.

Of interest, but nothing to rave about. Oh, and I happen to be fascinated by historical minutae, which is why I gave it three stars, not two.
2 people found this helpful
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Racial cross-over

Well researched, fascinating story, but often a bit dry (perhaps too well researched as far as his scientific/expeditionary contributions). The idea of a "reverse" crossover (white to black) is interesting. Would like to have read more of the transcript of the trial.
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Passing Strange

I wanted to read this book being a woman of color it seems so sad that anyone would do this. Some people still do.
Thank you for having this book on your list.

Very good condition as always
1 people found this helpful
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Prompt delivery; item in good condition

I liked the above. It was a gift for my daughter.
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The book moves kind of slowly. I was not ...

The book moves kind of slowly. I was not familiar with the term Passing before I started reading this book. The topic is fascinating, but the presentation is a bit dry. Worth some spare time, but I am not sure I would set aside time to read this book.
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Five Stars

Arrived in good shape. As advertised. I'm happy.