BROWN, John - A Stan Klos Biography
BROWN, John, of
Osawatomie, abolitionist, born in Torrington, Connecticut, 9 May, 1800;
executed in Charlestown, Virginia, 2 December, 1859; buried on his farm near
Lake Placid, in the Town of North Elba, New York. His ancestor, Peter Brown,
came over with the historic party in the "Mayflower" in 1620. Peter was
unmarried, by trade a carpenter, and drew his house-lot in Plymouth with the
rest; but he removed soon afterward, with Bradford, Standish, and Winslow, to
the neighboring settlement of Duxbury.
He was twice married, and died early. One of his
descendants in the main line was a Captain John Brown, of the Connecticut
militia, who died of disease in the revolutionary service in 1776. This
revolutionary captain married Hannah Owen, of Welsh origin ; and their son, Owen
Brown, married Ruth Mills, who was of Dutch descent; so that John Brown of
Osawatomie, their son, had a mingling of the blood of three races in his veins,
resulting in a corresponding mixture of strong qualities.
Owen Brown left a brief autobiography, which begins by
saying: "My life has been of little worth, mostly filled up with vanity." Then
he goes on to describe, with some fullness, this career of frivolity, which will
seem to most readers grave and decorous to the last degree. The most interesting
entry is the following: "In 1800, May 9, [my son] John was born, one hundred
years after his great-grandfather; nothing else very uncommon;" and he adds, in
tranquil ignorance of the future:" We lived in peace with all mankind, so far as
I know."
How far the parent would have approved the stormy career of
the son is now matter of inference only; but we have it in Owen Brown's own
declaration that he was one of that early school of abolitionists whom Hopkins
and Edwards enlightened; and he apparently took part in the forcible rescue of
some slaves claimed by a Virginia clergyman in Connecticut in 1798, soon after
that state had abolished slavery. The continuous anti-slavery devotion of the
whole family, for three generations, was a thing almost unexampled.
Mr. Sanborn has preserved verbatim a most quaint and
graphic fragment of autobiography, written by John Brown, of Osawatomie, in
1859. In this he records with the utmost frankness his boyish pursuits and
transgressions; how at the age of four he stole three brass pins, and at the age
of five removed with his parents to Ohio, where he grew familiar with the
Indians, who were then dwelling all around them. He says of himself:
"John was never quarrelsome, but was exceedingly fond of
the harshest and roughest kind of plays, and could never get enough [of] them.
Indeed, when for a short time he was sometimes sent to school, the opportunity
it offered to wrestle and snow-ball and run and jump and knock off old seedy
wool hats, offered to him almost the only compensation for the confinement and
restraint of school."
In this boyish combativeness, without personal
quarrelsomeness, we see the quality of the future man. He further records that
in boyhood his great delight was in going on responsible expeditions, and by the
age of twelve he was often sent a hundred miles into the wilderness with cattle.
This adventurous spirit took no military direction; he was disgusted with what
he heard of the war of 1812, and for many years used to be fined for refusing to
do militia duty.
He was very fond of reading, and familiar with every
portion of the Bible; but he never danced, and never knew one card from another.
Staying in a house where there was a slave-boy almost his own age, and seeing
this boy ill-treated--even beaten, as he declares, with an iron fire-shovel--he
became, in his own words, "a most determined abolitionist," and was led "to
declare, or swear, eternal war with slavery."
From the fifteenth to the twentieth years of his age he
worked as a farmer and currier, chiefly for his father, and for most of the time
as foreman. He then learned surveying, and followed that for a while, afterward
gratifying his early love for animals by becoming a shepherd.
Meanwhile he married, as he says, "a remarkably plain, but
neat, industrious, and economical girl, of excellent character, earnest piety,
and good practical common sense," who had, he asserts, a most powerful and good
influence over him. This was Dianthe Lusk, a widow, and they had seven children.
His second wife was Mary Anne Day, by whom he had thirteen
children, and who survived him twenty-five years, dying in San Francisco in
1884. She also was a woman of strong and decided character; and though among the
twenty children of the two marriages eight died in early childhood, the
survivors all shared the strong moral convictions of their father, and the whole
family habitually lived a life of great self-denial in order that his purposes
might be carried out.
The contest for Kansas in 1855-'6 between the friends of
freedom and those of slavery was undoubtedly, as it has since been called, the
skirmish-line of the civil war. It was there made evident--what an anti-slavery
leader so conspicuous as Joshua R. Giddings had utterly refused to believe--that
the matter was coming to blows. The condition of affairs was never better stated
than in the Charleston "Mercury" by a young man named Warren Wilkes, who had
commanded for a time a. band of so-called southern "settlers" in Kansas. He
wrote in the spring of 1856:
"If the south secures Kansas, she will extend slavery
into all territories south of the fortieth parallel of north latitude to the Rio
Grande; and this, of course, will secure for her pent-up institution of slavery
an ample outlet, and restore her power in congress. If the north secures Kansas,
the power of the south in congress will be gradually diminished, and the slave
property will become valueless. All depends upon the action of the present
moment."
Here was a point on which young Wilkes on the one side, and
John Brown on the other, were absolutely agreed; and each went to work in his
own way to save Kansas to his side by encouraging immigration from their
respective regions. We can, at this distance of time, admit that this was within
the right of each; but the free-state men went almost wholly as bona-fide
settlers, while numbers of those who went from Missouri, Virginia, and South
Carolina viewed the enterprise simply as a military foray, without intending to
remain. It was also true that the latter class, coming from communities then
more lawless, went generally armed; while the free-state men went at first
unarmed, afterward arming themselves reluctantly and by degrees.
