'A house built by slaves': How accurate was Michelle Obama's statement?
Fox News host Bill O'Reilly offered a fact-check of sorts of Mrs. Obama's comment that she 'wake[s] up every day in a house that was built by slaves,' a statement that historians say is true.
Fox News host Bill O'Reilly offered a fact-check of sorts of Mrs. Obama's comment that she 'wake[s] up every day in a house that was built by slaves,' a statement that historians say is true.
Michelle Obama鈥檚 stark invocation of the role of slaves in building the White House in a speech at the Democratic National Convention on Monday was the focus of a fact check of sorts by political commentator Bill O鈥橰eilly.
Mr. O鈥橰eilly, the host of Fox News鈥檚 鈥淭he O鈥橰eilly Factor,鈥 said Mrs. Obama had raised a 鈥渇ascinating鈥 point about American history when she said 鈥淚 wake up every day in a house that was built by slaves,鈥 but then seemed intent on softening the comment鈥檚 impact.
鈥淪laves that worked there were well fed and had decent lodgings provided by the government, which stopped hiring slave labor in 1802,鈥 he said on a segment of the show on Tuesday. 鈥淪o, Michelle Obama is essentially correct in citing slaves as builders of the White House, but there were others working as well.鈥
O鈥橰eilly likened himself to a history teacher, but his comments raised a question. With the role of enslaved African Americans in constructing the White House endorsed by historians, was a qualification for Obama鈥檚 statement really necessary?
The White House Historical Association notes that after efforts to recruit laborers from Europe to build what became the nation鈥檚 capital were unsuccessful, city commissioners 鈥渢urned to African American[s] 鈥 enslaved and free 鈥 to provide the bulk of labor that built the White House, the United States Capitol and other early government buildings.鈥
In what O鈥橰eilly appears to be referencing, the association notes that 鈥渢he slaves joined a work force that included local white laborers and artisans from Maryland and Virginia as well as immigrants from Ireland, Scotland and other European nations.鈥
Some researchers said Obama鈥檚 comments, which contrasted 鈥済enerations of people who felt the lash of bondage, the shame of servitude, the sting of segregation鈥 with the first lady鈥檚 daughters, 鈥渢wo beautiful intelligent black young women 鈥 playing with their dogs on the White House lawn鈥 were a necessary wakeup call for the role slavery played in the early years of the presidency.
鈥淚'm glad that she mentioned the role of enslaved Americans at the White House because she presented a larger audience with a history that most people are not being taught in our schools," Clarence Lusane, author of 鈥淭he Black History of the White House鈥 and chair of Howard University's political science department, told The Washington Post.
Professor Lusane noted in a 2011 interview with C-SPAN that many of America鈥檚 early leaders had an often-coercive relationship with the people they kept as slaves, the Post reports. President George Washington at one point attempted to organize the kidnapping of Oney Judge, a woman he had enslaved who managed to escape.
Ms. Judge, who was living as a free woman in New Hampshire at the time, successfully avoiding the kidnapping attempt and later learned to read, living into her 80s, according to Lusane.
The fact-checking site Politifact noted in 2009 that a report issued four years earlier by a Congressional task force shed further light on the often-brutal working conditions that surround the construction of Washington, DC. According to the report, the city commissioners issued "385 payments to slave owners between 1795 and 1801 for 鈥橬egro hire,鈥 a euphemism for the yearly rental of slaves,鈥 Politifact reports:
Mr. O鈥橰eilly referenced the payments cited in the Congressional report on his show Tuesday, adding a comment that, 鈥淭here were no illegal immigrants at that time. If you could make it here, you could stay here.鈥
On Twitter, the conservative commentator Michelle Malkin went further, arguing that since the White House underwent renovations between 1949 and 1951, 鈥淢ichelle Obama stretched the truth.鈥
But Professor Lusane notes that the role of enslaved African Americans in building the White House isn鈥檛 reflected anywhere at the building itself, unlike other historical sites, he told the Post. The first lady鈥檚 comments helped shed light on that history for a wider audience, he said.
鈥淲hat struck me was that her remarks were unique in terms of the perspective of a woman of color," he told the Post. 鈥滻t's hard to imagine someone who was not a woman of color giving that particular speech. She did it in a way that was perfectly toned, and聽she talks about the country addressing issues of difference without exacerbating those issues. Its a history lesson that is so valuable.鈥