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Elijah Parish Lovejoy

Elijah Parish Lovejoy (November 9, 1802 – November 7, 1837) was an American Presbyterian minister, journalist, newspaper editor, and abolitionist. Following his murder by a mob, he became a martyr to the abolitionist cause opposing slavery in the United States.[1] He was also hailed as a defender of free speech and freedom of the press.[1][2][3]

Elijah Parish Lovejoy
Born(1802-11-09)November 9, 1802
DiedNovember 7, 1837(1837-11-07) (aged 34)
Cause of deathMurder
EducationWaterville College
Spouse
Celia Ann French
(m. 1835)
Children2
Relatives
Signature

Lovejoy was born in New England and graduated from what is today Colby College. Unsatisfied with a teaching career, he was drawn to journalism and decided to 'go west'. In 1827, he reached St. Louis, Missouri. Due to the Missouri Compromise of 1820, Missouri had entered the United States as a slave state. Lovejoy edited a newspaper but returned east for a time to study for the ministry at Princeton University. On his return to St. Louis, he founded the St. Louis Observer, in which he became increasingly more critical of slavery and the powerful interests protecting slavery. Facing threats and violent attacks, Lovejoy decided to move across the river to Alton in Illinois, a free state. But Alton was also tied to the Mississippi River economy, easily reachable by anti-Lovejoy Missourians, and was badly split over pro-abolitionist and anti-abolitionist views.

In Alton, Lovejoy was fatally shot during an attack by a pro-slavery mob. The mob was seeking to destroy a warehouse owned by Winthrop Sargent Gilman and Benjamin Godfrey, which held Lovejoy's printing press and abolitionist materials.[4] According to John Quincy Adams, the murder "[gave] a shock as of an earthquake throughout this country."[5] The Boston Recorder wrote that "these events called forth from every part of the land 'a burst of indignation which has not had its parallel in this country since the Battle of Lexington.'"[6] When informed about the murder, John Brown said publicly: "Here, before God, in the presence of these witnesses, from this time, I consecrate my life to the destruction of slavery."[7] Lovejoy is often seen as a martyr to the abolitionist cause and to a free press. The Lovejoy Monument was erected in Alton in 1897.

Early life and education

Elijah Parish Lovejoy was born at his paternal grandparents' frontier farmhouse near Albion, Maine (at that time, part of Massachusetts), the eldest of nine children of Elizabeth (Pattee) Lovejoy and Daniel Lovejoy.[8] Lovejoy's father was a Congregational preacher and farmer, and his mother was a homemaker and a devout Christian. Daniel Lovejoy named his son in honor of his close friend and mentor, Elijah Parish, a minister who was also involved in politics.[9] Due to his own lack of education, the father encouraged his sons – Elijah, Daniel, Joseph Cammett, Owen, and John – to become educated. Elijah was taught to read the Bible and other religious texts by his mother at an early age.[10][11]

After completing early studies in public schools, Lovejoy attended the private Academy at Monmouth and China Academy. When sufficiently proficient in Latin and mathematics, he enrolled at Waterville College (now Colby College) as a sophomore in 1823.[10] Lovejoy received financial support from minister Benjamin Tappan to continue his studies there.[12] Based on faculty recommendations, from 1824 until his graduation in 1826, he also served as headmaster of Colby's associated high school, the Latin School (later known as the Coburn Classical Institute). In September 1826, Lovejoy graduated cum laude from Waterville,[13] and was class valedictorian.[14]

Journey westward

During the winter and spring, he taught at China Academy in Maine. Dissatisfied with teaching, Lovejoy considered moving to the American South or westward to the Northwest Territory. His former teachers at Waterville College advised him that he would best serve God in the West (now considered the American Midwest).[15]

In May 1827, he went to Boston to earn money for his journey, having settled on the free state of Illinois as his destination.[16] Unsuccessful at finding work, he started for Illinois by foot. He stopped in New York City in mid-June to try to find work. He eventually landed a position with the Saturday Evening Gazette as a newspaper subscription peddler. For nearly five weeks, he worked to sell subscriptions.[17]

Struggling with his finances, he wrote to Jeremiah Chaplin, president of Waterville College, explaining his situation. Chaplin sent the money that his former student needed.[17] Before embarking on his journey westward, Lovejoy wrote a poem which later seemed to prophesy his death:[18]

I go to tread
The Western vales, whose gloomy cypress tree
Shall haply, soon be enwreathed upon my bier;
Land of my birth! My natal soil, Farewell
—Elijah P. Lovejoy[18]

Career in Missouri

In 1827, Lovejoy arrived in St. Louis, Missouri, a major port in a slave state that shared its longest border with the free state of Illinois.[19] Although it had a large slave market, St. Louis identified itself less with the plantation South and more as the "gateway to the West" and the American "frontier."[19]

Lovejoy initially ran a private school in St. Louis with a friend, which they modeled after academies in the East.[18][11] Lovejoy's interest in teaching waned, however, when local editors began publishing his poems in their newspapers.[11]

St. Louis Times

In 1829, Lovejoy became a co-editor with T. J. Miller of the St. Louis Times, which promoted the candidacy of Henry Clay for president of the United States.[11][4] Working at the Times introduced him to like-minded community leaders, many of whom were members of the American Colonization Society. They supported sending freed American blacks to Africa, considering it a kind of "repatriation."[11] Opponents of the ACS including Frederick Douglass noted most African Americans had been native-born for generations and considered their future to be in the U.S.[20] Among Lovejoy's new acquaintances were prominent St. Louis attorneys and slaveholders such as Edward Bates (later U.S. Attorney General under President Abraham Lincoln); Hamilton R. Gamble, later Chief Justice of the Missouri Supreme Court; and his brother Archibald Gamble.[11]

Lovejoy occasionally hired slaves who were leased out by owners, to work with him at the paper.[11] Among them was William Wells Brown, who later recounted his experience in a memoir. Brown described Lovejoy as "a very good man, and decidedly the best master that I had ever had. I am chiefly indebted to him, and to my employment in the printing office, for what little learning I obtained while in slavery."[21][11]

 
Reverend David Nelson influenced Lovejoy's antislavery views[11]

Theological training

Lovejoy struggled with his interest in religion, often writing to his parents about his sinfulness and rebellion against God. He attended revival meetings in 1831 led by William S. Potts, pastor of First Presbyterian Church, that rekindled his interest in religion for a time. However, Lovejoy admitted to his parents that "gradually these feelings all left me, and I returned to the world a more hardened sinner than ever."[11]

A year later, Lovejoy found the call to God he had been yearning for. In 1832, influenced by Christian revivalist meetings led by abolitionist David Nelson, he joined the First Presbyterian Church and decided to become a preacher.[11] He sold his interest in the Times, and returned East to study at Princeton Theological Seminary.[11] While he was at Princeton, Lovejoy debated the question of slavery with an abolitionist named Bradford.[22] Although Lovejoy had opposed abolitionism during the debate, after returning to St. Louis he would write to Bradford repeatedly asking him to write articles for his newspaper.[22]

After graduation, he went to Philadelphia, where he became an ordained minister of the Presbyterian Church on April 18, 1833.[11]

St. Louis Observer

In 1833, a group of Protestants in St. Louis offered to finance a religious newspaper if Lovejoy would agree to return and edit it. Lovejoy accepted and on November 22, 1833, he published the first issue of the St. Louis Observer.[11][4] His editorials criticized both the Catholic Church and slavery.[23][11] By 1830, sixty percent of the population of St. Louis was Catholic, and the proprietors of the Observer tasked Lovejoy with countering the increasing influence of Catholicism.[23]

