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Brownlow's Whig

The Whig was a polemical American newspaper published and edited by William G. "Parson" Brownlow (1805–1877) in the mid-nineteenth century. As its name implies, the paper's primary purpose was the promotion and defense of Whig Party political figures and ideals. In the years leading up to the Civil War, the Whig became the mouthpiece for East Tennessee's anti-secessionist movement. The Whig was published under several names throughout its existence, namely the Tennessee Whig, the Elizabethton Whig. the Jonesborough Whig, the Knoxville Whig, and similar variations.[2]

The Whig
The front page of the October 2, 1867, edition of Brownlow's Knoxville Whig.
TypeWeekly newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Founder(s)William G. Brownlow
Mason R. Lyon
PublisherWilliam G. Brownlow
(1840 – 1869);
Mason R. Lyon
(1839–1840);[1]
Valentine Garland
(1840);
C.P. Byers
(1845 – 1847);
J.W. O'Brien
(1849 – 1855);
E.B.P. Kinslow
(1855 – 1861);
T. Haws and Company
(1867 – 1869);
Joseph A. Mabry
(1869 – 1870);
Saunders and Clark
(1870–1871).
EditorWilliam G. Brownlow
(1839-1865);
John B. Brownlow
(1865-1869);
Thomas H. Pearne
(1869);[2]
C. W. Charlton
(1869-1870)[3]
Political alignmentWhig (1839–1854)
Know Nothing (1856)[2]
Constitutional Union (1860)
Radical Republican (1863–1869)
Democratic Party (1869)[3]
LanguageEnglish
Ceased publication1871[1]
HeadquartersElizabethton, Tennessee (1839–1840)
Jonesborough, Tennessee (1840–1849)
Knoxville, Tennessee (1849–1871)
Circulation10,000 (appx.)
Sister newspapersKnoxville Journal
OCLC number60582333

The Whig was one of the most influential newspapers in nineteenth-century Tennessee, due mainly to Brownlow's editorials, which often included vindictive personal attacks and fierce diatribes. A Methodist circuit rider by trade, Brownlow partnered with publisher Mason R. Lyon under a one-year contract and launched the Whig on May 4, 1839 to counter rising Democratic sentiment in the region.[4] He quickly made many enemies across the majority Democratic antebellum South. During his career, Brownlow survived several assassination attempts, numerous libel lawsuits, and arrest and imprisonment by Confederate authorities during the American Civil War.[2]

Brownlow's Whig editorials attacked Democrats and Methodism's two main competitors in East Tennessee: Baptists and Presbyterians. Brownlow also attacked groups who he believed supported Democrats, such as Catholics, Mormons, and immigrants.[2] In spite of its anti-secessionist sentiments, the Whig was staunchly pro-slavery in the early days of the Civil War but, upon Brownlow's return from exile in 1863, the paper adopted an abolitionist stance.[5] After Brownlow was elected governor in 1865, his son became publisher of the Whig. In 1870, Whig reporter William Rule (1839–1928) launched the Knoxville Chronicle (later renamed Knoxville Journal), which is often considered the "successor" to the Whig.[3]

Layout and publication edit

 
"Office Brownlow's Knoxville Whig" detail from The War in Tennessee by Theodore R. Davis (Harper's Weekly, April 9, 1864)

The Whig was a typical nineteenth-century broadsheet, usually containing four pages, each divided into five (later six) columns. Editorials and news typically occupied the first two-and-a-half pages, and advertisements occupied the last page-and-a-half. The first column often began with a song or poem, after which Brownlow launched into an editorial. Along with political and religious commentary, Brownlow also reported on his travels to various cities, dispensed advice on issues such as marriage and child-rearing, and published his own speeches in their entirety.[6]

The masthead used for the first few issues included the phrase "Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness" from the Declaration of Independence,[4] and was soon followed by the motto, "Cry aloud, and spare not," taken from Isaiah 58:1 (KJV). The latter appeared in the paper's nameplate as early as 1839, and was used throughout much of the 1840s. In 1853, Brownlow began using the motto, "Independent in everything, neutral in nothing." For several months after the 1840 elections, the paper used Oliver Hazard Perry's famous line, "We have met the enemy, and they are ours," as its nameplate motto.[2]: 36–47 

Titles edit

The Whig was published under the following masthead titles:[1]

  • Tennessee Whig (May 16, 1839 in Elizabethton – June 13, 1839)
  • The Elizabethton Whig (June 13, 1839 in Elizabethton – nameplate change)
  • The Whig (May 6, 1840 – November 3, 1841)
  • Jonesborough Whig (November 10, 1841 – May 11, 1842)
  • Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal (May 18, 1842 – April 19, 1849)
  • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig and Independent Journal (May 19, 1849 – April 7, 1855)
  • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig (April 14, 1855 – July 27, 1861)
  • Brownlow's Weekly Whig (August 3, 1861 – October 26, 1861)
  • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig, and Rebel Ventilator (November 11, 1863 – February 21, 1866)
  • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig (February 28, 1866 – January 27, 1869)
  • Knoxville Weekly Whig (February 3, 1869 – March 1870)
  • Weekly Whig and Register (c. 1870 – 1871)
 