The condition of lawlessness that ensued was undoubtedly
demoralizing to both sides; it was to a great extent a period of violence and
plunder--civil war on a petty scale; but the original distinction never wholly
passed away, and the ultimate character of the community was fortunately shaped
and controlled by the free-state settlers. However it might be with others, for
John Brown the Kansas contest was deliberately undertaken as a part of the Great
War against slavery. He went there with more cautious and far-reaching purposes
than most others, and he carried out those purposes with the strength of a
natural leader.
As early as 1834, by a letter still in existence, he had
communicated to his brother Frederick his purpose to make active war upon
slavery, the plan being then to bring together some "first-rate abolitionist
families" and undertake the education of colored youth.
"If once the Christians of the free states would set to
work in earnest teaching the blacks, the people of the slave-holding states
would find themselves constitutionally driven to set about the work of
emancipation immediately."
This letter was written when he was postmaster under
President Jackson, at Randolph, Pennsylvania, and was officially franked by
Brown, as was then the practice. When we consider what were Jackson's views as
to antislavery agitation, especially through the mails, it is curious to
consider what a firebrand he was harboring in one of his own post-offices.
It appears from this letter and other testimony that Brown
at one time solemnly called his older sons together and pledged them, kneeling
in prayer, to give their lives to anti-slavery work. It must be remembered that
Prudence Crandall had been arrested and sent to jail in Connecticut, only the
year before, for doing, in a small way, what Brown now proposed to do
systematically. For some time he held to his project in this form, removing from
Pennsylvania to Ohio in 1835-'6, and from Ohio to Massachusetts in 1846,
engaging in different enterprises, usually in the wool business, but always
keeping the main end in view.
For instance, in 1840 he visited western Virginia to survey
land belonging to Oberlin College, and seems to have had some plan for
colonizing colored people there. At last, in 1846, on the anniversary of West
India emancipation, Oerrit Smith, a great land-owner in New York state, offered
to give a hundred thousand acres of wild land in northern New York to such
colored families, fugitive slaves, or others as would take them in small farms
and clear them. It was terribly hard region into which to invite those children
of the south: six months of winter and no possibility of raising either wheat or
Indian corn.
Brown convinced himself, nevertheless, that he could be of
much use to the colored settlers, and in 1848-'9 purchased a farm from Mr. Smith
and removed the younger part of his family to North Elba, which was their home
until his death. His wife and young children lived there in the greatest
frugality, voluntarily practiced by them all for the sake of helping others.
He, meanwhile, often absented himself on anti-slavery
enterprises, forming, for instance, at Springfield, Massachusetts, his former
home, a "League of Gileadites," pledged to the rescue of fugitive slaves. In one
of his manuscript addresses to this body he lays down the rule, "Stand by one
another and by your friends while a drop of blood remains; and be hanged if you
must, but tell no tales out of school." This was nearly nine years before his
own death on the scaffold.
In 1854 five of Brown's sons, then resident in Ohio, made
their arrangements to remove to Kansas, regarding it as a desirable home, where
they could exert an influence for freedom; but they were so little prepared for
an armed struggle that they had among them only two small shot-guns and a
revolver. They selected claims eight or ten miles from Osawatomie, and their
father, contrary to his previous intention, joined them there in October, 1855.
In March of that year the first election for a territorial constitution had
taken place. Thousands of Missourians, armed with rifles, and even with cannon,
had poured over the border, and, although less than a thousand legal votes were
thrown in the territory, more than six thousand went through the form of voting.
This state of things continued through that year and the
next, and the present writer saw an election precisely similar in the town of
Leavenworth, in the autumn of 1856. Hostilities were soon brought on by the
murder and unlawful arrest of men known to be opposed to slavery. The Brown
family were mustered in as Kansas militia by the free-state party, and turned
out to defend the town of Lawrence from a Missourian invasion, which was
compromised without bloodshed. A few months later Lawrence was attacked and
pillaged. Other murders took place, and a so-called grand jury indicted many
free-state men, including in the indictment the "Free State Hotel" in Lawrence.
Two of Brown's sons were arrested by United States cavalry,
which, at this time, Pierce being president, acted wholly with the pro-slavery
party. John Brown, Jr., the oldest, was driven on foot at the head of a cavalry
company, at a trot, for nine miles to Osawatomie, his arms being tied behind
him. This state of things must be fully remembered in connection with the
so-called "Pottawatomie Massacre," which furnishes, in the opinion of friends
and foes, the most questionable incident in Brown's career.
This occurrence took place on 25 May, 1856, and consisted
in the deliberate assassination of five representatives of the pro-slavery party
at night, they being called from their beds for the purpose. It was done in
avowed retribution for the assassination of five free-state men, and was
intended to echo far beyond Kansas, as it did, and to announce to the
slave-holding community that blood for blood would henceforth be exacted in case
of any further invasion of rights.
It undoubtedly had that effect, and though some even in
Kansas regarded it with disapproval, it is certain that leading citizens of the
territory, such as Governor Robinson, themselves justified it at the time.