From the fall of 1833 to the summer 1836, Lovejoy regularly published articles criticizing the Catholic Church and church doctrine.[23] Some were written by Lovejoy, while others were contributed by other authors.[23] Initially, he criticized Catholic beliefs such as transubstantiation, clerical celibacy, and the influence of Catholicism on foreign governments.[23] He also argued that "Popery" undermined the fundamental principles of American democracy.[23] Local Catholics and clergy were offended by these attacks and regularly responded in articles of their own in The Shepherd of the Times, a Catholic newspaper funded by Bishop Joseph Rosati.[11][23]

In 1834, the St. Louis Observer began to increase its coverage of slavery, the most controversial issue of the day.[11] At first, Lovejoy resisted calling himself an abolitionist, because he disliked the negative connotations associating abolitionism with social unrest.[23] Even as he expressed antislavery views, he claimed to be an "emancipationist" rather than an "abolitionist."[22] In the spring of 1835, the Missouri Republican advocated the gradual emancipation of slaves in Missouri, and Lovejoy voiced his support through the Observer.[11] Lovejoy urged antislavery groups in Missouri to push for the issue to be addressed during a proposed state constitutional convention.[11] To their dismay, the editors of both newspapers soon found that their "moderate" proposal to end slavery gradually could not be discussed without igniting a polarizing political debate.[11]

Over time, Lovejoy became bolder and more outspoken about his antislavery views, advocating the outright emancipation of all slaves on religious and moral grounds.[23] Lovejoy condemned slavery and "implored all Christians who owned slaves to recognize that slaves were human beings who possessed a soul,"[23] and famously wrote:

Slavery, as it exists among us . . . is demonstrably an evil. In every community where it exists, it presses like a nightmare on the body politic. Or, like the vampire, it slowly and imperceptibly sucks away the life-blood of society, leaving it faint and disheartened to stagger along the road of improvement.[23][24]

Threats of violence

Lovejoy's views on slavery began to incite complaints and threats.[11] Pro-slavery proponents condemned anti-slavery coverage which appeared in newspapers, stating that it was against "the vital interests of the slaveholding states." Lovejoy was threatened to be tarred and feathered if he continued to publish anti-slavery content.[25]

By October 1835, there were rumors of mob action against The Observer. A group of prominent St. Louisans, including many of Lovejoy's friends, wrote a letter pleading with him to cease discussion of slavery in the newspaper. Lovejoy was away from the city at this time, and the publishers declared that no further articles on slavery would be published during his absence. They said that when he returned, he would follow a more rigorous editorial policy. Lovejoy responded by expressing disagreement with the publishers' policy. As tensions over slavery escalated in St. Louis, Lovejoy would not back down from his convictions; he sensed that he would become a martyr for the cause. He was asked to resign as editor of The Observer, to which he agreed. After the newspaper's owners released The Observer property to the moneylender who held the mortgage, the new owners asked Lovejoy to stay on as editor.[11]

Lynching of Francis McIntosh

Lovejoy and The Observer continued to be embroiled in controversy. In April 1836, Francis McIntosh, a free man of color and boatman, was arrested by two policemen. En route to the jail, McIntosh grabbed a knife and stabbed both men. One was killed and the other seriously injured. McIntosh attempted to escape, but was caught by a white mob, who tied him up and burned him to death. Some of the mob were brought before a grand jury to face charges. The presiding judge, Judge Luke Lawless, refused to convict anyone; he said the crime was a spontaneous mob action without any specific people to prosecute. The judge made remarks suggesting that abolitionists, including Lovejoy and The Observer, had incited McIntosh into stabbing the policemen.[11]

Marriage and family

Lovejoy also served as an evangelist preacher. He traveled a circuit across the state, during which he met Celia Ann French of St. Charles, located on the Missouri River west of St. Louis,[25] now a suburb of the city. She was the daughter of Thomas French, a lawyer who came to St. Charles in the 1820s.[26] The couple were married on March 4, 1835.[25][27] Their son Edward P. Lovejoy was born in 1836.[26] Their second child was born after Elijah's death and died as an infant.[28][26][a] In a letter to his mother, Elijah had written about Celia:

My dear wife is a perfect heroine... never has she by a single word attempted to turn me from the scene of warfare and danger – never has she whispered a feeling of discontent at the hardships to which she has been subjected in consequence of her marriage to me, and those have been neither few nor small.[26]

Move to Illinois

In the summer of 1836, Lovejoy attended the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh and met several followers of abolitionist Theodore Weld.[22] At the assembly, Lovejoy was frustrated by the church's hesitation to fully support petitions for abolition and drafted a protest submitted to church leadership.[22] By this time, he had fully embraced the label of "abolitionist."[22]

In the face of all the negative publicity and two break-ins in May 1836, Lovejoy decided to move The Observer across the Mississippi River to Alton, Illinois.[11] At the time, Alton was large and prosperous, many times larger than the frontier city of Chicago.[25] Although Illinois was a free state, Alton was also a center for slave catchers and pro-slavery forces active in the southern area. Many refugee slaves crossed the Mississippi River from Missouri. Among Alton's residents were pro-slavery Southerners who thought Alton should not become a haven for escaped slaves.[29]

On July 21, 1836, Lovejoy published a scathing editorial criticizing the way that Judge Luke Lawless had handled the murder trial of Francis McIntosh.[22] Arguing that the judge's actions appeared to condone the murder, he wrote that Lawless was "a Papist; and in his charge we see the cloven foot of Jesuitism."[1] He also announced that his next issue would be printed in Alton.[11] Before he could move the press, an angry mob broke into The Observer office and vandalized it. Only Alderman and future mayor Bryan Mullanphy attempted to stop the crime, and no policemen or city officials intervened. Lovejoy packed what remained of the office for shipment to Alton. The printing press sat on the riverbank, unguarded, overnight; vandals destroyed it and threw the remains into the Mississippi River.[11]

Alton Observer

Lovejoy served as pastor at Upper Alton Presbyterian Church (now College Avenue Presbyterian Church). In 1837, he started the Alton Observer, also an abolitionist, Presbyterian paper.[30] Lovejoy's views on slavery became more extreme, and he called for a convention to discuss forming an Illinois state chapter of the American Anti-Slavery Society, established in Philadelphia in 1833.

Many residents of Alton began to question whether they should continue to allow Lovejoy to print in their town. After an economic crisis in March 1837, Alton citizens wondered if Lovejoy's views were contributing to hard times. They felt Southern states, or even the city of St. Louis, might not want to do business with their town if they continued to harbor such an outspoken abolitionist.[11]

Lovejoy held the Illinois Antislavery Congress at the Presbyterian church in Upper Alton on October 26, 1837. Supporters were surprised to see two pro-slavery advocates in the crowd, John Hogan and Illinois Attorney General Usher F. Linder. The Lovejoy supporters were not happy to have his enemies at the convention, but relented as the meeting was open to all parties.[31]

On November 2, 1837, Lovejoy responded to threats in a speech, saying:

As long as I am an American citizen, and as long as American blood runs in these veins, I shall hold myself at liberty to speak, to write and to publish whatever I please, being amenable to the laws of my country for the same.[28]

Mob attack and death

 
Wood engraving of the pro-slavery mob setting fire to Gilman & Godfrey's warehouse.

