In the Driver's Seat: Elizabeth Keckley

Episode Summary

Elizabeth Keckley was born into slavery in 1818 in Virginia. She faced abuse and trauma throughout her childhood, including being separated from her parents. As an adult, she worked as a skilled seamstress for the family that enslaved her. In 1850, she married James Keckley, a man who presented as free but was actually a fugitive slave. In 1855, Keckley earned enough money through her sewing to buy freedom for herself and her son. She moved to Washington D.C. in 1860 to start over. There, Keckley became the personal dressmaker for Mary Todd Lincoln. She designed elegant custom dresses for the First Lady and they became close friends. During the Civil War, Keckley founded an organization to aid formerly enslaved people. In 1868, she published a memoir about her life and relationship with Mary Todd Lincoln that was controversial. As a result, Keckley lost clients but continued working as a seamstress. She later worked at Wilberforce University before moving back to D.C. where she lived modestly until her death in 1907 at age 89. Keckley overcame enslavement and adversity to become a successful businesswoman and confidant to the First Lady. Her life story is a remarkable tale of tenacity, achievement, and friendship.

Episode Show Notes

Elizabeth Keckley (1818-1907) was born enslaved and yet became a successful seamstress, civil activist, and author in Washington, DC.

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_05: Reboot your credit card with Apple Card. It gives you unlimited daily cash back that can earn 4.15% annual percentage yield when you open a savings account. A high yield, low effort way to grow your money with no fees. Apply for Apple Card now in the Wallet app on iPhone to start earning and growing your daily cash with savings today. Apple Card subject to credit approval. Savings is available to Apple Card owners subject to eligibility. Savings accounts by Goldman Sachs Bank USA. Member FDIC, terms apply. SPEAKER_02: Warning, the following message contains an app recommendation you won't be able to resist. SPEAKER_00: Girl, how do you keep getting all these things for free? Coffee, makeup, and now lunch? SPEAKER_03: You haven't heard of the Drop app? Drop is a free app that rewards you for shopping at places like Ulta, Adidas, and Sam's Club. I've already earned $100 this month. SPEAKER_10: Download the Drop app and get $5. Use invite code GETDROP222. SPEAKER_01: You and your dog are close, like watch each other go to the bathroom close, but you could be even closer with BarkBox. Every month BarkBox brings dogs and their humans together with original toys and delicious treats. Sign up now at BarkBox.com slash iHeart. SPEAKER_04: This Women's History Month Encyclopedia Wamanica is brought to you by Mercedes-Benz. Mercedes-Benz celebrates all women driving change and is indebted to those trailblazing women who punctuate the brand's history, like Bertha Benz and Evie Ruskvist. These women defied the odds to change the auto industry forever, and Mercedes-Benz applauds the tenacity and courage it takes to pave the road ahead. Listen along this month as we share the stories of inspiring women in charge and at the top of their fields, powered by Mercedes-Benz. Before we get started with today's episode, I wanna let you know that it contains mentions of sexual assault and child abuse. Hello, from Wonder Media Network, I'm Jenny Kaplan, and this is Encyclopedia Wamanica. All month, we're talking about women in the driver's seat. Today, we're talking about a savvy businesswoman and skilled seamstress who catered to the who's who of Washington, D.C. Unlike many of the women we've covered, she was not born into privilege. She was born enslaved and faced numerous traumatic setbacks. Still, with unwavering tenacity and perseverance, she found profound success and landed a coveted position in the White House. Here's the remarkable story of Elizabeth Keckley. Elizabeth Keckley was born into slavery in February 1818 in Dinwiddie County, Virginia. Her mother, Agnes, had been raped by her enslaver, Colonel Armistead Burwell. But Elizabeth's parentage did not lead to any special treatment. Agnes' husband, George Hobbs, who lived on a neighboring plantation, treated Elizabeth as his own, and George was the only father Elizabeth knew. Elizabeth's childhood was riddled with emotional and physical abuse. The earliest incident of documented abuse occurred at the age of five, when Elizabeth was badly whipped for accidentally knocking Burwell's infant daughter out of her cradle while trying to soothe her. When Elizabeth was around seven years old, Colonel Burwell told Elizabeth and