Robinson wrote, as late as February, 1878: " I never had much doubt that Capt.
Brown was the author of the blow at Pottawatomie, for the reason that he was the
only man who comprehended the situation, and saw the absolute necessity of some
such blow, and had the nerve to strike it." Brown himself said, a few years
later: "I knew all good men who loved freedom, when they became better
acquainted with the circumstances of the case, would approve of it."
It is, nevertheless, probable that the public mind will be
permanently divided in judgment upon this act; just as there is still room,
after centuries have passed, for two opinions as to the execution of Charles I
or the banishment of Roger Williams.
Much, of course, turns upon the actual character of the
five men put to death--men whom the student will find painted in the darkest
colors in Mr. Sanborn's life of John Brown, and in much milder hues in Mr.
Spring's "History of Kansas." The successive phases of sentiment on the whole
subject may be partly attributed to the fact that the more pacific Kansas
leaders, such as Robinson and Pomeroy, have happened to outlive the fighting
men, such as Brown, Lane, and Montgomery; so that there is a little disposition
just now to underrate the services of the combatants and overrate those of the
noncombatants.
As a matter of fact, there was in the territory at the time
no noticeable difference of opinion between those two classes; and it is quite
certain that slavery would have triumphed over all legal and legislative skill
had not the sword been thrown into the balance, even in a small way. The largest
affairs in which Brown and his sons took part, "Black Jack" and "Osawatomie,"
for instance, seem trifling amid the vast encounters of the civil war; but these
petty skirmishes, nevertheless, began that great conflict.
The purpose that finally took John Brown to Virginia had
doubtless been many years in his mind, dating back, indeed, to the time when he
was a surveyor in the mountains of that state, in early life. Bishop Meade says,
in his "Old Churches and Ministers of Virginia," that he wrote the book in view
of a range of mountains which Washington had selected as the final stronghold of
his revolutionary army, should he be defeated in the contest with England; and
it was these same mountains which John Brown regarded as having been designed by
the Almighty, from all eternity, as a refuge for fugitive slaves.
His plan for his enterprise varied greatly in successive
years, and no doubt bore marks of the over-excited condition of his mind; but as
he ordinarily told it to the few with whom he had consulted outside of his own
band, there was nothing incoherent or impracticable about it; it was simply the
establishment on slave soil of a defensible station for fugitive slaves, within
the reach of the Pennsylvania border, so that bodies of slaves could hold their
own for a time against a superior force, and could be transferred, if necessary,
through the free states to Canada.
Those who furnished him with arms and money at the north
did so from personal faith in him, and from a common zeal for his objects,
without asking to know details. He had stated his general plan to Douglass and
others in 1847, and in 1857 had established at Tabor, in Iowa, a town peculiarly
friendly to the free-state men during the Kansas troubles, a sort of school of
military drill under the direction of a Scottish adventurer, Hugh Forbes, who
attempted to betray him.
He afterward had a similar school at Springfield, Iowa, and
meanwhile negotiated with his eastern friends for funds. He had already in his
hands two hundred rifles from the national Kansas committee; and although these
were really the property of George L. Stearns, of Medford, Massachusetts,
representing a small part of the $10,000 which that gentleman had given to make
Kansas free, yet this was enough to hamper in some degree the action of his
Boston allies.
Their position was also embarrassed by many curious,
rambling letters from his drill-master, Forbes, written to members of congress
and others, and disclosing what little he knew of the plans. This led the
eastern allies to insist--quite unnecessarily, as it seemed to one or two of
them--on a postponement for a year of the whole enterprise.
On 3 June, 1858, Brown left Boston, with $500 in gold and
with liberty to keep the Kansas rifles. Most of his friends in the eastern
states knew nothing more of his movements until it was announced that he had
taken possession of the United States arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia. A
few, however, were aware that he was about to enter on the execution of his
plans somewhere, though they did not know precisely where.
Late in June, 1859, Brown and several of his men appeared
in the vicinity of Harper's Ferry, and soon afterward hired a small farm, which
they occupied. Then his daughter Anne, a girl of fifteen, together with his
daughter-in-law, wife of Oliver Brown, appeared upon the scene and kept house
for them. There they lived for many weeks, unsuspected by their neighbors, and
gradually receiving from Ohio their boxes of rifles and pistols, besides a
thousand pikes from Connecticut.
In August he was visited by Frederick Douglass, to whom he
disclosed his plan of an attack on Harper's Ferry, which Douglass opposed,
thinking it would not really be favorable to his ultimate object of reaching the
slaves. But he persevered, and finally began his operations with twenty-two men,
besides himself. Six of these were colored; and it may be added that only six of
the whole party escaped, and only one of these is now (September, 1886)
living--Owen Brown.
On Sunday evening, 16 October, 1859, Brown mustered
eighteen of his men--the rest having been assigned to other duties--saying:
"Men, get on your arms; we will proceed to the Ferry." It was a cold, dark
night, ending in rain. At half-past ten they reached the armory-gate and broke
it in with a crow-bar, easily overpowering the few watchmen on duty. Before
midnight Brown's men, quietly patrolled the village without firing a gun, and
six men had been sent to bring in certain neighboring planters, with their
slaves. He had taken several leading citizens prisoners, as hostages, but had
allowed a railway train to go through northward, which of course carried the
news.