An 1865 edition of the Whig with the subtitle The Rebel Ventilator

Views edit

Politics edit

In an 1842 description of the Whig, Brownlow wrote, "politically, we are WHIG— ultra whig, and of the old school— the 'sworn and eternal foe of locofocoism.'"[7] Brownlow despised President Andrew Jackson, calling him the "greatest curse that ever yet befell this nation."[8] The Whig supported, among other things, a strong central government, federal funding for internal improvements, a weakened presidency, a national bank, and tariffs to protect American products from foreign competition.[2]: 111 

As Brownlow's political idol was Kentucky senator Henry Clay, the publisher pleaded with the Whig Party to make Clay its presidential candidate. He became disenchanted when the party snubbed Clay in favor of William Henry Harrison in 1840 and by 1842, Brownlow had turned outright hostile toward Harrison's successor, John Tyler. After Clay's defeat in the presidential election of 1844, Brownlow was grief-stricken. When the party snubbed Clay in favor of Zachary Taylor in 1848, Brownlow called on Whig electors to vote for Clay instead.[2]: 112–118 

In the presidential election of 1852, Brownlow rejected Whig candidate Winfield Scott and supported Daniel Webster, although the Massachusetts senator died before the election. After the Whig Party disintegrated in 1854, Brownlow aligned with the Know Nothing movement, and intensified his attacks on non-Anglo American immigrants.[2]: 125  In 1860, after the secession debate had come to dominate politics in the region, the Whig supported Constitutional Union presidential candidate John Bell, helping him capture the state's electoral votes. After the war, the Whig became one of the few papers in the South to support the Radical Republicans.[3]: 205 

Religion edit

 
Heading for "F.A. Ross' Corner," a series in the Jonesborough Whig that attacked Presbyterian minister Frederick Augustus Ross

While Clay was Brownlow's political idol, Methodism founder John Wesley was his theological idol. Brownlow consistently refuted Wesley's critics, and two of his favorite targets were Presbyterian minister F. A. Ross and Baptist preacher J. R. Graves. In 1847, the Whig ran a continuous column entitled "Frederick Ross's Corner," which bashed Ross's character.[2]: 53–83 

In the 1840s, as Northern and Southern Methodists argued over the slavery issue, Brownlow was offended by what he perceived as poor treatment of Southern Methodist leaders, especially Bishop Joshua Soule (who had ordained Brownlow as minister). When Northern Methodist leader Thomas Bond called for missionaries to be sent to the South, Brownlow warned that such missionaries would be lynched. "The people of the South," he wrote, "cannot regard such men, whatever may be their claims to the character, as true and faithful ministers of Christianity."[9]

Brownlow's anti-Catholic sentiment was present in the earliest editions of the Whig, and gradually intensified over the years. In 1846, Brownlow ran a multi-part series on "Romanism" in America, claiming that the Catholic Church had kept Europe in "mental slavery" for 1,200 years, and was inherently intolerant and opposed to democracy.[10] Brownlow referred to Catholics as "lousy, sinful, obedient subjects of a foreign Despot," and warned of their encroachment into American government.[11]

Secessionism edit

In January 1860, Brownlow asked Whig readers to "pray against the wicked leaders of Abolitionism and the equally ungodly advocates of Secessionism,"[12]: 30  a statement which sums up his pre-Civil War stance on both issues. Brownlow believed an independent South would continue to be run by the elite - Southern Democratic plantation owners, who would exploit small farmers. "The honest yeomanry of these border States," he wrote, "whose families live by their hard licks, four-fifths of whom own no negroes and never expect to own any, are to be drafted" to fight for the "purse-proud aristocrats of the Cotton States."[12]: 50 

While Brownlow had supported Bell in 1860, he praised Lincoln as an "Old Clay Whig," and argued that opposition to him had more to do with sectionalism than with slavery.[12]: 31  He blasted the state of South Carolina (the first state to secede) as the "home of traitors,"[12]: 71  and claimed that most South Carolinians were descended from Revolutionary War Loyalists, and thus had a love of aristocracy that "will never suit Tennesseeans."[12]: 88 

Slavery edit

Brownlow's views on slavery were complex, and changed over time. In the 1830s, he was opposed to slavery, but for obscure reasons, had changed his mind by the following decade.[5]: 38–39  Historian Robert McKenzie suggests that the hostility of Northern Methodists (who were abolitionists) toward Southern Methodists (who tended to be pro-slavery) in the 1840s may have driven Brownlow into the pro-slavery camp.[5]: 39  In any case, by the 1850s, Brownlow was staunchly pro-slavery, arguing that the institution had been "ordained by God."[12]: 108–113 

Brownlow's support for slavery remained unchanged throughout 1860 and 1861, and he and rival editors accused one another of secretly supporting abolitionism.[5]: 45–46  In Parson Brownlow's Book, published in 1862, Brownlow maintains his support of slavery, but clarified that he would do away with it if it meant preserving the Union.[12]: 108–113  By April 1864, however, he had adopted an abolitionist viewpoint, and led a faction calling for emancipation at a gathering of East Tennessee Unionists. After the meeting, he gave a speech in support of a series of resolutions that deemed slavery "incompatible with the perpetuity of free and republican institutions."[5]: 191–193 