Lovejoy had acquired a fourth press and hid it in a warehouse owned by Winthrop Sargent Gilman and Gilford, major grocers in the area. A mob, said by Appleton's to be composed mostly of Missourians, attacked the building on the evening of November 6, 1837.[4] Pro-slavery partisans approached Gilman's warehouse, where Lovejoy had hidden his printing press.[32][33] The conflict continued. According to the Alton Observer, the mob fired shots into the warehouse. When Lovejoy and his men returned fire, they hit several people in the crowd, killing a man named Bishop.[32] After the attacking party had apparently withdrawn, Lovejoy opened the door and was instantly struck by five bullets, dying in a few minutes.[4]

 
Mid-19th century memorial card with Lovejoy's silhouette

Elijah Lovejoy was buried in Alton Cemetery; his grave was unmarked to prevent vandalism. The ceremony was kept small. In 1864, Thomas Dimmock "reclaimed from oblivion" Lovejoy's grave. Dimmock had "succeeded in establishing the location of the grave... in a roadway where vehicles were passing over it... Mr. Dimmock had the bones disinterred and... laid in a new grave where they would be free from trespass." He also arranged for a gravestone and helped found a committee to create a monument to the editor. Dimmock was principal orator at the dedication of a later monument erected in 1897 to commemorate Lovejoy.[34][35]

 
Elijah Lovejoy grave as it appeared in 2009.

The Chicago Tribune said of the grave marking and association to fund a monument:

For many years Lovejoy's grave was unmarked and in danger of utter oblivion, until one who had known him in life, Thomas Dimmock of St. Louis, . . . marked the grave with the simple stone bearing he inscription: "Hic jacet Lovejoy. Jam parce depulto." "Here lies Lovejoy: now spare his grave." It was largely through the efforts of Mr. Dimmock that ten years ago the Lovejoy Monument Association was formed . . . .[36]

Alton riot trial

Francis B. Murdoch, the district attorney of Alton, prosecuted charges of riot related to both assailants and defenders of the warehouse in January 1838, on Wednesday and Friday of the same week. He called the Illinois Attorney General, Usher F. Linder, to assist him.[37]

Murdoch (with Linder) first prosecuted Gilman, owner of the warehouse, and eleven other defenders of the new press and building. They were indicted on two charges related to the riot at a trial opening January 16, 1838, for "unlawful defence", so defined and charged because it was "violently and tumultuously done."[38][37] Gilman moved to be tried separately; his counsel said he needed to be able to show his lack of criminal intent.[39] The court agreed on the condition that the other eleven defendants would be tried together. Although the proceedings lasted until 10 p.m. that night, in the case of Gilman, the jury returned after ten minutes to declare him "Not Guilty." The next morning the "City Attorney entered a 'Nulle Prosequi' as to the other eleven defendants", effectively dismissing the charges against them.[37]

A new jury was called to hear the case against the assailants of the warehouse. The attackers allegedly responsible for destruction of the warehouse and Lovejoy's death were tried beginning January 19, 1838. Concluding it was not possible to assign responsibility among the several suspects and others not indicted, the jury gave a verdict of "not guilty".[37] The jury foreman had been identified as a member of the mob and was wounded in the attack. The presiding judge doubled as a witness to the proceedings. These conflicts of interest are believed to have contributed to the "not guilty" verdict.[11]

Legacy and honors

 
The 110-foot tall Elijah P. Lovejoy monument, in Alton, Illinois
  • Lovejoy was considered a martyr by the abolition movement. In his name, his brother Owen Lovejoy became the leader of the Illinois abolitionists. Owen and his brother Joseph wrote a memoir about Elijah, which was published in 1838 by the Anti-Slavery Society in New York and distributed widely among abolitionists in the nation.[4] With his killing symbolic of the rising tensions within the country, Lovejoy is called the "first casualty of the Civil War."[29]
  • Abraham Lincoln referred to Lovejoy's murder in his Lyceum address in January 1838.
  • John Brown was inspired by Lovejoy's death, declaring in church, "Here, before God, in the presence of these witnesses, from this time, I consecrate my life to the destruction of slavery."[40]
  • John Glanville Gill completed his Ph.D. at Harvard in 1946 on The Issues Involved in the Death of the Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy, Alton, 1837.[41] This thesis was adapted and published in 1958 as the first biography of Lovejoy, entitled Tide Without Turning: Elijah P. Lovejoy and Freedom of the Press.
  • Awards and scholarships
    • The Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award was established by Colby College in his honor. It is awarded annually to a member of the press who "has contributed to the nation's journalistic achievement." A major classroom building at Colby is also named for Lovejoy. An inscribed memorial rock from his birthplace was installed in a grassy square at Colby.
    • In 2003, Reed College established the Elijah Parish and Owen Lovejoy Scholarship, which it awards annually.
  • Memorials and plaques
    • In 1897, the 110-foot tall Elijah P. Lovejoy Monument was erected at Alton's City Cemetery; $25,000 had been appropriated by the state legislature, and $5,000 raised by residents of Alton and other supporters.[36]
    • A plaque honoring Elijah Parish Lovejoy was installed on an external wall at the Mackay Campus Center at his alma mater, Princeton Theological Seminary.
    • He is the first person listed in the "Journalists Memorial" located at the Newseum, 555 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC.[42][43]
    • Elijah Lovejoy is recognized by a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.[44]
  • Numerous places and institutions were named after him:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Elijah and Celia Lovejoy's second child, who died as an infant, was identified as a son by the Alton Evening Telegraph in 1937, but as a daughter in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in 1987.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Dillon, Merton L. (February 2000). "Lovejoy, Elijah Parish". American National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1500423.
  2. ^ Merriam, Allen H. (November 1987). Elijah Lovejoy and Free Speech. ERIC – Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved March 27, 2022.
  3. ^ Rabban, David M. (November 1992). "The Free Speech League, the ACLU, and Changing Conceptions of Free Speech in American History". Stanford Law Review. 45 (1): 71. doi:10.2307/1228985. JSTOR 1228985.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Wilson & Fiske 1900, p. 34.
  5. ^ Brown 1916, pp. 97–98.
  6. ^ Brown 1916, p. 98.
  7. ^ Brown 1916, p. 101.
  8. ^ Lawson 1916, p. 528.
  9. ^ Dillon 1999, p. 3.
  10. ^ a b Lovejoy & Lovejoy 1838, pp. 18–19.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Van Ravenswaay, Charles (1991). St. Louis: An Informal History of the City and Its People, 1764–1865. Missouri History Museum. pp. 276–277, 279–280.
  12. ^ Dillon 1999, p. 5.
  13. ^ Lovejoy & Lovejoy 1838, p. 23.
  14. ^ Dillon 1999, p. 6.
  15. ^ Dillon 1999, p. 7.
  16. ^ Dillon 1999, p. 9.
  17. ^ a b Dillon 1999, p. 10.
  18. ^ a b c "Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy: A biographical sketch". Bangor Daily Whig and Courier. December 15, 1870. p. 4. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  19. ^ a b VanderVelde, Lea (2014). Redemption Songs: Suing for Freedom Before Dred Scott. Oxford University Press. p. 12. ISBN 9780199927296.
  20. ^ Douglass, Frederick (2015). Kaufman-McKivigan, John R.; Levine, Robert S.; Stauffer, John (eds.). The Heroic Slave – A Cultural and Critical Edition. Yale University Press. doi:10.12987/9780300210569-019. S2CID 246119905.
  21. ^ Brown, William W. (1847). Narrative of William W. Brown, a Fugitive Slave, written by himself. Boston. from the original on October 19, 2019. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g Merkel, Benjamin G. (April 1950). "The Abolition Aspects of Missouri's Anti-Slavery Controversy 1819–1865". Missouri Historical Review. 44 (3): 239–240 – via Internet Archive.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Duerk, John A. (Summer 2015). "Elijah P. Lovejoy: Anti-Catholic Abolitionist". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 108 (2): 103–121. doi:10.5406/jillistathistsoc.108.2.0103. JSTOR 10.5406/jillistathistsoc.108.2.0103 – via JSTOR.
  24. ^ St. Louis Observer, April 30, 1835.
  25. ^ a b c d Ritchie, Donald A. (2007). American Journalists. Oxford University Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-19-532837-0. from the original on July 10, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  26. ^ a b c d "Wife of Lovejoy Commemorated after 150 Years". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. November 12, 1987. p. 72. Retrieved March 27, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  27. ^ "Elijah P. Lovejoy As An Anti-Catholic". Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia. 62 (3): 172–180. 1951. ISSN 0002-7790. JSTOR 44210176. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  28. ^ a b "Love and Devotion Marked Home Life of Elijah Lovejoy". Alton Evening Telegraph. July 22, 1937. p. 7. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  29. ^ a b John Glanville Gill, Tide Without Turning: Elijah P. Lovejoy and Freedom of the Press (1958).
  30. ^ a b "Reverend Elijah Parish Lovejoy". Philadelphia: Presbyterian Historical Society. April 29, 2014. from the original on November 26, 2020. Retrieved March 9, 2017.
  31. ^ Simon, Paul (1994). Freedom's Champion: Elijah Lovejoy (Rev. ed.). Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois Press. p. 102. ISBN 0-8093-1941-1.
  32. ^ a b "Winthrop S. Gilman Dead: An Original Abolitionist and Successful Business Man and Banker". The New York Times. October 5, 1884. from the original on April 20, 2016. Retrieved February 7, 2017. Winthrop Sargent Gilman, head of the banking house of Gilman, Son Co., of No. 62 Cedar-street, this city, died at his Summer home in Palisades, Rockland County, N.Y., on Friday, age 76. Mr. Gilman was known as a business ...
  33. ^ "Elijah Parish Lovejoy Was Killed By a Pro-slavery Mob". Library of Congress. from the original on December 5, 2009. Retrieved June 7, 2008. On November 7, 1837, Elijah Parish Lovejoy was killed by a pro-slavery mob while defending the site of his anti-slavery newspaper, The Saint Louis Observer.
  34. ^ "Dimmock Funeral To-day". St. Louis Globe-Democrat. November 20, 1909. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  35. ^ St. Louis Marriage Index, 1804–76. St. Louis, Missouri: St. Louis Genealogical Society, 1999
  36. ^ a b "Lovejoy Memorial at Alton, Illinois to be Dedicated Tomorrow". Chicago Tribune. November 7, 1897. p. 12. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  37. ^ a b c d "The Riot Trial". The Alton Observer. Madison County/Illinois GenWeb. January 24, 1838. from the original on June 10, 2021. Retrieved June 10, 2021.
  38. ^ Gilman (1838), Alton Trials, p. 8
  39. ^ Winthrop Sargent Gilman; John Solomon; William Sever Lincoln (1838). Alton trials: of Winthrop S. Gilman, who was indicted with Enoch Long, Amos B. Roff, George H. Walworth ... for the crime of riot, committed on the night of the 7th of November, 1837, while engaged in defending a printing press, from an attack made on it at that time, by an armed mob. New York: J.F. Trow. from the original on June 10, 2021. Retrieved June 10, 2021.
  40. ^ . War and Reconciliation: The Mid-Missouri Civil War Project. University of Missouri-Columbia School of Law. Archived from the original on December 20, 2016. Retrieved December 12, 2016.
  41. ^ Gill, John G (March 22, 1946). Lovejoy; the issues involved in the death of the Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy, Alton, 1837. OCLC 76984559. from the original on November 18, 2018. Retrieved March 22, 2021 – via Open WorldCat.
  42. ^ Rosenwald, Michael S. (June 29, 2018). "Angry mobs, deadly duels, presses set on fire: A history of attacks on the press". The Washington Post. from the original on June 29, 2018. Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  43. ^ "Journalists Memorial". Newseum. from the original on October 29, 2019. Retrieved March 22, 2021.
  44. ^ St. Louis Walk of Fame. . stlouiswalkoffame.org. Archived from the original on June 2, 2008. Retrieved April 25, 2013.