The citizens of the town gradually armed themselves, and
some shots were exchanged, killing several men; and before night Brown, who
might easily have escaped, was hopelessly hemmed in. Col. Robert E. Lee,
afterward well known in history, arrived from Washington at evening with a
company of United States marines, and all was practically over. Brown and his
men, now reduced to six, were barricaded in a little building called the
engine-house, and were shot down one by one, thousands of bullets, according to
a Virginia witness, having been imbedded in the walls.
Brown constantly returned the fire, refusing to surrender;
but when some of his men aimed at passers-by who had taken no part in the
matter, he would stop them, according to the same Virginia witness, Capt.
Dangerfield, saying : "Don't shoot ! That man is unarmed." Col. Washington,
another Virginia witness, has testified to the extraordiary coolness with which
Brown felt the pulse of his dying son, while holding his own rifle with the
other hand, and encouraging his men to be firm. All this time he was not
recognized, until Lieutenant J. E. Stuart, who had known him in Kansas, called
him by his name. When he was finally captured, his two sons were dead, and he
himself was supposed to be dying.
No one will ever be able exactly to understand that mood of
John Brown's mind, which induced him to remain in Harper's Ferry to certain
death. His reason for taking possession of the town and arsenal was undoubtedly
a desire to alarm the country at large, and not merely secure arms, but attract
recruits to his side, after he should have withdrawn.
Why did he remain? Those who escaped from the terrible
disaster could not answer. Brown himself is reported as saying that it was
preordained; that if he had once escaped, he knew the Virginia mountains too
well to be captured; but that he for the first time lost command of himself and
was punished for it. Governor Wise, of Virginia, with several hundred men,
reached Harper's Ferry by the noon train of 18 October, and Brown held
conversations, which have been fully reported, with him and others. Governor
Wise said of him:
"They are mistaken who take Brown to be a madman. He is
a bundle of the best nerves I ever saw, cut and thrust and bleeding and in
bonds. He is a man of clear head, of courage, fortitude, and simple
ingenuousness. He is cool, collected, indomitable; and it is but just to him to
say that he was humane to his prisoners, and he inspired me with great trust in
his integrity as a man of truth."
This opinion, coming from the man whose immediate duty it
was to see him tried and executed as a felon, may be regarded as a final and
trustworthy estimate.
John Brown was tried before a Virginia court, legal counsel
going to him from Massachusetts. All thought of a rescue was precluded by strong
messages of prohibition sent by him. The proposal to send his wife to him, this
being planned partly in the hope that she might shake his determination, was
also refused, and she did not see him until after his trial. He was sentenced to
death by hanging, and this sentence was executed 2 December, 1859.
On the day of his death he handed to one of his guards a
paper on which he had written this sentence:
"Charlestown, Virginia, December 2, 1859. I, John Brown,
am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged
away but with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without
very much bloodshed it might be done."
Within eighteen months this prophecy was fulfilled, and
many a northern regiment, as it marched to the seat of war, sang that which will
always remain, more than any other, the war-song of the great conflict: "John
Brown's body lies a smoldering in the grave, But his soul is marching on."
His bearing on the scaffold, under exceptionally trying
circumstances, evinced wonderful fortitude. After the sheriff had told him that
all was ready, and had adjusted the rope and the cap, ten or fifteen minutes
passed, while the military escort formed a hollow square. During this painfully
long interval, John Brown, blindfolded, stood alone erect, like a statue
unsupported. An eyewitness who was very near him could not detect a tremor. A
further delay occurred while the sheriff descended the steps of the scaffold,
but Brown never wavered, and died apparently with muscles and nerves still
subject to his iron will.
His career is remarkable for its dramatic quality, for the
important part he played in events preliminary to the great civil war, and for
the strong and heroic traits shown in his life and death. He belonged to a class
of men whose permanent fame is out of all proportion to their official
importance or contemporary following; and indeed he represents a type more akin
to that seen among the Scottish covenanters of two centuries ago than to
anything familiar in our own days.
With John Brown were executed Copeland, Green, Cook, and
Coppoc, of his company. Stephens and Hazlett were put to death in the same way
later. An effort for their rescue, organized in Boston, with men brought mainly
from Kansas, under Capt. Montgomery as leader, proved abortive.
In regard to the bearing of John Brown's enterprise upon
subsequent history, it is enough if we recall the fact that a select committee
of the United States senate investigated the whole affair, and the majority,
consisting of John M. Mason, Jefferson Davis, and Graham N. Fitch, submitted a
report in which occurs the following passage:
"The invasion (to call it so) by Brown and his followers
at Harper's Ferry was in no sense of that character. It was simply the act of
lawless ruffians, under the sanction of no public or political
authority--distinguishable only from ordinary companies by the ulterior ends in
contemplation by them, and by the fact that the money to maintain the
expedition, and the large armament they brought with them, had been contributed
and furnished by the citizens of other states of the union, under circumstances
that must continue to jeopardize the safety and peace of the southern states,
and against which congress has no power to legislate. If the several states,
whether from motives of policy or a desire to preserve the peace of the union,
if not from fraternal feeling, do not hold it incumbent on them, after the
experience of the country, to guard in future by appropriate legislation against
occurrences similar to the one here inquired into, the committee can find no
guarantee elsewhere for the security of peace between the states of the union."
