31 pages 1 hour read

Charles W. Chesnutt

The Passing of Grandison

Fiction | Short Story | Adult | Published in 1899

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Background

Socio-Historical Context: Racial Tensions in the 19th-Century South

“The Passing of Grandison” was published in 1899, and takes place roughly 45 years earlier, in the mid-1850s, in Kentucky. The story is set several years after the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law, which was part of the larger Compromise of 1850, a package of five bills that attempted to cool tensions between the Northern and Southern United States. The law required that all escaped enslaved people be returned to the location they fled from and that citizens and officials in both the northern and southern United States cooperate. A previous Fugitive Slave Act was passed in 1783, but many free states made it difficult for the South to repatriate escapees or simply refused to convict escapees altogether. The new law heavily fined officials who flouted the law as well as any citizen who aided or fed an escapee, and it incentivized enforcement with hefty rewards. These rewards were so tempting that officials would sometimes claim that free Black citizens were escapees to gain the reward. Escaped families like Grandison’s would find much more security in Canada, which outlawed slavery in 1834.

As of 1899, when Chesnutt published this story, racial tensions in the United States were still high, and racism was still deeply embedded in American social and legal systems.