History edit

Early publication edit

As a Methodist circuit rider in the 1820s, Brownlow gained a reputation for vicious personal attacks against rival missionaries as they competed for converts across Southern Appalachia, and as early as 1828 Brownlow had been in court facing a slander charge. In the mid-1830s, Brownlow anonymously wrote several articles attacking nullification for the Washington Republican and Farmer's Journal, a Jonesborough-based paper published by retired state supreme court justice Thomas Emmerson (1773–1837). Impressed, Emmerson suggested Brownlow leave the ministry to pursue a career in journalism.[13]

After his marriage in 1839, Brownlow settled in Elizabethton, and began looking for steady income to support his family. T. A. R. Nelson, then a local attorney, suggested Brownlow publish a newspaper to support the Whigs in the upcoming elections.[14] Brownlow formed a partnership with Mason R. Lyon, who had assumed publication of the Republican after Emmerson's death.[13] The first edition of the Tennessee Whig was published on May 16, 1839, with Brownlow as editor and Lyon as publisher. Within a few months, Brownlow's vitriolic editorial style had left Elizabethton bitterly divided.[2]: 36 

One Elizabethtonian who developed an immediate dislike of Brownlow was Landon Carter Haynes, a fellow Whig who had switched his support to the Democratic Party in 1839. In May 1840, following the Whig's relocation to Jonesborough, Haynes wrote an article insulting Brownlow's lineage. Enraged, Brownlow accosted Haynes in the streets of Jonesborough, and began beating him with a cane, prompting Haynes to draw a pistol and shoot Brownlow in the thigh.[2]: 39  In 1841, Haynes was hired as editor of the Tennessee Sentinel, a Democratic paper published by former Emmerson associate Lawson Gifford, and an intense editorial rivalry developed between Brownlow and Haynes.[13]

Jonesborough edit

The feud between Brownlow and Haynes continued through the early 1840s. Brownlow wrote that Haynes abounded in "hopeless rottenness,"[9] and accused him of cheating tenants out of corn and selling infected hogs to a North Carolina merchant,[15] while Haynes dubbed Brownlow a "wretched abortion of sin" and a "tarnisher of female innocence."[16] In 1842, Haynes attempted to join the Methodist ministry, but was denied due in part to a series of charges levied against him in the Whig.[17] Haynes finally quit the newspaper business in 1845 to focus on his political career.[17]

In 1843, Brownlow ran for Congress against Andrew Johnson, and used the Whig to promote his own campaign. Brownlow launched a barrage of attacks against Johnson, claiming (correctly) that Johnson's cousin had been hanged for murder, accusing (incorrectly) Johnson's father of being a chicken thief, and suggesting (incorrectly) that Johnson was illegitimate.[2] Even after Johnson won the election, Brownlow continued his attacks. Johnson vowed to ignore him, arguing that Brownlow's "trade is to slander," and that Brownlow was "wholly irresponsible for what he says or does."[18] Brownlow refuted Johnson's dismissal, calling him a "base coward and low-bred scullion" who was simply hiding from the facts.[18]

Brownlow's views and vindictive style provoked numerous assaults and assassination attempts. In March 1840, a gunman fired two shots into Brownlow's house, although both shots missed. In August 1842, a mob attacked Brownlow at a camp meeting, but Brownlow fended them off with a pistol. In April 1849, an unknown assailant clubbed Brownlow in the back of the head, leaving him bedridden for two weeks.[2]: 37–44 [19]

Knoxville edit

 
The Whig office in Knoxville

By the time he relocated the Whig to Knoxville in May 1849, Brownlow was already well known in the city. Brownlow had previously clashed with the Democratic Knoxville Standard, which he called a "filthy lying sheet,"[8] and blasted its editor, A. R. Crozier, as a "miserable mockery of a man."[20] Before he had settled into his new printing office on Gay Street, Brownlow had become embroiled in a war of words with Knoxville Register editor John Miller McKee that lasted until McKee's departure in 1855.[21]

Andrew Johnson's political ascent in the mid-1850s was a constant source of frustration for Brownlow. The Whig rehashed claims that Johnson's relatives were criminals, and accused Johnson of being an atheist (Johnson never joined a church, but always insisted he was a Christian). After Johnson was reelected governor in 1855, Brownlow published a prayer in the Whig that begged God to forgive Tennessee for electing an "ungodly Governor."[2]: 121 

In 1857, the Whig quarrelled with the radical Southern Citizen, published by Knoxville businessman William G. Swan and Irish Patriot John Mitchel, and Brownlow spent at least one night parading in front of Swan's home while brandishing a revolver.[2]: 49  During the same period, Brownlow blasted the officers of the failed Bank of East Tennessee, namely William Churchwell, J. G. M. Ramsey, and John H. Crozier, and accused them of swindling money from low-level depositors to pay the bank's wealthy creditors.[5]

Secession crisis edit

After the election of Abraham Lincoln in November 1860, the secession debate dominated the pages of the Whig, with Brownlow relentlessly attacking the idea of secession and its supporters. Knoxville's secessionists cited Brownlow as the source of East Tennessee's pro-Union support, complaining that the Whig was "deluding and poisoning the public mind."[5]: 62–63  In hopes of countering this sentiment, the Knoxville Register installed as its editor J. Austin Sperry, a radical secessionist whom Brownlow described as a "scoundrel, debauchee, and coward."[12]: 214 