It is a sufficient commentary on the implied threat with
which this report concludes, to point out that two of its three signers, within
the year following, became leaders of the movement for a forcible division of
the union. In view of this fact, it is impossible to doubt that the enterprise
of John Brown was an important link in the chain of historical events.
The life of Capt. Brown has been at least three times
written--by James Redpath, by Richard Webb, of Dublin, and by Frank Sanborn. The
last named is the fullest work, and has the approval of John Brown's family; it
is the result of much personal research, and is, with some defects of
arrangement, a mine of information in regard to one of the most remarkable men
of his time.
Edited Appletons Encyclopedia by John Looby, Copyright © 2001 VirtualologyTM
BROWN, John, of Osawatomie, abolitionist, born in Torrington, Connecticut, 9 May, 1800; executed in Charlestown, Virginia, 2 December, 1859. His ancestor, Peter Brown, came over with the historic party in the "Mayflower" in 1620. Peter was unmarried, by trade a carpenter, and drew his house-lot in Plymouth with the rest; but he removed soon afterward, with Bradford, Standish, and Wins-low, to the neighboring settlement of Duxbury. He was twice married, and died early. One of his descendants in the main line was a Captain John Brown, of the Connecticut militia, who died of disease in the revolutionary service in 1776. This revolutionary captain married Hannah Owen, of Welsh origin ; and their son, Owen Brown, married Ruth Mills, who was of Dutch descent ; so that John Brown of Osawatomie, their son, had a mingling of the blood of three races in his veins, resulting in a corresponding mixture of strong qualities. Owen Brown left a brief autobiography, which begins by saying: "My life has been of little worth, mostly filled up with vanity." Then he goes on to describe, with some fullness, this career of frivolity, which will seem to most readers grave and decorous to the last degree. The most interesting entry is the following: "In 1800, May 9, [my son] John was born, one hundred years after his great-grandfather; nothing else very uncommon"; and he adds, in tranquil ignorance of the future:" We lived in peace with all mankind, so far as I know." How far the parent would have approved the stormy career of the son is now matter of inference only; but we have it in Owen Brown's own declaration that he was one of that early school of abolitionists whom Hopkins and Edwards enlightened; and he apparently took part in the forcible rescue of some slaves claimed by a Virginia clergyman in Connecticut in 1798, soon after that state had abolished slavery. The continuous anti-slavery devotion of the whole family, for three generations, was a thing almost unexampled. Mr. Sanborn has preserved verbatim a most quaint and graphic fragment of autobiography, written by John Brown, of Osawatomie, in 1859. In this he records with the utmost frankness his boyish pursuits and transgressions; how at the age of four he stole three brass pins, and at the age of five removed with his parents to Ohio, where he grew familiar with the Indians, who were then dwelling all around them. He says of himself: "John was never quarrelsome ;. but was exceedingly fond of the harshest and roughest kind of plays; and could never get enough [of] them. Indeed, when for a short time he was sometimes sent to school, the opportunity it offered to wrestle and snow-ball and run and jump and knock off old seedy wool hats, offered to him almost the only compensation for the confinement and restraint of school."
In this boyish combativeness, without personal quarrelsomeness, we see the quality of the future man. He further records that in boyhood his great delight was in going on • responsible expeditions, and by the age of twelve he was often sent a hundred miles into the wilderness with cattle. This adventurous spirit took no military direction; he was disgusted with what he heard of the war of 1812, and for many years used to be fined for refusing to do militia duty. He was very fond of reading, and familiar with every portion of the Bible; but he never danced, and never knew one card from another. Staying in a house where there was a slave-boy almost his own age. and seeing this boy ill-treated--even beaten, as he declares, with an iron fire-shovel--he became, in his own words, "a most determined abolitionist," and was led "to declare, or swear, eternal war with slavery." From the fifteenth to the twentieth years of his age he worked as a farmer and currier, chiefly for his father, and for most of the time as foreman. He then learned surveying, and followed that for a while, afterward gratifying his early love for animals by becoming a shepherd. Meanwhile he married, as he says, "a remarkably plain, but neat, industrious, and economical girl, of excellent character, earnest piety, and good practical common sense," who had, he asserts, a most powerful and good influence over him. This was Dianthe Lusk, a widow, and they had seven children. His second wife was Mary Anne Day, by whom he had thirteen children, and who survived him twenty-five years, dying in San Francisco in 1884. She also was a woman of strong and decided character; and though among the twenty children of the two marriages eight died in early childhood, the survivors all shared the strong moral convictions of their father, and the whole family habitually lived a life of great self-denial in order that his purposes might be carried out.