Agnes that George Hobbs could come live with them. The women were giddy at the thought of all living together as a family. But then one day, the colonel brought them a letter that said George had to go work for his enslaver in the West. The family had two hours to say their goodbyes before never seeing each other again. Although life on the plantation was grueling, Elizabeth and Agnes had an advantage. Because Agnes was so well-liked by the family, they taught her how to read and write. Agnes passed that knowledge down to Elizabeth. It was only because of this skill that the two were able to send letters and correspond with George. Seven years after being separated from her father, Elizabeth was torn away from her mother and was forced to go work for Colonel Burwell's son and his wife in North Carolina. The young couple looked for every reason to punish and degrade Elizabeth. They sent her to work for a neighbor who repeatedly raped her for four years. This resulted in the birth of Elizabeth's only child in 1839, when Elizabeth was 21 years old. She named him George after her father. After 10 years in North Carolina, Elizabeth and her son George were called back to Virginia. At that point, Colonel Burwell had passed away, so Elizabeth, Agnes, and George lived with and worked for the colonel's daughter and her husband, Anne and Hugh Garland. The Garland family was in a lot of financial trouble and eventually moved their family as well as Elizabeth's to St. Louis, Missouri in 1847 in the hopes of finding prosperity. That didn't pan out, and the Garland's solution was to rent out Agnes's time as a day servant. But Agnes was older and her health was failing, so Elizabeth offered up another plan. She proposed she use a new plan, which would be to help her with her family's life. She used her seamstress skills learned from her mother as a means to provide for the family. Using Garland's connections to white society, Elizabeth established a name for herself. Through shaking hands and rubbing elbows with St. Louis's elite women, she built a loyal client network and took enough dress orders to support the Garland household. Her dresses were highly regarded as stylish, well-fitted, and very sophisticated. In 1850, James Keckley, who presented as a free Black man, asked for Elizabeth's hand in marriage. She initially declined his proposal because she knew that as an enslaved woman, any future children of hers would also be enslaved. After much back and forth, the Garland's agreed to allow Elizabeth to buy freedom for herself and George for $1,200, today's equivalent of $40,000. With the tangible price attached to her freedom, Elizabeth agreed to marry James. Because all the money from dressmaking went to the Garland family, it was very difficult for Elizabeth to raise $1,200. She decided to travel to New York to try to raise funds by appealing to abolitionists. Thankfully, the news of Elizabeth's efforts spread among her clients and they helped raise the necessary funds. On November 15th, 1855, Ann Garland signed the Emancipation Papers for Elizabeth and George's freedom. But Elizabeth and James' marriage fell apart when Elizabeth learned that James was not in fact free, but rather a fugitive slave. During the dissolution of their marriage, Elizabeth's mother died. Now with no ties to St. Louis, Elizabeth, a freed Black woman and successful seamstress, used her earnings to pay back everyone who had donated to her freedom fund and moved to Washington, D.C. in 1860 to start a new chapter. At first, Elizabeth struggled to get her footing in the nation's capital, as D.C. required her to obtain a work permit and a white person's declaration that she was a free woman. But she used her network to overcome those hurdles and to rebuild her business. One former client introduced her to Verena Davis, wife of Senator Jefferson Davis. Verena hired Elizabeth as her personal stylist and seamstress. Elizabeth's work caught the eye of Margaret MacLean, who commissioned Elizabeth to make a dress for her dinner with President Abraham Lincoln and First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln. Margaret was so pleased with Elizabeth's work that she recommended her to the First Lady. Impressed, Mary handpicked Elizabeth to serve as her dressmaker. Elizabeth made around 16 custom dresses for the First Lady each season. With her earnings, Elizabeth was able to open her own dress shop in the city and hire multiple seamstresses. Elizabeth's dresses were known for their extraordinary fit and Parisian-style elegance. They were the envy of women across Washington, D.C. Over time, Elizabeth and the First Lady became close friends and confidants. Elizabeth had