- Edited by
- Greenleaf, Joseph, American
- Written by
- Wheatley Peters, Phillis, American, ca. 1753 - 1784
- Published by
- Greenleaf, Joseph, American
- Date
- December 1774
- Medium
- ink on paper with leather
- Dimensions
- H x W x D: 8 1/16 × 5 1/8 × 1/8 in. (20.5 × 13 × 0.3 cm)
- Caption
- Phillis Wheatley Peters (c. 1753 – 1784) was born in West Africa and captured by slave traders as a child, whereupon she was sold to John and Susanna Wheatley of Boston, Massachusetts. She was named after the slave ship on which she was transported to the Americas and the name of her enslavers, but her surname of Peters is that of the man she married in 1778—John Peters, a free man of color.
- The story of the discovery of her talent by the Wheatley family is oft told—they taught her to read and write, and by age fourteen, she had begun to write poetry that was soon published and circulated amongst the elites of late eighteenth century America and Great Britain. Her first and only volume of poetry, Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral (1773), was published in London with the assistance of wealthy abolitionists. Peters’ poetry brought her renown in abolitionist circles as proof of the humanity of those of African descent and the inhumanity of the institution of slavery.
- The Wheatleys manumitted Peters in 1773 under pressure from critics who saw the hypocrisy in praising Peters’ talent while keeping her enslaved. They died within a few years of this decision, and Peters soon met and married grocer John Peters. Her life afterwards was indicative of the troubled freedom of African Americans of the period, who were emancipated but not fully integrated into the promise of American citizenship. Peters was also affected by the loss of all three of her children—the birth of the last of whom caused her premature death at age 31 In 1784. Despite being feted as a prodigy while enslaved, the emancipated Peters struggled to find the support necessary for producing a second volume of poetry and her husband’s financial struggles forced her to find work as a scullery maid—the lowest position of domestic help. Posthumous publications of Peters’ poetry in various anthologies and periodicals solidified her image as a child poet for the benefit of abolitionist activism and African American cultural pride in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In the twenty-first century, the accumulation of this collection is a restoration of Peters the woman and the influence of her poetry and activism today.
- Description
- An edition of The Royal American Magazine for December, 1774, edited and published by Joseph Greenleaf in Boston. Pages 473 and 474 feature the poem "To a Gentleman in the Navy" by Phillis Wheatley. The poem is given a preface that begins [By particular request we insert the following Poem addressed, by Phillis, (a young African, of surprising genius) to a gentleman of the navy, with his reply.] and a second paragraph asserting that the poem is evidence that "uncultivated nature" is an issue of education on not racial descent. A response poem, titled "The Answer," runs on pages 474 and 475. Magazine pages numbered 444 through 480. Magazine was previously bound. Leather spine is slightly powdery and split; pages somewhat yellowed overall with minor foxing.
- Place printed
- Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States, North and Central America
- Collection title
- Phillis Wheatley Peters Collection
- Classification
- Books and Published Materials
- Movement
- Anti-slavery movements
- Abolitionist movement
- Topic
- Literature
- Poetry
- Slavery
- Women
- Credit Line
- Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
- Object number
- A2021.113.1.4
- Restrictions & Rights
- Public domain
- Proper usage is the responsibility of the user.