The contest for Kansas in 1855-'6 between the friends of freedom and those of slavery was undoubtedly, as it has since been called, the skirmish-line of the civil war. It was there made evident--what an anti-slavery leader so conspicuous as Joshua R. Giddings had utterly refused to believe --that the matter was coming to blows. The condition of affairs was never better stated than in the Charleston "Mercury" by a young man named Warren Wilkes, who had commanded for a time a. band of so-called southern "settlers" in Kansas. He wrote in the spring of 1856 : "If the south secures Kansas, she will extend slavery into all territories south of the fortieth parallel of north latitude to the Rio Grande; and this, of course, will secure for her pent-up institution of slavery an ample outlet, and restore her power in congress. If the north secures Kansas, the power of the south in congress will be gradually diminished, and the slave property will become valueless. All depends upon the action of the present moment." Here was a point on which young Wilkes on the one side, and John Brown on the other, were absolutely agreed; and each went to work in his own way to save Kansas to his side by encouraging ira-migration from their respective regions. We can, at this distance of time, admit that this was within the right of each; but the free-state men went almost wholly as bona-fide settlers, while numbers of those who went from Missouri, Virginia, and South Carolina viewed the enterprise simply as a military foray, without intending to remain. It was also true that the latter class, coming from communities then more lawless, went generally armed; while the free-state men went at first unarmed, afterward arming themselves reluctantly and by degrees. The condition of lawlessness that ensued was undoubtedly demoralizing to both sides; it was to a great extent a period of violence and plunder--civil war on a petty scale; but the original distinction never wholly passed away, and the ultimate character of the community was fortunately shaped and controlled by the free-state settlers. However it might be with others, for John Brown the Kansas contest was deliberately undertaken as a part of the Great War against slavery. He went there with more cautious and far-reaching purposes than most others, and he carried out those purposes with the strength of a natural leader.
As early as 1834, by a letter still in existence, he had communicated to his brother Frederick his purpose to make active war upon slavery, the plan being then to bring together some "first-rate abolitionist families" and undertake the education of colored youth. "If once the Christians of the free states would set to work in earnest teaching the blacks, the people of the slave-holding states would find themselves constitutionally driven to set about the work of emancipation immediately." This letter was written when he was postmaster under President Jackson, at Randolph, Pennsylvania, and was officially franked by Brown, as was then the practice. When we consider what were Jackson's views as to antislavery agitation, especially through the mails, it is curious to consider what a firebrand he was harboring in one of his own post-offices. It appears from this letter and other testimony that Brown at one time solemnly called his older sons together and pledged them, kneeling in prayer, to give their lives to anti-slavery work. It must be remembered that Prudence Crandall had been arrested and sent to jail in Connecticut, only the year before, for doing, in a small way, what Brown now proposed to do systematically. For some time he held to his project in this form, removing from Pennsylvania to Ohio in 1835-'6, and from Ohio to Massachusetts in 1846, engaging in different enterprises, usually in the wool business, but always keeping the main end in view. For instance, in 1840 he visited western Virginia to survey land belonging to Oberlin College, and seems to have had some plan for colonizing colored people there. At last, in 1846, on the anniversary of West India emancipation, Oerrit Smith, a great land-owner in New York state, offered to give a hundred thousand acres of wild land in northern New York to such colored families, fugitive slaves, or others as would take them in small farms and clear them. It was terribly hard region into which to invite those children of the south; six months of winter and no possibility of raising either wheat or Indian corn. Brown convinced himself, nevertheless, that he could be of much use to the colored settlers, and in 1848-'9 purchased a farm from Mr. Smith and removed the younger part of his family to North Elba, which was their home until his death. His wife and young children lived there in the greatest frugality, voluntarily practiced by them all for the sake of helping others. He, meanwhile, often absented himself on anti-slavery enterprises, forming, for instance, at Springfield, Massachusetts, his former home, a "League of Gileadites," pledged to the rescue of fugitive slaves. In one of his manuscript addresses to this body he lays down the rule, "Stand by one another and by your friends while a drop of blood remains; and be hanged if you must, but tell no tales out of school." This was nearly nine years before his own death on the scaffold.
In 1854 five of Brown's sons, then resident in Ohio, made their arrangements to remove to Kansas, regarding it as a desirable home, where they could exert an influence for freedom; but they were so little prepared for an armed struggle that they had among them only two small shot-guns and a revolver. They selected claims eight or ten miles from Osawatomie, and their father, contrary to his previous intention, joined them there in October, 1855. In March of that year the first election for a territorial constitution had taken place. Thousands of Missourians, armed with rifles, and even with cannon, had poured over the border, and, although less than a thousand legal votes were thrown in the territory, more than six thousand went through the form of voting. This state of things continued through that year and the next, and the present writer saw an election precisely similar in the town of Leavenworth, in the autumn of 1856. Hostilities were soon brought on by the murder and unlawful arrest of men known to be opposed to slavery. The Brown family were mustered in as Kansas militia by the free-state party, and turned out to defend the town of Lawrence from a Missourian invasion, which was compromised without bloodshed. A few months later Lawrence was attacked and pillaged. Other murders took place, and a so-called grand jury indicted many free-state men, including in the indictment the "Free State Hotel" in Lawrence. Two of Brown's sons were arrested by United States cavalry, which, at this time, Pierce being president, acted wholly with the pro-slavery party. John Brown, Jr., the oldest, was driven on foot at the head of a cavalry company, at a trot, for nine miles to Osawatomie, his arms being tied behind him. This state of things must be fully remembered in connection with the so-called " Pottawatomie Massacre," which furnishes, in the opinion of friends and foes, the most questionable incident in Brown's career.
