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John Brown (abolitionist)

John Brown (May 9, 1800 – December 2, 1859) was a prominent leader in the American abolitionist movement in the decades preceding the Civil War. First reaching national prominence in the 1850s for his radical abolitionism and fighting in Bleeding Kansas, Brown was captured, tried, and executed by the Commonwealth of Virginia for a raid and incitement of a slave rebellion at Harpers Ferry in 1859.

John Brown
Brown in a photograph by Augustus Washington, c. 1846–1847
Born(1800-05-09)May 9, 1800
DiedDecember 2, 1859(1859-12-02) (aged 59)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Resting placeNorth Elba, New York, U.S.
44°15′08″N 73°58′18″W / 44.252240°N 73.971799°W / 44.252240; -73.971799
Monuments
Various:
Known forInvolvement in Bleeding Kansas; Raid on Harpers Ferry, Virginia.
MovementAbolitionism
Criminal charge(s)Treason against the Commonwealth of Virginia; murder; inciting slave insurrection
Spouses
Dianthe Lusk
(m. 1820; died 1832)
(m. 1833)
Children20, including John Jr., Owen, and Watson
ParentOwen Brown (father)
Signature

An evangelical Christian of strong religious convictions, Brown was profoundly influenced by the Puritan faith of his upbringing.[1][2] He believed that he was "an instrument of God",[3] raised to strike the "death blow" to American slavery, a "sacred obligation".[4] Brown was the leading exponent of violence in the American abolitionist movement,[5] believing it was necessary to end American slavery after decades of peaceful efforts had failed.[6][7] Brown said that in working to free the enslaved, he was following Christian ethics, including the Golden Rule,[8] and the Declaration of Independence, which states that "all men are created equal".[9] He stated that in his view, these two principles "meant the same thing".[10]

Brown first gained national attention when he led anti-slavery volunteers and his sons during the Bleeding Kansas crisis of the late 1850s, a state-level civil war over whether Kansas would enter the Union as a slave state or a free state. He was dissatisfied with abolitionist pacifism, saying of pacifists, "These men are all talk. What we need is action – action!" In May 1856, Brown and his sons killed five supporters of slavery in the Pottawatomie massacre, a response to the sacking of Lawrence by pro-slavery forces. Brown then commanded anti-slavery forces at the Battle of Black Jack and the Battle of Osawatomie.

In October 1859, Brown led a raid on the federal armory at Harpers Ferry, Virginia (which became West Virginia), intending to start a slave liberation movement that would spread south; he had prepared a Provisional Constitution for the revised, slavery-free United States that he hoped to bring about. He seized the armory, but seven people were killed and ten or more were injured. Brown intended to arm slaves with weapons from the armory, but only a few slaves joined his revolt. Those of Brown's men who had not fled were killed or captured by local militia and U.S. Marines, the latter led by Robert E. Lee. Brown was tried for treason against the Commonwealth of Virginia, the murder of five men, and inciting a slave insurrection. He was found guilty of all charges and was hanged on December 2, 1859, the first person executed for treason against a U.S. state in the history of the United States.[11][12]

The Harpers Ferry raid and Brown's trial, both covered extensively in national newspapers, escalated tensions that in the next year led to the South's long-threatened secession and the American Civil War. Southerners feared that others would soon follow in Brown's footsteps, encouraging and arming slave rebellions. He was a hero and icon in the North. Union soldiers marched to the new song "John Brown's Body" that portrayed him as a heroic martyr. Brown has been variously described as a heroic martyr and visionary, and as a madman and terrorist.[13][14][15]

Early life and family

Family and childhood

 
The house in which Brown was born, in Torrington, Connecticut, was photographed in 1896 and destroyed by fire in 1918.[16][17][18]

John Brown was born May 9, 1800, in Torrington, Connecticut,[19] the son of Owen Brown (1771–1856)[a] and Ruth Mills (1772–1808).[22] Owen Brown's father was Capt. John Brown, of English descent, who died in the Revolutionary War in New York on September 3, 1776.[23] His mother, of Dutch and Welsh descent,[24] was the daughter of Gideon Mills, an officer in the Revolutionary Army.[23]

Although Brown described his parents as "poor but respectable" at some point,[22] Owen Brown became a leading and wealthy citizen of Hudson.[23][25] He operated a tannery and employed Jesse Grant, father of President Ulysses S. Grant. Jesse lived with the Brown family for some years.[25] The founder of Hudson, David Hudson, with whom John's father had frequent contact, was an abolitionist and an advocate of "forcible resistance by the slaves."[26]