a front row seat to the White House during the Civil War and to the intimate details of the President and First Lady's lives. Elizabeth and Mary also bonded over the shared trauma of recently losing a son, Willie Lincoln to typhoid fever, and George Keckley to the battle at Wilson's Creek. When President Lincoln was assassinated, Mary requested that Elizabeth be brought to her bedside as she grieved. Outside of work hours, Elizabeth founded the Contraband Relief Association in 1862 to aid formerly enslaved refugees flooding into D.C. during the war. The organization provided food, shelter, clothing, and medical assistance to recently freed slaves who were considered contrabands of war. It was an organization created by Black people for Black people. In 1866, Mary Todd Lincoln asked Elizabeth to help Mary sell some of her clothes to settle her debt. The two agreed to give Mary's clothes to a man named William Brady, who staged a public exposition to sell her wardrobe. This came at the cost of much criticism from the media and the general public. Elizabeth tried to support her friend by writing letters to prominent figures in the Black community, including Frederick Douglass, asking them to take up collections for Mary in their churches. But in time, their friendship strained. Elizabeth published Behind the Scenes or 30 Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House in 1868 with the intent of humanizing Mary and redeeming her character. But the memoir backfired, and many White Americans believed that Elizabeth broke social norms of race, class, and privacy. They used the memoir as a case for why Black women should not be educated. As a result of the publication, Elizabeth lost clients, and her dressmaking business never completely regained its footing. In 1892, Elizabeth moved to Ohio to head the Department of Sewing and Domestic Science Arts at Wilberforce University. A year later, she resigned after suffering a stroke. She moved back to D.C., where she lived a modest life supported by the pension from her son's Civil War service. Elizabeth died in 1907 at the age of 89 in the National Home for Destitute Colored Women and Children, which she helped found. Elizabeth's life tells the story of a true survivor and free Black woman who took agency over her life and achieved extraordinary success. All month, we're talking about women in the driver's seat. For more on why we're doing what we're doing, check out our newsletter, Womanica Weekly. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram at Encyclopedia Womanica. Special thanks to Liz Kaplan, my favorite sister and co-creator. Talk to you tomorrow. I wanna tell you about a new podcast I think you might like. In plain sight, Lady Bird Johnson is an eight-part series that recasts the former first lady as President Lyndon B. Johnson's closest advisor and most indispensable political partner. You'll hear Lady Bird in her own words as she documents through audio diaries some of the most critical and impactful moments in our nation's history. Hear how Lady Bird Johnson quietly shaped the future of our country and influenced the Johnson presidency on In Plain Sight, Lady Bird Johnson, wherever you listen to podcasts. SPEAKER_07: AT&T and Verizon lure you in with their best phone offers, only to lock you into a three-year phone contract, not at T-Mobile. Now, with T-Mobile's best Go 5G plans, upgrade when you want, every year or every two, you decide. Visit T-Mobile.com to take charge of your upgrades. SPEAKER_06: Get two-year financing on Go 5G Plus and Next. One-year upgrade on Go 5G Next requires financing a new qualifying device and upgrading in good condition after six plus months with 50% paid off. Upgrade ends financing in any promo credits. See T-Mobile.com. SPEAKER_08: When you visit a state as big and diverse as Texas, there are a million different trips you can take. Let's say you've got an appetite for white water kayaking. You can get your own. So this is why they call it Devil's River. Trip to Texas. Or maybe you have an actual appetite. I'll take a pint of brisket, six ribs, three links of sausage and a piece of pecan pie. Trip to Texas. Go to TravelTexas.com slash get your own for the only trip to Texas that matters. Yours. SPEAKER_09: Do you hear it? The clock is ticking. It's time for the new season of 60 Minutes. The CBS News Sunday Night Tradition is back for its 56th season with all new big name interviews, hard hitting investigations and epic adventures. No place, no one, no story is off limits. And you'll always learn something new. It's time for 60 Minutes. New episode airs Sunday, September 24th on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.