In May 1861, the Whig announced it had exposed a forgery conspiracy involving several secessionists attempting to smear Andrew Johnson (with whom Brownlow had formed an uneasy alliance, since they were both pro-Union). Brownlow pushed this issue for several months, and accused the "corrupt liar, low-down drunkard, irresponsible vagabond, and infamous coward of the Register" of complicity in the matter.[12]: 128  In August 1861, Sperry complained about visiting dignitaries spurning him in favor of Brownlow. This provoked taunts from Brownlow, who claimed that a paper with such "limited circulation" as the Register could not be called a "competitor" of the Whig, and cited Sperry's "bad morals" as the reason for dignitaries avoiding him.[12]: 214  The Whig reportedly had 10,700 subscribers throughout East Tennessee in 1861.[22]: 130 

The Civil War edit

 
Engraving from Parson Brownlow's Book, showing Confederate soldiers hanging bridge-burning conspirators Jacob and Henry Harmon

After Tennessee withdrew from the Union in June 1861, the Confederate Army occupied East Tennessee and arrested several noted Union supporters. Throughout the summer of that year, Brownlow dedicated much of the Whig to defending these Unionists.[12]: 138–150  By October, the Whig was the last pro-Union newspaper in the Confederacy.[5]: 98  Finally, on October 24, Brownlow announced he had become aware of an indictment issued against him and was suspending publication.[12]: 254–255  The Confederate Army confiscated the Whig offices and used the printing machinery to convert muskets into rifles.[5]: 106 

Brownlow was eventually arrested but released. He went into exile in the North, where he published a book and played an important role in rallying support for the liberation of East Tennessee. He returned to Knoxville on the heels of the Union general Ambrose Burnside's invading army in September 1863, and revived the Whig under the title, Knoxville Whig, and Rebel Ventilator. Brownlow used the Whig to harass Knoxville's Confederates,[5]: 180  and had a number of them expelled. These included the Confederate diarist Ellen Renshaw House, who wrote that Brownlow was "the vilest thing that ever lived."[23]

Later years edit

After Brownlow was elected Governor of Tennessee in 1865, publication of the Whig was turned over to his son, John Bell Brownlow, although the elder Brownlow continued to write for the paper. As governor, Brownlow used the Whig to issue state proclamations, ignoring a Tennessee law requiring the Secretary of State's signature.[2]: 263–265  In 1868, Brownlow revived his old rivalry with Andrew Johnson by supporting Johnson's impeachment.[14]

In 1869, Brownlow sold the Whig to T. Hawes and Company, which in turn sold it to Knoxville businessman Joseph A. Mabry. Mabry had supported secession during the Civil War, but had since become friends with Brownlow. Mabry tried to transform the Whig into a Democratic newspaper, but was unsuccessful, and the paper failed shortly afterward.[3]: 206 

In 1870, William Rule, a former Whig editor, launched the Knoxville Chronicle, which continued the Whig's Republican leanings. Upon his return from the U.S. Senate in 1875, Brownlow purchased half ownership of the Chronicle, and it was renamed the Whig and Chronicle, which he edited until his death in 1877.[3]: 206–208  Rule continued editing the paper, later renamed the Knoxville Journal, until his own death in 1928. The paper's publication continued in Knoxville until 1991.[24]

As of 2013, the Journal is a weekly paper with both print and online editions.[25]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "About Knoxville weekly Whig. (Knoxville, Tenn.) 1869-1870", Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers, Library of Congress. Retrieved: 2 July 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q E. Merton Coulter, William G. Brownlow: Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands (Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 1999).
  3. ^ a b c d e f William Rule, Standard History of Knoxville, Tennessee (General Books, 2009).
  4. ^ a b "Early History of Carter County 1760-1861," p.55. Frank Merritt. East Tennessee Historical Society, Knoxville, Tennessee. 1950.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Robert McKenzie, Lincolnites and Rebels: A Divided Town in the American Civil War (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006).
  6. ^ Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 15 October 1845, 3 December 1845, 29 July 1846, et al.
  7. ^ Jonesborough Whig, 11 May 1842.
  8. ^ a b Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 18 June 1845.
  9. ^ a b Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 29 October 1845.
  10. ^ Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 25 February 1846.
  11. ^ Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 25 March 1846.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l William G. Brownlow, Sketches of the Rise, Progress, and Decline of Secession: with a Narrative of Personal Adventures Among the Rebels (Philadelphia: G. W. Childs, 1862).
  13. ^ a b c Paul Fink, Jonesborough: The First Century of Tennessee's First Town (Johnson City, Tenn.: Overmountain Press, 2002), pp. 140-145.
  14. ^ a b Thomas Alexander, "Strange Bedfellows: The Interlocking Careers of T.A.R. Nelson, Andrew Johnson, and William G. (Parson) Brownlow." East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, No. 24 (1952), p. 72.
  15. ^ Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 20 August 1845.
  16. ^ Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 20 November 1844.
  17. ^ a b James Bellamy, "The Political Career of Landon Carter Haynes," East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, No. 28 (1956), pp. 105-107.
  18. ^ a b Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 21 January 1846.
  19. ^ Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 19 April 1849.
  20. ^ Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 11 June 1845.
  21. ^ Verton Queener, "William Gannaway Brownlow as an Editor," East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, No. 4 (1932), pp. 72-76.
  22. ^ Rothrock, Mary Utopia (1946). The French Broad-Holston Country; a history of Knox County, Tennessee. Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society – via HathiTrust.
  23. ^ Ellen Renshaw House, Daniel Sutherland (ed.), A Very Violent Rebel: The Civil War Diary of Ellen Renshaw House (Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 1996), p. 5.
  24. ^ Beth Vanlandingham, "Knoxville Journal". Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2002. Retrieved: 2 July 2010.
  25. ^ The Knoxville Journal subscription page Retrieved 24 March 2013.

