Nicholas Said (1836-1882), international traveler, soldier, and educator. Mohammed Ali bin Said was born in Kukawa, the capital of the
Kanem-Bornu Empire, which included parts of present-day Chad, Nigeria, Libya,
Niger, and Cameroon. His father was a prominent military leader, while his
mother was the daughter of the leader of the Mandra people, and the two had
married in an effort to make peace between the two nations. The Kanem-Bornu kingdom
had once been one of the most powerful in West Africa, but by the 1800s it had
declined due to internal conflict, war with other African nations, and slavery.
For centuries Africa’s human resources were depleted by two international slave
trades: the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, which brought 12 million people to the
Americas between 1502 and 1888; and the Arab Slave Trade, which from 650 to the
early 1900s brought 11-18 million to North Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe. One
of those was Said, who around 1851 was gathering fruit in the woods when slave
traders captured him. He was purchased by an Arab merchant for the equivalent
of $10 and forced to walk across the Sahara Desert to Libya, nearly dying along
the way due to hunger, dehydration, and bleeding feet. He worked as a field
laborer, suffering constant beatings from his supervisor, before being sold to
a Turkish military officer who sent him to Tripoli. They later traveled to the
Islamic holy city of Mecca, seeing the Egyptian pyramids along the way and surviving
a shipwreck in the Mediterranean, jackals in the Ethiopian mountains, and robbers
in the Sudan. He was sold to another Turkish officer and worked as a domestic
servant in the Greek city of Smyrna and in Istanbul until he was sold again,
this time to a Russian diplomat who took him to Odessa and St. Petersburg,
where he was loaned to a prince who became his final master. The prince took
him to most of the major cities of Europe, including Moscow, Warsaw, Vienna, Munich,
Amsterdam, Milan, Rome, Paris, and London. These travels and Said’s natural
talent for languages led him to become fluent in Arabic, Turkish, Russian, Armenian,
German, Italian, French, English, and his native Kanuri and Mandara. He also
converted to Christianity and changed his first name to Nicholas. Although his
work as a servant was relatively mild, he became homesick and while in London
in 1859 persuaded the prince to free him.
In order to raise money for his trip home, he became the paid
servant for a Dutch businessman who was traveling to the Americas. Said had his
first experience with American racism in New York City while he and his employer
attended a Dutch Reformed Church, where he was forced to sit in the balcony.
They then traveled to the British West Indies and Haiti, and Said later
recalled that he was “exceedingly delighted to be in the country where the heroes
[of] the ‘Haitian Independence’ contended with the armies of Napoleon. I had
always admired the exploits of…negro leaders, whose heroism and military
talents are an honor to the African race.” While in Montreal, however, his
employer fled without paying their hotel bill, and the manager took all of Said’s
money and possessions as compensation. A local minister encouraged him to move
to Detroit, where “there were a great number of colored people,” and he used
his linguistic skills to work as a teacher for black families. Although more
than a half million African slaves had been brought to the U.S., the abolition
of the international slave trade in 1808 meant that by 1860 nearly all African
Americans had been born in America, so Said was one of the few of African
birth. He was further distinguished from other African Americans by his travels
and because neither he nor his ancestors had ever been enslaved in the
Americas. Nevertheless, like all other free blacks, law and custom denied him
the same rights and opportunities that whites enjoyed. He had also arrived just
before American tensions over slavery erupted into the Civil War. Although
African Americans were initially barred from joining the military, by 1863 the
army began forming black regiments collectively known as the United States
Colored Troops. Among the first of these regiments was the 55th
Massachusetts Infantry, which included black men from throughout the North. One
of those was Said, who joined “because all his folks seemed to be doing so.” Said’s
“curious and romantic history” and linguistic ability made him a popular
subject in abolitionist newspapers, one writing that his “acquisitions and
behavior go far to dispel ignorant and vulgar prejudices against the colored
race.” He organized a school for his fellow enlisted men and was promoted to
sergeant, making him one of the few black officers in the 55th, but
he quickly decided that years of working as a servant had made him unfit for
this position and requested a reduction back to private.
When the war ended, Said moved to the South. His reasons for doing
so were not recorded, but historian Douglas Egerton theorizes that he was more
comfortable in the black majority regions of the southeast coast. He taught in Georgia,
South Carolina, and Alabama and gave speaking tours to black audiences on
“Africa and its resources”; this frequent movement paid his bills and enabled
him to share his experiences, combat stereotypes about black people, and
continue his travels. He also decided to write an autobiography describing his
“adventures,” motivated by his “honest and ardent desire…to render myself
useful to my race wherever it may be.” When he opened a bank account in
Tallahassee to help fund this project, he identified his place of birth as
“Soudan” and his occupation as “Teacher,” but when asked where he lived, he
simply said “Traveler.” By then the clerk had realized who the new customer was
and wrote on the application “This is the wonderful Nickolas Said doubtless.”
In 1873 The Autobiography of Nicholas
Said; A Native of Bornou, Eastern Soudan, Central Africa was published. Its
introduction describes his wish to “show the world the possibilities that may
be accomplished by the African, and the hope that my humble example may
stimulate some at least of my people
to systematic efforts in the direction of mental culture and improvement.” The
book vividly describes the peoples, cultures, and physical environments, of the
many places he had traveled, but unlike other travelers’ biographies of the
time, it gave a great deal of attention to Africa and provided a black person’s
perspective on Europe, Asia, and the Americas. Nevertheless, some southern
white journalists accused him of lying on the grounds that a black man could
not have done what he did; one wrote, for instance, that “A semi-civilized
party of the African persuasion…is devoting his valuable time at present to
swindling the newspapers.” He eventually ceased lecturing and publishing, and little
information is available about his later life aside from the 1880 census, which
showed him teaching in Brownsville, Tennessee. Nicholas Said died two years
later, ending a life as perhaps the most widely traveled person of African
descent until the emergence of internationally known black celebrities and
scholars in the late 20th century.
©David Brodnax, Sr.