Works cited

  • Beecher, Edward (1969). Narrative of Riots at Alton, in Connection with the Death of Rev. Elijah P Lovejoy. Mnemosyne Pub. Co.
  • Brown, Justus Newton (September–October 1916). "Lovejoy's Influence on John Brown". Magazine of History with Notes and Queries. Vol. 23, no. 3–4. pp. 97–102.
  • Dillon, Merton L. (1999). John A. Garraty and Mark C. Carnes (ed.). American National Biography. New York: Oxford University Press. Vol. 14, pp. 4–5. ISBN 0-19-512793-5.
  • Dillon, Merton L. (1961). Elijah P. Lovejoy, Abolitionist Editor. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
  • Gill, John Glanville (1959). Tide Without Turning: Elijah P. Lovejoy and Freedom of the Press. Boston: Starr King Press.
  • Lawson, John D. (1916). Robert L. Howard (ed.). American State Trials: A Collection of the Important and Interesting Criminal Trials which have taken place in the United States, from the beginning of our Government to the Present Day. St. Louis: F. H. Thomas Law Book Co.
  • Lovejoy, Joseph C.; Lovejoy, Owen (1838). Memoir of the Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy: Who was Murdered in Defence of the Liberty of the Press at Alton, Illinois, Nov. 7, 1837. New York: J. S. Taylor.
  • Tanner, Henry (1971). The Martyrdom of Lovejoy: An Account of the Life, Trials, and Perils of Rev Elijah P. Lovejoy. A. M. Kelley. ISBN 0-678-00744-6. (first published in Chicago, 1881; reprint edition 1971)
  • Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Lovejoy, Elijah Parish" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton. pp. 34–35.

Further reading (most recent first)

  • Ellingwood, Ken (2021). First to Fall: Elijah Lovejoy and the Fight for a Free Press in the Age of Slavery. Pegasus Press. ISBN 978-1643137025.
  • Dinius, Marcy J. (2018). "Press". Early American Studies. 16 (4): 747–755. doi:10.1353/eam.2018.0045. S2CID 246013692 – via Project MUSE.
  • Phillips, Jennifer (2020). Elijah Lovejoy's Fight for Freedom. IngramSpark. (Biography for middle-grade readers.)
  • Simon, Paul (1994). Freedom's Champion: Elijah Lovejoy. Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0-8093-1940-3.
  • Lincoln, William S. (1838). Alton trials : of Winthrop S. Gilman, who was indicted with Enoch Long, Amos B. Roff, George H. Walworth, William Harned, John S. Noble, James Morss, Jr., Henry Tanner Royal Weller, Reuben Gerry, and Taddeus B. Hurlbut; for the crime of riot, Committed on the night of the 7th of November, 1837, while engaged in defending a printing press. New-York: John F. Trow.
  • Phillips, Wendell (1890) [1837]. "The Murder of Lovejoy". The Freedom Speech of Wendell Phillips. Faneuil Hall, December 8, 1837. With descriptive letters from eye witnesses. Boston: Wendell Phillips Hall Association.