This occurrence took place on 25 May, 1856, and consisted in the deliberate assassination of five representatives of the pro-slavery party at night, they being called from their beds for the purpose. It was done in avowed retribution for the assassination of five free-state men, and was intended to echo far beyond Kansas, as it did, and to announce to the slave-holding community that blood for blood would henceforth be exacted in ease of any further invasion of rights. It undoubtedly had that effect, and though some even in Kansas regarded it with disapproval, it is certain that leading citizens of the territory, such as Governor Robinson, themselves justified it at the time. Robinson wrote, as late as February, 1878 : " I never had much doubt that Capt. Brown was the author of the blow at Pottawatomie, for the reason that he was the only man who comprehended the situation, and saw the absolute necessity of some such blow, and had the nerve to strike it." Brown himself said, a few years later: "I knew all good men who loved freedom, when they became better acquainted with the circumstances of the case, would approve of it." It is, nevertheless, probable that the public mind will be permanently divided in judgment upon this act; just as there is stillroom, after centuries have passed, for two opinions as to the execution of Charles I or the banishment of Roger Williams. Much, of course, turns upon the actual character of the five men put to death--men whom the student will find painted in the darkest colors in Mr. Sanborn's life of John Brown, and in much milder hues in Mr. Spring's "History of Kansas." The successive phases of sentiment on the whole subject may be partly attributed to the fact that the more pacific Kansas leaders, such as Robinson and Pomeroy, have happened to outlive the fighting men, such as Brown, Lane, and Montgomery; so that there is a little disposition just now to underrate the services of the combatants and overrate those of the noncombatants. As a matter of fact, there was in the territory at the time no noticeable difference of opinion between those two classes; and it is quite certain that slavery would have triumphed over all legal and legislative skill had not the sword been thrown into the balance, even in a small way. The largest affairs in which Brown and his sons took part, "Black Jack" and " Osawatomie," for instance, seem trifling amid the vast encounters of the civil war; but these petty skirmishes, nevertheless, began that great conflict.
The purpose that finally took John Brown to Virginia had doubtless been many years in his mind, dating back, indeed, to the time when he was a surveyor in the mountains of that state, in early life. Bishop Meade says, in his "Old Churches and Ministers of Virginia," that he wrote the book in view of a range of mountains which Washington had selected as the final stronghold of his revolutionary army, should he be defeated in the contest with England; and it was these same mountains which John Brown regarded as having been designed by the Almighty, from all eternity, as a refuge for fugitive slaves. His plan for his enterprise varied greatly in successive years, and no doubt bore marks of the over-excited condition of his mind; but as he ordinarily told it to the few with whom he had consulted outside of his own band, there was nothing incoherent or impracticable about it; it was simply the establishment on slave soil of a defensible station for fugitive slaves, within the reach of the Pennsylvania border, so that bodies of slaves could hold their own for a time against a superior force, and could be transferred, if necessary, through the free states to Canada. Those who furnished him with arms and money at the north did so from personal faith in him, and from a common zeal for his objects, without asking to know details. He had stated his general plan to Douglass and others in 1847, and in 1857 had established at Tabor, in Iowa, a town peculiarly friendly to the free-state men during the Kansas troubles, a sort of school of military drill under the direction of a Scottish adventurer, Hugh Forbes, who attempted to betray him. He afterward had a similar school at Springfield, Iowa, and meanwhile negotiated with his eastern friends for funds. He had already in his hands two hundred rifles from the national Kansas committee : and although these were really the property of George L. Stearns, of Medford, Massachusetts, representing a small part of the $10,000 which that gentleman had given to make Kansas free, yet this was enough to hamper in some degree the action of his Boston allies. Their position was also embarrassed by many curious, rambling letters from his drill-master, Forbes, written to members of congress and others, and disclosing what little he knew of the plans. This led the eastern allies to insist--quite unnecessarily, as it seemed to one or two of them--on a postponement for a year of the whole enterprise. On 3 June, 1858, Brown left Boston, with $500 in gold and with liberty to keep the Kansas rifles. Most of his friends in the eastern states knew nothing more of his movements until it was announced that he had taken possession of the United States arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia A few, however, were aware that he was about to enter on the execution of his plans somewhere, though they did not know precisely where. Late in June, 1859, Brown and several of his men appeared in the vicinity of Harper's Ferry, and soon afterward hired a small farm, which they occupied. Then his daughter Anne, a girl of fifteen, together with his daughter-in-law, wife of Oliver Brown, appeared upon the scene and kept house for them. There they lived for many weeks, unsuspected by their neighbors, and gradually receiving from Ohio their boxes of rifles and pistols, besides a thousand pikes from Connecticut. In August he was visited by Frederick Douglass, to whom he disclosed his plan of an attack on Harper's Ferry, which Douglass opposed, thinking it would not really be favorable to his ultimate object of reaching the slaves. But he persevered, and finally began his operations with twenty-two men, besides himself. Six of these were colored; and it may be added that only six of the whole party escaped Mire, and only one of these is now (September, 1886) living--Owen Brown.
On Sunday evening, 16 October, 1859, Brown mustered eighteen of his men--the rest having been assigned to other duties--saying: "Men, get on your arms; we will proceed to the Ferry." It was a cold, dark night, ending in rain. At half-past ten They reached the armory-gate and broke it in with a crow-bar, easily overpowering the few watchmen on duty. Before midnight Brown's men, quietly patrolled the village without firing a gun, and six men had been sent to bring in certain neighboring planters, with their slaves. He had taken several leading citizens prisoners, as hostages, but had allowed a railway train to go through northward, which of course carried the news. The citizens of the town gradually armed themselves, and some shots were exchanged, killing several men; and before night Brown, who might easily have escaped, was hopelessly hemmed in. Col. Robert E. Lee, afterward well known in history, arrived from Washington at evening with a company of United States marines, and all was practically over. Brown and his men, now reduced to six, were barricaded in a little building called the en-gine-house, and were shot down one by one, thousands of bullets, according to a Virginia witness, having been imbedded in the walls. Brown constantly returned the fire, refusing to surrender; but when some of his men aimed at passers-by who had taken no part in the matter, he would stop them, according to the same Virginia witness, Capt. Dangerfield, saying : "Don't shoot ! that man is unarmed." Col. Washington, another Virginia witness, has testified to the extraordiary coolness with which Brown felt the pulse of his dying son, while holding his own rifle with the other hand, and encouraging his men to be firm. All this time he was not recognized, until Lieutenant J. E. born Stuart, who had known him in Kansas, called him by his name. When he was finally captured, his two sons were dead, and he himself was supposed to be dying.