brownlow, whig, whig, polemical, american, newspaper, published, edited, william, parson, brownlow, 1805, 1877, nineteenth, century, name, implies, paper, primary, purpose, promotion, defense, whig, party, political, figures, ideals, years, leading, civil, whi. The Whig was a polemical American newspaper published and edited by William G Parson Brownlow 1805 1877 in the mid nineteenth century As its name implies the paper s primary purpose was the promotion and defense of Whig Party political figures and ideals In the years leading up to the Civil War the Whig became the mouthpiece for East Tennessee s anti secessionist movement The Whig was published under several names throughout its existence namely the Tennessee Whig the Elizabethton Whig the Jonesborough Whig the Knoxville Whig and similar variations 2 The WhigThe front page of the October 2 1867 edition of Brownlow s Knoxville Whig TypeWeekly newspaperFormatBroadsheetFounder s William G BrownlowMason R LyonPublisherWilliam G Brownlow 1840 1869 Mason R Lyon 1839 1840 1 Valentine Garland 1840 C P Byers 1845 1847 J W O Brien 1849 1855 E B P Kinslow 1855 1861 T Haws and Company 1867 1869 Joseph A Mabry 1869 1870 Saunders and Clark 1870 1871 EditorWilliam G Brownlow 1839 1865 John B Brownlow 1865 1869 Thomas H Pearne 1869 2 C W Charlton 1869 1870 3 Political alignmentWhig 1839 1854 Know Nothing 1856 2 Constitutional Union 1860 Radical Republican 1863 1869 Democratic Party 1869 3 LanguageEnglishCeased publication1871 1 HeadquartersElizabethton Tennessee 1839 1840 Jonesborough Tennessee 1840 1849 Knoxville Tennessee 1849 1871 Circulation10 000 appx Sister newspapersKnoxville JournalOCLC number60582333 The Whig was one of the most influential newspapers in nineteenth century Tennessee due mainly to Brownlow s editorials which often included vindictive personal attacks and fierce diatribes A Methodist circuit rider by trade Brownlow partnered with publisher Mason R Lyon under a one year contract and launched the Whig on May 4 1839 to counter rising Democratic sentiment in the region 4 He quickly made many enemies across the majority Democratic antebellum South During his career Brownlow survived several assassination attempts numerous libel lawsuits and arrest and imprisonment by Confederate authorities during the American Civil War 2 Brownlow s Whig editorials attacked Democrats and Methodism s two main competitors in East Tennessee Baptists and Presbyterians Brownlow also attacked groups who he believed supported Democrats such as Catholics Mormons and immigrants 2 In spite of its anti secessionist sentiments the Whig was staunchly pro slavery in the early days of the Civil War but upon Brownlow s return from exile in 1863 the paper adopted an abolitionist stance 5 After Brownlow was elected governor in 1865 his son became publisher of the Whig In 1870 Whig reporter William Rule 1839 1928 launched the Knoxville Chronicle later renamed Knoxville Journal which is often considered the successor to the Whig 3 Contents 1 Layout and publication 1 1 Titles 2 Views 2 1 Politics 2 2 Religion 2 3 Secessionism 2 4 Slavery 3 History 3 1 Early publication 3 2 Jonesborough 3 3 Knoxville 3 4 Secession crisis 3 5 The Civil War 3 6 Later years 4 ReferencesLayout and publication edit nbsp Office Brownlow s Knoxville Whig detail from The War in Tennessee by Theodore R Davis Harper s Weekly April 9 1864 The Whig was a typical nineteenth century broadsheet usually containing four pages each divided into five later six columns Editorials and news typically occupied the first two and a half pages and advertisements occupied the last page and a half The first column often began with a song or poem after which Brownlow launched into an editorial Along with political and religious commentary Brownlow also reported on his travels to various cities dispensed advice on issues such as marriage and child rearing and published his own speeches in their entirety 6 The masthead used for the first few issues included the phrase Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness from the Declaration of Independence 4 and was soon followed by the motto Cry aloud and spare not taken from Isaiah 58 1 KJV The latter appeared in the paper s nameplate as early as 1839 and was used throughout much of the 1840s In 1853 Brownlow began using the motto Independent in everything neutral in nothing For several months after the 1840 elections the paper used Oliver Hazard Perry s famous line We have met the enemy and they are ours as its nameplate motto 2 36 47 Titles edit The Whig was published under the following masthead titles 1 Tennessee Whig May 16 1839 in Elizabethton June 13 1839 The Elizabethton Whig June 13 1839 in Elizabethton nameplate change The Whig May 6 1840 November 3 1841 Jonesborough Whig November 10 1841 May 11 1842 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal May 18 1842 April 19 1849 Brownlow s Knoxville Whig and Independent Journal May 19 1849 April 7 1855 Brownlow s Knoxville Whig April 14 1855 July 27 1861 Brownlow s Weekly Whig August 3 1861 October 26 1861 Brownlow s Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator November 11 1863 February 21 1866 Brownlow s Knoxville Whig February 28 1866 January 27 1869 Knoxville Weekly Whig February 3 1869 March 1870 Weekly Whig and Register c 1870 1871 nbsp An 1865 edition of the Whig with the subtitle The Rebel VentilatorViews editPolitics edit In an 1842 description of the Whig Brownlow wrote politically we are WHIG ultra whig and of the old school the sworn and eternal foe of locofocoism 7 Brownlow despised President Andrew Jackson calling him the greatest curse that ever yet befell this nation 8 The Whig