External links

  • Biography from the Alton, Illinois web June 29, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
    • "Elijah Parish Lovejoy: 'a Martyr on the Altar of American Liberty' " May 11, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Reprint, Alton Observer, November 7, 1837
  • St. Louis Walk of Fame
  • "Elijah Lovejoy, Correspondence & manuscripts, 1804–1891", at Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University. See also papers of nephew Austin Wiswall, officer with 9th United States Colored Troops, captured and held in prison at Andersonville, Georgia.
  • Anne Silverwood Twitty, Slavery and Freedom in the American Confluence, from the Northwest Ordinance to Dred Scott, Ph.D. dissertation, Princeton University, 2010, via ProQuest subscription (Preview online)
  • "Old Des Peres Presbyterian Church" (1834), Frontenac, MO, where Lovejoy preached in its early years
  • "Lovejoy, Elijah Parish" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. 1900.
  • Elijah Parish Lovejoy at Find a Grave
  • Biography from Spartacus Educational

elijah, parish, lovejoy, november, 1802, november, 1837, american, presbyterian, minister, journalist, newspaper, editor, abolitionist, following, murder, became, martyr, abolitionist, cause, opposing, slavery, united, states, also, hailed, defender, free, spe. Elijah Parish Lovejoy November 9 1802 November 7 1837 was an American Presbyterian minister journalist newspaper editor and abolitionist Following his murder by a mob he became a martyr to the abolitionist cause opposing slavery in the United States 1 He was also hailed as a defender of free speech and freedom of the press 1 2 3 Elijah Parish LovejoyBorn 1802 11 09 November 9 1802Albion Maine U S DiedNovember 7 1837 1837 11 07 aged 34 Alton Illinois U S Cause of deathMurderEducationWaterville CollegeSpouseCelia Ann French m 1835 wbr Children2RelativesOwen Lovejoy brother Nathan A Farwell cousin SignatureLovejoy was born in New England and graduated from what is today Colby College Unsatisfied with a teaching career he was drawn to journalism and decided to go west In 1827 he reached St Louis Missouri Due to the Missouri Compromise of 1820 Missouri had entered the United States as a slave state Lovejoy edited a newspaper but returned east for a time to study for the ministry at Princeton University On his return to St Louis he founded the St Louis Observer in which he became increasingly more critical of slavery and the powerful interests protecting slavery Facing threats and violent attacks Lovejoy decided to move across the river to Alton in Illinois a free state But Alton was also tied to the Mississippi River economy easily reachable by anti Lovejoy Missourians and was badly split over pro abolitionist and anti abolitionist views In Alton Lovejoy was fatally shot during an attack by a pro slavery mob The mob was seeking to destroy a warehouse owned by Winthrop Sargent Gilman and Benjamin Godfrey which held Lovejoy s printing press and abolitionist materials 4 According to John Quincy Adams the murder gave a shock as of an earthquake throughout this country 5 The Boston Recorder wrote that these events called forth from every part of the land a burst of indignation which has not had its parallel in this country since the Battle of Lexington 6 When informed about the murder John Brown said publicly Here before God in the presence of these witnesses from this time I consecrate my life to the destruction of slavery 7 Lovejoy is often seen as a martyr to the abolitionist cause and to a free press The Lovejoy Monument was erected in Alton in 1897 Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 Journey westward 2 Career in Missouri 2 1 St Louis Times 2 2 Theological training 2 3 St Louis Observer 2 4 Threats of violence 2 4 1 Lynching of Francis McIntosh 3 Marriage and family 4 Move to Illinois 4 1 Alton Observer 4 2 Mob attack and death 5 Alton riot trial 6 Legacy and honors 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Works cited 10 Further reading most recent first 11 External linksEarly life and education EditElijah Parish Lovejoy was born at his paternal grandparents frontier farmhouse near Albion Maine at that time part of Massachusetts the eldest of nine children of Elizabeth Pattee Lovejoy and Daniel Lovejoy 8 Lovejoy s father was a Congregational preacher and farmer and his mother was a homemaker and a devout Christian Daniel Lovejoy named his son in honor of his close friend and mentor Elijah Parish a minister who was also involved in politics 9 Due to his own lack of education the father encouraged his sons Elijah Daniel Joseph Cammett Owen and John to become educated Elijah was taught to read the Bible and other religious texts by his mother at an early age 10 11 After completing early studies in public schools Lovejoy attended the private Academy at Monmouth and China Academy When sufficiently proficient in Latin and mathematics he enrolled at Waterville College now Colby College as a sophomore in 1823 10 Lovejoy received financial support from minister Benjamin Tappan to continue his studies there 12 Based on faculty recommendations from 1824 until his graduation in 1826 he also served as headmaster of Colby s associated high school the Latin School later known as the Coburn Classical Institute In September 1826 Lovejoy graduated cum laude from Waterville 13 and was class valedictorian 14 Journey westward Edit During the winter and spring he taught at China Academy in Maine Dissatisfied with teaching Lovejoy considered moving to the American South or westward to the Northwest Territory His former teachers at Waterville College advised him that he would best serve God in the West now considered the American Midwest 15 In May 1827 he went to Boston to earn money for his journey having settled on the free state of Illinois as his destination 16 Unsuccessful at finding work he started for Illinois by foot He stopped in New York City in mid June to try to find work He eventually landed a position with the Saturday Evening Gazette as a newspaper subscription peddler For nearly five weeks he worked to sell subscriptions 17 Struggling with his finances he wrote to Jeremiah Chaplin president of Waterville College explaining his situation Chaplin sent the money that his former student needed 17 Before embarking on his journey westward Lovejoy wrote a poem which later seemed to prophesy his death 18 I go to treadThe Western vales whose gloomy cypress treeShall haply soon be enwreathed upon my bier Land of my birth My natal soil Farewell Elijah P Lovejoy 18 Career in Missouri EditIn 1827 Lovejoy arrived in St Louis Missouri a major port in a slave state that shared its longest border with the free state of Illinois 19 Although it had a large slave market St Louis identified itself less with the plantation South and more as the gateway to the West and the American frontier 19 Lovejoy initially ran a private school in St Louis with a friend which they modeled after academies in the East 18 11 Lovejoy s interest in teaching waned however when local editors began publishing his poems in their newspapers 11 St Louis Times Edit In 1829 Lovejoy became a co editor with T J Miller of the St Louis Times which promoted the candidacy of Henry Clay for president of the United States 11 4 Working at the Times introduced him to like minded community leaders many of whom were members of the American Colonization Society They supported sending freed American blacks to Africa considering it a kind of repatriation 11 Opponents of the ACS including Frederick Douglass noted most African Americans had been native born for generations and considered their future to be in the U S 20 Among Lovejoy s new acquaintances were prominent St Louis attorneys and slaveholders such as Edward Bates later U S Attorney General under President Abraham Lincoln Hamilton R Gamble later Chief Justice of the Missouri Supreme Court and his brother Archibald Gamble 11 Lovejoy occasionally hired slaves who were leased out by owners to work with him at the paper 11 Among them was William Wells Brown who later recounted his experience in a memoir Brown described Lovejoy as a very good man and decidedly the best master that I had ever had I am chiefly indebted to him and to my employment in the printing office for what little learning I obtained while in slavery 21 11 Reverend David Nelson influenced Lovejoy s antislavery views 11 Theological training Edit Lovejoy struggled with his interest in religion often writing to his parents about his sinfulness and rebellion against God He attended revival meetings in 1831 led by William