On July 6, 1853, William Wells Brown published "Clotel", the first novel by an African American. An excerpt from the article:
"First published in London, Clotel; or, The President's Daughter (1853) subsequently underwent three title changes and substantial revisions for later editions, all released during the 1860s. Interestingly, Brown opens the novel with a shortened version of his narrative entitled, "Narrative of the Life and Escape of William Wells Brown"; however, he presents this account using third-person narration. In his distinct style, Brown readily blends elements from this narrative as well as various anecdotes, poetry, folk songs and ditties, vignettes of slave life, and even newspaper accounts into the novel. In promoting an abolitionist agenda, he also emphasizes the deleterious effects of slavery on the family. Drawing heavily upon the conventions of sentimental fiction, Clotel also is considered one of the earliest novels of passing—that is, a novel in which a character with African American heritage passes as white in order to escape slavery and/or enjoy greater opportunities. Brown's text includes a number of tragic mulatta (or mixed-race female) figures, although Currer, Althesa, and Clotel are the most prominent. The novel follows their three intersecting plot lines, which transpire in Natchez, Mississippi; New Orleans, Louisiana; and Richmond, Virginia.
Opening with the auction of Currer, the supposed mistress of Thomas Jefferson, and their two daughters, Clotel and Althesa, the novel immediately highlights the horrifying injustices rendered, particularly upon mixed-race individuals, under slavery. Whereas Clotel's white redeemer, Horatio Green, the son of a wealthy Richmond planter, purchases and marries her, both Althesa and Currer, fall into the hands of the notoriously villainous slave trader Dick Walker. Thus, while Clotel remains in relative comfort "for a time," Althesa and Currer are sold away from one another and into more degrading forms of bondage (p.212). Currer, relocated to Poplar Farm in Natchez, tragically dies from yellow fever just before Rev. John Peck's abolitionist-minded daughter, Georgiana, can emancipate her. Likewise Althesa is reduced to tragedy; despite Althesa's marriage to her white owner Henry Morton, their two daughters, upon the couple's untimely deaths, are sold into slavery.
After experiencing isolated happiness for a few blissful years, Clotel, like her mother and sister, meets a tragic end. She and Horatio initially live in secret harmony, joyously sharing in the birth of their daughter Mary; yet, Horatio's political ambitions permanently disrupt the union. Having never legally married Clotel (for mixed-race marriages were illegal in Virginia as in much of the South), Horatio soon becomes involved with a local politician's daughter. Abandoning his first wife and daughter, Horatio marries the white Gertrude, while still supporting and occasionally visiting Mary. True to the sentimental form (where increased happenstances or coincidences spell certain disaster), Clotel and Mary's existence are discovered by the new Mrs. Greene, who stumbles upon the cabin and is startled by Mary's close resemblance to her husband Horatio. Not surprisingly, she immediately demands Clotel's enslavement. With Clotel sold to Dick Walker, Gertrude takes Mary into her home as a house servant. Managing to escape while disguised as a man, the wronged mother returns to Virginia to rescue her child. Clotel, however, is discovered and imprisoned, due in large part to increased vigilance surrounding Nat Turner's slave insurrection (1831). Clotel escapes again, but rather than face further debasement, she flings herself into the Potomac River—only about a mile from the White House her father once inhabited.
In identifying Clotel and Althesa as illegitimate "heiresses" of Thomas Jefferson, Brown's invective commentary is self-evident. The vaunted president who authored the Declaration of Independence—with its assertion of shared human rights, "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"—was himself a slave owner. Moreover, Jefferson participated in the sexual exploitation of his female slaves. Though Brown does not explicitly foreground the violation implied in such a relationship, he does reveal both slave owner's indifference and the slaves' humiliations. What Brown does portray, then, throughout Clotel is the pervasive, recurring victimization of black women under slavery. Even individuals of mixed-race status who attempt to pass as white nevertheless suffer horrifically. Brown also exposes the insidious intersection of economic gain and political ambition—represented by founding fathers such as Jefferson and Horatio Green—that works to preserve this "peculiar" institution. Such marked inconsistency between slavery and the United States' founding ideals severely destabilizes the country's exalted place as the bastion of democracy."