supported among other things a strong central government federal funding for internal improvements a weakened presidency a national bank and tariffs to protect American products from foreign competition 2 111 As Brownlow s political idol was Kentucky senator Henry Clay the publisher pleaded with the Whig Party to make Clay its presidential candidate He became disenchanted when the party snubbed Clay in favor of William Henry Harrison in 1840 and by 1842 Brownlow had turned outright hostile toward Harrison s successor John Tyler After Clay s defeat in the presidential election of 1844 Brownlow was grief stricken When the party snubbed Clay in favor of Zachary Taylor in 1848 Brownlow called on Whig electors to vote for Clay instead 2 112 118 In the presidential election of 1852 Brownlow rejected Whig candidate Winfield Scott and supported Daniel Webster although the Massachusetts senator died before the election After the Whig Party disintegrated in 1854 Brownlow aligned with the Know Nothing movement and intensified his attacks on non Anglo American immigrants 2 125 In 1860 after the secession debate had come to dominate politics in the region the Whig supported Constitutional Union presidential candidate John Bell helping him capture the state s electoral votes After the war the Whig became one of the few papers in the South to support the Radical Republicans 3 205 Religion edit nbsp Heading for F A Ross Corner a series in the Jonesborough Whig that attacked Presbyterian minister Frederick Augustus Ross While Clay was Brownlow s political idol Methodism founder John Wesley was his theological idol Brownlow consistently refuted Wesley s critics and two of his favorite targets were Presbyterian minister F A Ross and Baptist preacher J R Graves In 1847 the Whig ran a continuous column entitled Frederick Ross s Corner which bashed Ross s character 2 53 83 In the 1840s as Northern and Southern Methodists argued over the slavery issue Brownlow was offended by what he perceived as poor treatment of Southern Methodist leaders especially Bishop Joshua Soule who had ordained Brownlow as minister When Northern Methodist leader Thomas Bond called for missionaries to be sent to the South Brownlow warned that such missionaries would be lynched The people of the South he wrote cannot regard such men whatever may be their claims to the character as true and faithful ministers of Christianity 9 Brownlow s anti Catholic sentiment was present in the earliest editions of the Whig and gradually intensified over the years In 1846 Brownlow ran a multi part series on Romanism in America claiming that the Catholic Church had kept Europe in mental slavery for 1 200 years and was inherently intolerant and opposed to democracy 10 Brownlow referred to Catholics as lousy sinful obedient subjects of a foreign Despot and warned of their encroachment into American government 11 Secessionism edit In January 1860 Brownlow asked Whig readers to pray against the wicked leaders of Abolitionism and the equally ungodly advocates of Secessionism 12 30 a statement which sums up his pre Civil War stance on both issues Brownlow believed an independent South would continue to be run by the elite Southern Democratic plantation owners who would exploit small farmers The honest yeomanry of these border States he wrote whose families live by their hard licks four fifths of whom own no negroes and never expect to own any are to be drafted to fight for the purse proud aristocrats of the Cotton States 12 50 While Brownlow had supported Bell in 1860 he praised Lincoln as an Old Clay Whig and argued that opposition to him had more to do with sectionalism than with slavery 12 31 He blasted the state of South Carolina the first state to secede as the home of traitors 12 71 and claimed that most South Carolinians were descended from Revolutionary War Loyalists and thus had a love of aristocracy that will never suit Tennesseeans 12 88 Slavery edit Brownlow s views on slavery were complex and changed over time In the 1830s he was opposed to slavery but for obscure reasons had changed his mind by the following decade 5 38 39 Historian Robert McKenzie suggests that the hostility of Northern Methodists who were abolitionists toward Southern Methodists who tended to be pro slavery in the 1840s may have driven Brownlow into the pro slavery camp 5 39 In any case by the 1850s Brownlow was staunchly pro slavery arguing that the institution had been ordained by God 12 108 113 Brownlow s support for slavery remained unchanged throughout 1860 and 1861 and he and rival editors accused one another of secretly supporting abolitionism 5 45 46 In Parson Brownlow s Book published in 1862 Brownlow maintains his support of slavery but clarified that he would do away with it if it meant preserving the Union 12 108 113 By April 1864 however he had adopted an abolitionist viewpoint and led a faction calling for emancipation at a gathering of East Tennessee Unionists After the meeting he gave a speech in support of a series of resolutions that deemed slavery incompatible with the perpetuity of free and republican institutions 5 191 193 History editEarly publication edit As a Methodist circuit rider in the 1820s Brownlow gained a reputation for vicious personal attacks against rival missionaries as they competed for converts across Southern Appalachia and as early as 1828 Brownlow had been in court facing a slander charge In the mid 1830s Brownlow anonymously wrote several articles attacking nullification for the Washington Republican and Farmer s Journal a Jonesborough based paper published by retired state supreme court justice Thomas Emmerson 1773 1837 Impressed Emmerson suggested