S Potts pastor of First Presbyterian Church that rekindled his interest in religion for a time However Lovejoy admitted to his parents that gradually these feelings all left me and I returned to the world a more hardened sinner than ever 11 A year later Lovejoy found the call to God he had been yearning for In 1832 influenced by Christian revivalist meetings led by abolitionist David Nelson he joined the First Presbyterian Church and decided to become a preacher 11 He sold his interest in the Times and returned East to study at Princeton Theological Seminary 11 While he was at Princeton Lovejoy debated the question of slavery with an abolitionist named Bradford 22 Although Lovejoy had opposed abolitionism during the debate after returning to St Louis he would write to Bradford repeatedly asking him to write articles for his newspaper 22 After graduation he went to Philadelphia where he became an ordained minister of the Presbyterian Church on April 18 1833 11 St Louis Observer Edit In 1833 a group of Protestants in St Louis offered to finance a religious newspaper if Lovejoy would agree to return and edit it Lovejoy accepted and on November 22 1833 he published the first issue of the St Louis Observer 11 4 His editorials criticized both the Catholic Church and slavery 23 11 By 1830 sixty percent of the population of St Louis was Catholic and the proprietors of the Observer tasked Lovejoy with countering the increasing influence of Catholicism 23 From the fall of 1833 to the summer 1836 Lovejoy regularly published articles criticizing the Catholic Church and church doctrine 23 Some were written by Lovejoy while others were contributed by other authors 23 Initially he criticized Catholic beliefs such as transubstantiation clerical celibacy and the influence of Catholicism on foreign governments 23 He also argued that Popery undermined the fundamental principles of American democracy 23 Local Catholics and clergy were offended by these attacks and regularly responded in articles of their own in The Shepherd of the Times a Catholic newspaper funded by Bishop Joseph Rosati 11 23 In 1834 the St Louis Observer began to increase its coverage of slavery the most controversial issue of the day 11 At first Lovejoy resisted calling himself an abolitionist because he disliked the negative connotations associating abolitionism with social unrest 23 Even as he expressed antislavery views he claimed to be an emancipationist rather than an abolitionist 22 In the spring of 1835 the Missouri Republican advocated the gradual emancipation of slaves in Missouri and Lovejoy voiced his support through the Observer 11 Lovejoy urged antislavery groups in Missouri to push for the issue to be addressed during a proposed state constitutional convention 11 To their dismay the editors of both newspapers soon found that their moderate proposal to end slavery gradually could not be discussed without igniting a polarizing political debate 11 Over time Lovejoy became bolder and more outspoken about his antislavery views advocating the outright emancipation of all slaves on religious and moral grounds 23 Lovejoy condemned slavery and implored all Christians who owned slaves to recognize that slaves were human beings who possessed a soul 23 and famously wrote Slavery as it exists among us is demonstrably an evil In every community where it exists it presses like a nightmare on the body politic Or like the vampire it slowly and imperceptibly sucks away the life blood of society leaving it faint and disheartened to stagger along the road of improvement 23 24 Threats of violence Edit Lovejoy s views on slavery began to incite complaints and threats 11 Pro slavery proponents condemned anti slavery coverage which appeared in newspapers stating that it was against the vital interests of the slaveholding states Lovejoy was threatened to be tarred and feathered if he continued to publish anti slavery content 25 By October 1835 there were rumors of mob action against The Observer A group of prominent St Louisans including many of Lovejoy s friends wrote a letter pleading with him to cease discussion of slavery in the newspaper Lovejoy was away from the city at this time and the publishers declared that no further articles on slavery would be published during his absence They said that when he returned he would follow a more rigorous editorial policy Lovejoy responded by expressing disagreement with the publishers policy As tensions over slavery escalated in St Louis Lovejoy would not back down from his convictions he sensed that he would become a martyr for the cause He was asked to resign as editor of The Observer to which he agreed After the newspaper s owners released The Observer property to the moneylender who held the mortgage the new owners asked Lovejoy to stay on as editor 11 Lynching of Francis McIntosh Edit Main article Lynching of Francis McIntosh Lovejoy and The Observer continued to be embroiled in controversy In April 1836 Francis McIntosh a free man of color and boatman was arrested by two policemen En route to the jail McIntosh grabbed a knife and stabbed both men One was killed and the other seriously injured McIntosh attempted to escape but was caught by a white mob who tied him up and burned him to death Some of the mob were brought before a grand jury to face charges The presiding judge Judge Luke Lawless refused to convict anyone he said the crime was a spontaneous mob action without any specific people to prosecute The judge made remarks suggesting that abolitionists including Lovejoy and The Observer had incited McIntosh into stabbing the policemen 11 Marriage and family EditLovejoy also served as an evangelist preacher He traveled a circuit across the state during which he met Celia Ann French of St Charles located on the Missouri River west of St Louis 25 now a suburb of the city She was the daughter of Thomas French a lawyer who came to St Charles in the 1820s 26 The couple were married on March 4 1835 25 27 Their son Edward P Lovejoy was born in 1836 26 Their second child was born after Elijah s death and died as an infant 28 26 a In a letter to his mother Elijah had written about Celia My dear wife is a perfect heroine never has she by a single word attempted to turn me from the scene of warfare and danger never has she whispered a feeling of discontent at the hardships to which she has been subjected in consequence of her marriage to me and those have been neither few nor small 26 Move to Illinois EditIn the summer of 1836 Lovejoy attended the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh and met several followers of abolitionist Theodore Weld 22 At the assembly Lovejoy was frustrated by the church s hesitation to fully support petitions for abolition and drafted a protest submitted to church leadership 22 By this time he had fully embraced the label of abolitionist 22 In the face of all the negative publicity and two break ins in May 1836 Lovejoy decided to move The Observer across the Mississippi River to Alton Illinois 11 At the time Alton was large and prosperous many times larger than the frontier city of Chicago 25 Although Illinois was a free state Alton was also a center for slave catchers and pro slavery forces active in the southern area Many refugee slaves crossed the Mississippi River from Missouri Among Alton s residents were pro slavery Southerners who thought Alton should not become a haven for escaped slaves 29 On July 21 1836 Lovejoy published a scathing editorial criticizing the way that Judge Luke Lawless had handled the murder trial of Francis McIntosh 22 Arguing that the judge s actions appeared to condone the murder he wrote that Lawless was a Papist and in his charge we see the cloven foot of Jesuitism 1 He also announced that his next issue would be printed in Alton 11 Before he could move the press an angry mob broke into The Observer office and vandalized it Only Alderman and future mayor Bryan Mullanphy attempted to stop the crime and no policemen or city officials intervened Lovejoy packed what remained of the office for shipment to Alton The printing press sat on the riverbank unguarded overnight vandals destroyed it and threw the remains into the Mississippi River 11 Alton Observer Edit Lovejoy served as pastor at Upper Alton Presbyterian Church now College Avenue Presbyterian Church In 1837 he started the Alton Observer also an abolitionist Presbyterian paper 30 Lovejoy s views on slavery became more extreme and he called for a convention to discuss forming an Illinois state chapter of the American Anti Slavery Society established in Philadelphia in 1833 Many residents of Alton began to