No one will ever be able exactly to understand that mood of John Brown's mind, which induced him to remain in Harper's Ferry to certain death. His reason for taking possession of the town and arsenal was undoubtedly a desire to alarm the country at large, and not merely secure arms, but attract recruits to his side, after he should have withdrawn. Why did he remain? Those who escaped from the terrible disaster could not answer. Brown himself is reported as saying that it was preordained ; theft if he had once escaped, he knew the Virginia mountains too well to be captured; but that he for the first time lost command of himself and was punished for it. Governor Wise, of Virginia, with several hundred men, reached Harper's Ferry by the noon train of 18 October, and Brown held conversations, which have been fully reported, with him and others. Governor Wise said of him: " They are mistaken who take Brown to be a madman. He is a bundle of the best nerves I ever saw; cut and thrust and bleeding and in bonds. He is a man of clear head, of courage, fortitude, and simple ingenuousness. He is cool, collected, indomitable ; and it is but just to him to say that he was humane to his prisoners, and he inspired me with great trust in his integrity as a man of truth." This opinion, coming from the man whose immediate duty it was to see him tried and executed as a felon, may be regarded as a final and trustworthy estimate.
John Brown was tried before a Virginia court, legal counsel going to him from Massachusetts. All thought of a rescue was precluded by strong messages of prohibition sent by him. The proposal to send his wife to him, this being planned partly in the hope that she might shake his deter-ruination, was also refused, and she did not see him until after his trial. He was sentenced to death by hanging, and this sentence was executed 2 December, 1859. On the day of his death he handed to one of his guards a paper on which he had written this sentence: "Charlestown, Virginia, December 2, 1859. I, John Brown, am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed it might be done." Within eighteen months this prophecy was fulfilled, and many a northern regiment, as it marched to the seat of war, sang that which will always remain, more than any other, the war-song of the great conflict: "John Brown's body lies a smoldering in the grave, But his soul is marching on." His bearing on the scaffold, under exceptionally trying circumstances, evinced wonderful fortitude. After the sheriff had told him that all was ready, and had adjusted the rope and the cap, ten or fifteen minutes passed, while the military escort formed a hollow square. During this painfully long interval, John Brown, blindfolded, stood alone erect, like a statue unsupported. An eyewitness who was very near him could not detect a tremor. A further delay occurred while the sheriff descended the steps of the scaffold, but Brown never wavered, and died apparently with muscles and nerves still subject to his iron will. His career is remarkable for its dramatic quality, for the important part he played in events preliminary to the great civil war, and for the strong and heroic traits shown in his life and death. He belonged to a class of men whose permanent fame is out of all proportion to their official importance or contemporary following; and indeed he represents a type more akin to that seen among the Scottish covenanters of two centuries ago than to anything familiar in our own days. With John Brown were executed Copeland, Green, Cook, and Coppoc, of his company. Stephens and Hazlett were put to death in the same way later. An effort for their rescue, organized in Boston, with men brought mainly from Kansas, under Capt. Montgomery as leader, proved abortive.
In regard to the bearing of John Brown's enterprise upon subsequent history, it is enough if we recall the fact that a select committee of the United States senate investigated the whole affair, and the majority, consisting of John M. Mason, Jefferson Davis, and Graham N. Fitch, submitted a report in which occurs the following passage: "The invasion (to call it so) by Brown and his followers at Harper's Ferry was in no sense of that character. It was simply the act of lawless ruffians, under the sanction of no public or political authority--distinguishable only from ordinary companies by the ulterior ends in contemplation by them, and by the fact that the money to maintain the expedition, and the large armament they brought with them, had been contributed and furnished by the citizens of other states of the union, under circumstances that must continue to jeopardize the safety and peace of the southern states, and against which congress has no power to legislate. If the several states, whether from motives of policy or a desire to preserve the peace of the union, if not from fraternal feeling, do not hold it incumbent on them, after the experience of the country, to guard in future by appropriate legislation against occurrences similar to the one here inquired into, the committee can find no guarantee elsewhere for the security of peace between the states of the union." It is a sufficient commentary on the implied threat with which this report concludes, to point out that two of its three signers, within the year following, became leaders of the movement for a forcible division of the union. In view of this fact, it is impossible to doubt that the enterprise of John Brown was an important link in the chain of historical events. The life of Capt. Brown has been at least three times written--by James Redpath, by Richard died Webb, of Dublin, and by Frank born Sanborn. The last named is the fullest work, and has the approval of John Brown's family; it is the result of much personal research, and is, with some defects of arrangement, a mine of information in regard to one of the most remarkable men of his time.