Brownlow leave the ministry to pursue a career in journalism 13 After his marriage in 1839 Brownlow settled in Elizabethton and began looking for steady income to support his family T A R Nelson then a local attorney suggested Brownlow publish a newspaper to support the Whigs in the upcoming elections 14 Brownlow formed a partnership with Mason R Lyon who had assumed publication of the Republican after Emmerson s death 13 The first edition of the Tennessee Whig was published on May 16 1839 with Brownlow as editor and Lyon as publisher Within a few months Brownlow s vitriolic editorial style had left Elizabethton bitterly divided 2 36 One Elizabethtonian who developed an immediate dislike of Brownlow was Landon Carter Haynes a fellow Whig who had switched his support to the Democratic Party in 1839 In May 1840 following the Whig s relocation to Jonesborough Haynes wrote an article insulting Brownlow s lineage Enraged Brownlow accosted Haynes in the streets of Jonesborough and began beating him with a cane prompting Haynes to draw a pistol and shoot Brownlow in the thigh 2 39 In 1841 Haynes was hired as editor of the Tennessee Sentinel a Democratic paper published by former Emmerson associate Lawson Gifford and an intense editorial rivalry developed between Brownlow and Haynes 13 Jonesborough edit The feud between Brownlow and Haynes continued through the early 1840s Brownlow wrote that Haynes abounded in hopeless rottenness 9 and accused him of cheating tenants out of corn and selling infected hogs to a North Carolina merchant 15 while Haynes dubbed Brownlow a wretched abortion of sin and a tarnisher of female innocence 16 In 1842 Haynes attempted to join the Methodist ministry but was denied due in part to a series of charges levied against him in the Whig 17 Haynes finally quit the newspaper business in 1845 to focus on his political career 17 In 1843 Brownlow ran for Congress against Andrew Johnson and used the Whig to promote his own campaign Brownlow launched a barrage of attacks against Johnson claiming correctly that Johnson s cousin had been hanged for murder accusing incorrectly Johnson s father of being a chicken thief and suggesting incorrectly that Johnson was illegitimate 2 Even after Johnson won the election Brownlow continued his attacks Johnson vowed to ignore him arguing that Brownlow s trade is to slander and that Brownlow was wholly irresponsible for what he says or does 18 Brownlow refuted Johnson s dismissal calling him a base coward and low bred scullion who was simply hiding from the facts 18 Brownlow s views and vindictive style provoked numerous assaults and assassination attempts In March 1840 a gunman fired two shots into Brownlow s house although both shots missed In August 1842 a mob attacked Brownlow at a camp meeting but Brownlow fended them off with a pistol In April 1849 an unknown assailant clubbed Brownlow in the back of the head leaving him bedridden for two weeks 2 37 44 19 Knoxville edit nbsp The Whig office in Knoxville By the time he relocated the Whig to Knoxville in May 1849 Brownlow was already well known in the city Brownlow had previously clashed with the Democratic Knoxville Standard which he called a filthy lying sheet 8 and blasted its editor A R Crozier as a miserable mockery of a man 20 Before he had settled into his new printing office on Gay Street Brownlow had become embroiled in a war of words with Knoxville Register editor John Miller McKee that lasted until McKee s departure in 1855 21 Andrew Johnson s political ascent in the mid 1850s was a constant source of frustration for Brownlow The Whig rehashed claims that Johnson s relatives were criminals and accused Johnson of being an atheist Johnson never joined a church but always insisted he was a Christian After Johnson was reelected governor in 1855 Brownlow published a prayer in the Whig that begged God to forgive Tennessee for electing an ungodly Governor 2 121 In 1857 the Whig quarrelled with the radical Southern Citizen published by Knoxville businessman William G Swan and Irish Patriot John Mitchel and Brownlow spent at least one night parading in front of Swan s home while brandishing a revolver 2 49 During the same period Brownlow blasted the officers of the failed Bank of East Tennessee namely William Churchwell J G M Ramsey and John H Crozier and accused them of swindling money from low level depositors to pay the bank s wealthy creditors 5 Secession crisis edit After the election of Abraham Lincoln in November 1860 the secession debate dominated the pages of the Whig with Brownlow relentlessly attacking the idea of secession and its supporters Knoxville s secessionists cited Brownlow as the source of East Tennessee s pro Union support complaining that the Whig was deluding and poisoning the public mind 5 62 63 In hopes of countering this sentiment the Knoxville Register installed as its editor J Austin Sperry a radical secessionist whom Brownlow described as a scoundrel debauchee and coward 12 214 In May 1861 the Whig announced it had exposed a forgery conspiracy involving several secessionists attempting to smear Andrew Johnson with whom Brownlow had formed an uneasy alliance since they were both pro Union Brownlow pushed this issue for several months and accused the corrupt liar low down drunkard irresponsible vagabond and infamous coward of the Register of complicity in the matter 12 128 In August 1861 Sperry complained about visiting dignitaries spurning him in favor of Brownlow This provoked taunts from Brownlow who claimed that a paper with such limited circulation as the Register could not be called a competitor of the Whig and cited Sperry s bad morals as the reason for dignitaries