question whether they should continue to allow Lovejoy to print in their town After an economic crisis in March 1837 Alton citizens wondered if Lovejoy s views were contributing to hard times They felt Southern states or even the city of St Louis might not want to do business with their town if they continued to harbor such an outspoken abolitionist 11 Lovejoy held the Illinois Antislavery Congress at the Presbyterian church in Upper Alton on October 26 1837 Supporters were surprised to see two pro slavery advocates in the crowd John Hogan and Illinois Attorney General Usher F Linder The Lovejoy supporters were not happy to have his enemies at the convention but relented as the meeting was open to all parties 31 On November 2 1837 Lovejoy responded to threats in a speech saying As long as I am an American citizen and as long as American blood runs in these veins I shall hold myself at liberty to speak to write and to publish whatever I please being amenable to the laws of my country for the same 28 Mob attack and death Edit Wood engraving of the pro slavery mob setting fire to Gilman amp Godfrey s warehouse Lovejoy had acquired a fourth press and hid it in a warehouse owned by Winthrop Sargent Gilman and Gilford major grocers in the area A mob said by Appleton s to be composed mostly of Missourians attacked the building on the evening of November 6 1837 4 Pro slavery partisans approached Gilman s warehouse where Lovejoy had hidden his printing press 32 33 The conflict continued According to the Alton Observer the mob fired shots into the warehouse When Lovejoy and his men returned fire they hit several people in the crowd killing a man named Bishop 32 After the attacking party had apparently withdrawn Lovejoy opened the door and was instantly struck by five bullets dying in a few minutes 4 Mid 19th century memorial card with Lovejoy s silhouette Elijah Lovejoy was buried in Alton Cemetery his grave was unmarked to prevent vandalism The ceremony was kept small In 1864 Thomas Dimmock reclaimed from oblivion Lovejoy s grave Dimmock had succeeded in establishing the location of the grave in a roadway where vehicles were passing over it Mr Dimmock had the bones disinterred and laid in a new grave where they would be free from trespass He also arranged for a gravestone and helped found a committee to create a monument to the editor Dimmock was principal orator at the dedication of a later monument erected in 1897 to commemorate Lovejoy 34 35 Elijah Lovejoy grave as it appeared in 2009 The Chicago Tribune said of the grave marking and association to fund a monument For many years Lovejoy s grave was unmarked and in danger of utter oblivion until one who had known him in life Thomas Dimmock of St Louis marked the grave with the simple stone bearing he inscription Hic jacet Lovejoy Jam parce depulto Here lies Lovejoy now spare his grave It was largely through the efforts of Mr Dimmock that ten years ago the Lovejoy Monument Association was formed 36 Alton riot trial EditFrancis B Murdoch the district attorney of Alton prosecuted charges of riot related to both assailants and defenders of the warehouse in January 1838 on Wednesday and Friday of the same week He called the Illinois Attorney General Usher F Linder to assist him 37 Murdoch with Linder first prosecuted Gilman owner of the warehouse and eleven other defenders of the new press and building They were indicted on two charges related to the riot at a trial opening January 16 1838 for unlawful defence so defined and charged because it was violently and tumultuously done 38 37 Gilman moved to be tried separately his counsel said he needed to be able to show his lack of criminal intent 39 The court agreed on the condition that the other eleven defendants would be tried together Although the proceedings lasted until 10 p m that night in the case of Gilman the jury returned after ten minutes to declare him Not Guilty The next morning the City Attorney entered a Nulle Prosequi as to the other eleven defendants effectively dismissing the charges against them 37 A new jury was called to hear the case against the assailants of the warehouse The attackers allegedly responsible for destruction of the warehouse and Lovejoy s death were tried beginning January 19 1838 Concluding it was not possible to assign responsibility among the several suspects and others not indicted the jury gave a verdict of not guilty 37 The jury foreman had been identified as a member of the mob and was wounded in the attack The presiding judge doubled as a witness to the proceedings These conflicts of interest are believed to have contributed to the not guilty verdict 11 Legacy and honors Edit The 110 foot tall Elijah P Lovejoy monument in Alton Illinois Lovejoy was considered a martyr by the abolition movement In his name his brother Owen Lovejoy became the leader of the Illinois abolitionists Owen and his brother Joseph wrote a memoir about Elijah which was published in 1838 by the Anti Slavery Society in New York and distributed widely among abolitionists in the nation 4 With his killing symbolic of the rising tensions within the country Lovejoy is called the first casualty of the Civil War 29 Abraham Lincoln referred to Lovejoy s murder in his Lyceum address in January 1838 John Brown was inspired by Lovejoy s death declaring in church Here before God in the presence of these witnesses from this time I consecrate my life to the destruction of slavery 40 John Glanville Gill completed his Ph D at Harvard in 1946 on The Issues Involved in the Death of the Rev Elijah P Lovejoy Alton 1837 41 This thesis was adapted and published in 1958 as the first biography of Lovejoy entitled Tide Without Turning Elijah P Lovejoy and Freedom of the Press Awards and scholarships The Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award was established by Colby College in his honor It is awarded annually to a member of the press who has contributed to the nation s journalistic achievement A major classroom building at Colby is also named for Lovejoy An inscribed memorial rock from his birthplace was installed in a grassy square at Colby In 2003 Reed College established the Elijah Parish and Owen Lovejoy Scholarship which it awards annually Memorials and plaques In 1897 the 110 foot tall Elijah P Lovejoy Monument was erected at Alton s City Cemetery 25 000 had been appropriated by the state legislature and 5 000 raised by residents of Alton and other supporters 36 A plaque honoring Elijah Parish Lovejoy was installed on an external wall at the Mackay Campus Center at his alma mater Princeton Theological Seminary He is the first person listed in the Journalists Memorial located at the Newseum 555 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington DC 42 43 Elijah Lovejoy is recognized by a star on the St Louis Walk of Fame 44 Numerous places and institutions were named after him The majority African American village of Brooklyn Illinois located just north of East St Louis is popularly known as Lovejoy in his honor The Presbytery of Giddings Lovejoy Presbyterian Church USA formed on January 3 1985 from the merger of Elijah Parish Lovejoy Presbytery and the Presbytery of Southeast Missouri 30 Lovejoy Health Center in Albion Maine his birthplace The Lovejoy School in Washington DC was named in his honor in 1870 It closed in 1988 It was adapted and converted to the Lovejoy Lofts condominiums in 2004 Lovejoy Elementary School in Alton Illinois LoveJoy United Presbyterian Church Wood River Illinois Lovejoy Library at Southern Illinois University EdwardsvilleSee also Edit Biography portalCensorship in the United States List of journalists killed in the United States List of unsolved murders Rev John R Anderson who worked for Lovejoy and witnessed his murderNotes Edit Elijah and Celia Lovejoy s second child who died as an infant was identified as a son by the Alton Evening Telegraph in 1937 but as a daughter in the St Louis Post Dispatch in 1987 References EditCitations Edit a b c Dillon Merton L February 2000 Lovejoy Elijah Parish American National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 1500423 Merriam Allen H November 1987 Elijah Lovejoy and Free Speech ERIC Institute of Education Sciences Retrieved March 27 2022 Rabban David M November 1992 The Free Speech League the ACLU and Changing Conceptions of Free Speech in American History Stanford Law Review 45 1 71 doi 10 2307 1228985 JSTOR 1228985 a b c d e f Wilson amp Fiske 1900 p 34 Brown 1916 pp 97 98 Brown 1916 p 98 Brown 1916 p 101 Lawson 1916 p 528 Dillon 1999 p 3 a b Lovejoy amp Lovejoy 1838 pp 18 19 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Van Ravenswaay Charles 1991 St Louis An Informal History of the City and Its People 1764 1865 Missouri History Museum pp 276 277 279 280 Dillon 1999 p 5 Lovejoy amp Lovejoy 1838 p 23 Dillon 1999 p 6 Dillon 1999 p 7 Dillon 1999 p 9 a b Dillon 1999 p 10 a b c Rev Elijah P Lovejoy A biographical sketch Bangor Daily Whig and Courier December 15 1870 p 4 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved June 7 2021 a b VanderVelde Lea 2014 Redemption Songs Suing for Freedom Before Dred Scott Oxford University Press p 12 ISBN 9780199927296 Douglass Frederick 2015 Kaufman McKivigan John R Levine Robert S Stauffer John eds The Heroic Slave A Cultural and Critical Edition Yale University Press doi 10 12987 9780300210569 019 S2CID 246119905 Brown William W 1847 Narrative of William W Brown a Fugitive Slave written by himself Boston Archived from the original on October 19 2019 Retrieved September 8 2019 a b c d e f g Merkel Benjamin G April 1950 The Abolition Aspects of Missouri s Anti Slavery Controversy 1819 1865 Missouri Historical Review 44 3 239 240 via Internet Archive a b c d e f g h i j k Duerk John A Summer 2015 Elijah P Lovejoy Anti Catholic Abolitionist Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 108 2 103 121 doi 10 5406 jillistathistsoc 108 2 0103 JSTOR 10 5406 jillistathistsoc 108 2 0103 via JSTOR St Louis Observer April 30 1835 a b c d Ritchie Donald A 2007 American Journalists Oxford University Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 19 532837 0 Archived from the original on July 10 2021 Retrieved June 7 2021 a b c d Wife of Lovejoy Commemorated after 150 Years St Louis Post Dispatch November 12 1987 p 72 Retrieved March 27 2022 via Newspapers com Elijah P Lovejoy As An Anti Catholic Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia 62 3 172 180 1951 ISSN 0002 7790 JSTOR 44210176 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved June 7 2021 a b Love and Devotion Marked Home Life of Elijah Lovejoy Alton Evening Telegraph July 22 1937 p 7 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved June 7 2021 a b John Glanville Gill Tide Without Turning Elijah P Lovejoy and Freedom of the Press 1958 a b Reverend Elijah Parish Lovejoy Philadelphia Presbyterian Historical Society April 29 2014 Archived from the original on November 26 2020 Retrieved March 9 2017 Simon Paul 1994 Freedom s Champion Elijah Lovejoy Rev ed Carbondale Illinois Southern Illinois Press p 102 ISBN 0 8093 1941 1 a b Winthrop S Gilman Dead An Original Abolitionist and Successful Business Man and Banker The New York Times October 5 1884 Archived from the original on April 20 2016 Retrieved February 7 2017 Winthrop Sargent Gilman head of the banking house of Gilman Son Co of No 62 Cedar street this city died at his Summer home in Palisades Rockland County N Y on Friday age 76 Mr Gilman was known as a business Elijah Parish Lovejoy Was Killed By a Pro slavery Mob Library of Congress Archived from the original on December 5 2009 Retrieved June 7 2008 On November 7 1837 Elijah Parish Lovejoy was killed by a pro slavery mob while defending the site of his anti slavery newspaper The Saint Louis Observer Dimmock Funeral To day St Louis Globe Democrat November 20 1909 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved June 7 2021 St Louis Marriage Index 1804 76 St Louis Missouri St Louis Genealogical Society 1999 a b Lovejoy Memorial at Alton Illinois to be Dedicated Tomorrow Chicago Tribune November 7 1897 p 12 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved June 7 2021 a b c d The Riot Trial The Alton Observer Madison County Illinois GenWeb January 24 1838 Archived from the original on June 10 2021 Retrieved June 10 2021 Gilman 1838 Alton Trials p 8 Winthrop Sargent Gilman John Solomon William Sever Lincoln 1838 Alton trials of Winthrop S Gilman who was indicted with Enoch Long Amos B Roff George H Walworth for the crime of riot committed on the night of the 7th of November 1837 while engaged in defending a printing press from an attack made on it at that time by an armed mob New York J F Trow Archived from the original on June 10 2021 Retrieved June 10 2021 Biography of John Brown War and Reconciliation The Mid Missouri Civil War Project University of Missouri Columbia School of Law Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 12 2016 Gill John G March 22 1946 Lovejoy the issues involved in the death of the Rev Elijah P Lovejoy Alton 1837 OCLC 76984559 Archived from the original on November 18 2018 Retrieved March 22 2021 via Open WorldCat Rosenwald Michael S June 29 2018 Angry mobs deadly duels presses set on fire A history of attacks on the press The Washington Post Archived from the original on June 29 2018 Retrieved July 7 2018 Journalists Memorial Newseum Archived from the original on October 29 2019 Retrieved March 22 2021 St Louis Walk of Fame St Louis Walk of Fame Inductees stlouiswalkoffame org Archived from the original on June 2 2008 Retrieved April 25 2013 Works cited Edit Beecher Edward 1969 Narrative of Riots at Alton in Connection with the Death of Rev Elijah P Lovejoy Mnemosyne Pub Co Brown Justus Newton September October 1916 Lovejoy s Influence on John Brown Magazine of History with Notes and Queries Vol 23 no 3 4 pp 97 102 Dillon Merton L 1999 John A Garraty and Mark C Carnes ed American National Biography New York Oxford University Press Vol 14 pp 4 5 ISBN 0 19 512793 5 Dillon Merton L 1961 Elijah P Lovejoy Abolitionist Editor Urbana University of Illinois Press Gill John Glanville 1959 Tide Without Turning Elijah P Lovejoy and Freedom of the Press Boston Starr King Press Lawson John D 1916 Robert L Howard ed American State Trials A Collection of the Important and Interesting Criminal Trials which have taken place in the United States from the beginning of our Government to the Present Day St Louis F H Thomas Law Book Co Lovejoy Joseph C Lovejoy Owen 1838 Memoir of the Rev Elijah P Lovejoy Who was Murdered in Defence of the Liberty of the Press at Alton Illinois Nov 7 1837 New York J S Taylor Tanner Henry 1971 The Martyrdom of Lovejoy An Account of the Life Trials and Perils of Rev Elijah P Lovejoy A M Kelley ISBN 0 678 00744 6 first published in Chicago 1881 reprint edition 1971 Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1900 Lovejoy Elijah Parish Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton pp 34 35 Further reading most recent first EditEllingwood Ken 2021 First to Fall Elijah Lovejoy and the Fight for a Free Press in the Age of Slavery Pegasus Press ISBN 978 1643137025 Dinius Marcy J 2018 Press Early American Studies 16 4 747 755 doi 10 1353 eam 2018 0045 S2CID 246013692 via Project MUSE Phillips Jennifer 2020 Elijah Lovejoy s Fight for Freedom IngramSpark Biography for middle grade readers Simon Paul 1994 Freedom s Champion Elijah Lovejoy Carbondale Illinois Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 0 8093 1940 3 Lincoln William S 1838 Alton trials of Winthrop S Gilman who was indicted with Enoch Long Amos B Roff George H Walworth William Harned John S Noble James Morss Jr Henry Tanner Royal Weller Reuben Gerry and Taddeus B Hurlbut for the crime of riot Committed on the night of the 7th of November 1837 while engaged in defending a printing press New York John F Trow Phillips Wendell 1890 1837 The Murder of Lovejoy The Freedom Speech of Wendell Phillips Faneuil Hall December 8 1837 With descriptive letters from eye witnesses Boston Wendell Phillips Hall Association External links EditBiography from the Alton Illinois web Archived June 29 2021 at the Wayback Machine Elijah Parish Lovejoy a Martyr on the Altar of American Liberty Archived May 11 2008 at the Wayback Machine Reprint Alton Observer November 7 1837 St Louis Walk of Fame Elijah Lovejoy Correspondence amp manuscripts 1804 1891 at Southwest Collection Special Collections Library Texas Tech University See also papers of nephew Austin Wiswall officer with 9th United States Colored Troops captured and held in prison at Andersonville Georgia Anne Silverwood Twitty Slavery and Freedom in the American Confluence from the Northwest Ordinance to Dred Scott Ph D dissertation Princeton University 2010 via ProQuest subscription Preview online Old Des Peres Presbyterian Church 1834 Frontenac MO where Lovejoy preached in its early years Lovejoy Elijah Parish Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Elijah Parish Lovejoy at Find a Grave Biography from Spartacus Educational Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elijah Parish Lovejoy amp oldid 1122107892, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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