avoiding him 12 214 The Whig reportedly had 10 700 subscribers throughout East Tennessee in 1861 22 130 The Civil War edit nbsp Engraving from Parson Brownlow s Book showing Confederate soldiers hanging bridge burning conspirators Jacob and Henry Harmon After Tennessee withdrew from the Union in June 1861 the Confederate Army occupied East Tennessee and arrested several noted Union supporters Throughout the summer of that year Brownlow dedicated much of the Whig to defending these Unionists 12 138 150 By October the Whig was the last pro Union newspaper in the Confederacy 5 98 Finally on October 24 Brownlow announced he had become aware of an indictment issued against him and was suspending publication 12 254 255 The Confederate Army confiscated the Whig offices and used the printing machinery to convert muskets into rifles 5 106 Brownlow was eventually arrested but released He went into exile in the North where he published a book and played an important role in rallying support for the liberation of East Tennessee He returned to Knoxville on the heels of the Union general Ambrose Burnside s invading army in September 1863 and revived the Whig under the title Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator Brownlow used the Whig to harass Knoxville s Confederates 5 180 and had a number of them expelled These included the Confederate diarist Ellen Renshaw House who wrote that Brownlow was the vilest thing that ever lived 23 Later years edit After Brownlow was elected Governor of Tennessee in 1865 publication of the Whig was turned over to his son John Bell Brownlow although the elder Brownlow continued to write for the paper As governor Brownlow used the Whig to issue state proclamations ignoring a Tennessee law requiring the Secretary of State s signature 2 263 265 In 1868 Brownlow revived his old rivalry with Andrew Johnson by supporting Johnson s impeachment 14 In 1869 Brownlow sold the Whig to T Hawes and Company which in turn sold it to Knoxville businessman Joseph A Mabry Mabry had supported secession during the Civil War but had since become friends with Brownlow Mabry tried to transform the Whig into a Democratic newspaper but was unsuccessful and the paper failed shortly afterward 3 206 In 1870 William Rule a former Whig editor launched the Knoxville Chronicle which continued the Whig s Republican leanings Upon his return from the U S Senate in 1875 Brownlow purchased half ownership of the Chronicle and it was renamed the Whig and Chronicle which he edited until his death in 1877 3 206 208 Rule continued editing the paper later renamed the Knoxville Journal until his own death in 1928 The paper s publication continued in Knoxville until 1991 24 As of 2013 the Journal is a weekly paper with both print and online editions 25 References edit a b c About Knoxville weekly Whig Knoxville Tenn 1869 1870 Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Library of Congress Retrieved 2 July 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q E Merton Coulter William G Brownlow Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands Knoxville Tenn University of Tennessee Press 1999 a b c d e f William Rule Standard History of Knoxville Tennessee General Books 2009 a b Early History of Carter County 1760 1861 p 55 Frank Merritt East Tennessee Historical Society Knoxville Tennessee 1950 a b c d e f g h i j Robert McKenzie Lincolnites and Rebels A Divided Town in the American Civil War New York Oxford University Press 2006 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 15 October 1845 3 December 1845 29 July 1846 et al Jonesborough Whig 11 May 1842 a b Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 18 June 1845 a b Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 29 October 1845 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 25 February 1846 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 25 March 1846 a b c d e f g h i j k l William G Brownlow Sketches of the Rise Progress and Decline of Secession with a Narrative of Personal Adventures Among the Rebels Philadelphia G W Childs 1862 a b c Paul Fink Jonesborough The First Century of Tennessee s First Town Johnson City Tenn Overmountain Press 2002 pp 140 145 a b Thomas Alexander Strange Bedfellows The Interlocking Careers of T A R Nelson Andrew Johnson and William G Parson Brownlow East Tennessee Historical Society Publications No 24 1952 p 72 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 20 August 1845 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 20 November 1844 a b James Bellamy The Political Career of Landon Carter Haynes East Tennessee Historical Society Publications No 28 1956 pp 105 107 a b Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 21 January 1846 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 19 April 1849 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 11 June 1845 Verton Queener William Gannaway Brownlow as an Editor East Tennessee Historical Society Publications No 4 1932 pp 72 76 Rothrock Mary Utopia 1946 The French Broad Holston Country a history of Knox County Tennessee Knoxville Tenn East Tennessee Historical Society via HathiTrust Ellen Renshaw House Daniel Sutherland ed A Very Violent Rebel The Civil War Diary of Ellen Renshaw House Knoxville Tenn University of Tennessee Press 1996 p 5 Beth Vanlandingham Knoxville Journal Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture 2002 Retrieved 2 July 2010 The Knoxville Journal subscription page Retrieved 24 March 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brownlow 27s Whig amp oldid 1192115761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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