The fourth child of Owen and Ruth,[22][b] Brown's older siblings were Anna Ruth (born in 1798), Salmon (born 1802), and Oliver Owen (born in 1804).[27][28] Frederick, identified by Owen as his sixth son, was born in 1807.[29] Frederick visited Brown when he was in jail, awaiting execution.[30] He had an adopted brother, Levi Blakeslee (born some time before 1805).[31] Salmon became a lawyer, politician, and newspaper editor.[29]

While Brown was very young, his father moved the family briefly to his hometown, West Simsbury, Connecticut.[23] In 1805, the family moved, again, to Hudson, Ohio, in the Western Reserve, which at the time was mostly wilderness;[32] it became the most anti-slavery region of the country.[33] Owen hated slavery[34] and participated in Hudson's anti-slavery activity and debate, offering a safe house to Underground Railroad fugitives.[35] Owen became a supporter of Oberlin College after Western Reserve College would not allow a Black man to enroll in the school.[36] Owen was an Oberlin trustee from 1835 to 1844.[36] Other Brown family members were abolitionists, but John and his eccentric brother Oliver were the most active and forceful.[37]

John's mother Ruth died a few hours after the death of her newborn girl in December 1808.[38] In his memoir, Brown wrote that he mourned his mother for years.[39][40] While he respected his father's new wife,[39][40] Sallie Root,[29] he never felt an emotional bond with her.[39][40] Owen married a third time to Lucy Hinsdale, a formerly married woman.[29] Owen had a total of 6 daughters and 10 sons.[29]

With no school beyond the elementary level in Hudson at that time, Brown studied at the school of the abolitionist Elizur Wright, father of the famous Elizur Wright, in nearby Tallmadge.[41] In a story he told to his family, when he was 12 years old and away from home moving cattle, Brown worked for a man with a colored boy, who was beaten before him with an iron shovel. He asked the man why he was treated thus, and the answer was that he was a slave. According to Brown's son-in-law Henry Thompson, it was that moment when John Brown decided to dedicate his life to improving African Americans' condition.[42][43] As a child in Hudson, John got to know local Native Americans and learned some of their language.[22] He accompanied them on hunting excursions and invited them to eat in his home.[44][45]

Young adulthood

At 16, Brown left his family for New England to acquire a liberal education and become a Gospel minister.[46] He consulted and conferred with Jeremiah Hallock, then clergyman at Canton, Connecticut, whose wife was a relative of Brown's, and as advised proceeded to Plainfield, Massachusetts, where, under the instruction of Moses Hallock, he prepared for college. He would have continued at Amherst College,[41][47] but he suffered from inflammation of the eyes which ultimately became chronic and precluded further studies. He returned to Ohio.[23]

Back in Hudson, Brown taught himself surveying from a book.[48][c] He worked briefly at his father's tannery before opening a successful tannery outside of town with his adopted brother Levi Blakeslee.[41] The two kept bachelor's quarters, and Brown was a good cook.[41] He had his bread baked by a widow, Mrs. Amos Lusk. As the tanning business had grown to include journeymen and apprentices, Brown persuaded her to take charge of his housekeeping. She and her daughter Dianthe moved into his log cabin. Brown married Dianthe in 1820.[49] There is no known picture of her,[50] but he described Dianthe as "a remarkably plain, but neat, industrious and economical girl, of excellent character, earnest piety, and practical common sense".[51] Their first child, John Jr., was born 13 months later. During 12 years of married life Dianthe gave birth to seven children, among them Owen, and died from complications of childbirth in 1832.[52]

Brown knew the Bible thoroughly and could catch even small errors in Bible recitation. He never used tobacco nor drank tea, coffee, or alcohol. After the Bible, his favorite books were the series of Plutarch's Parallel Lives and he enjoyed reading about Napoleon and Oliver Cromwell.[53] He felt that "truly successful men" were those with their own libraries.[54]

Pennsylvania

 
John Brown's Tannery, in 1885

Brown left Hudson, Ohio, where he had a successful tannery, to be better situated to operate a safe and productive Underground Railroad station.[55][56] He moved to Richmond Township in Crawford County, Pennsylvania, in 1825[55][56][d] and lived there until 1835,[57] longer than he did anywhere else.[58] He bought 200 acres (81 hectares) of land, cleared an eighth of it, and quickly built a cabin, a two-story tannery with 18 vats, and a barn; in the latter was a secret, well-ventilated room to hide escaping slaves.[55][56] He transported refugees across the state border into New York and to an important Underground Railroad connection in Jamestown,[57] about 55 miles (89 km) from Richmond Township.[59] The escapees were hidden in the wagon he used to move the mail, hides for his tannery, and survey equipment.[57] For ten years, his farm was an important stop on the Underground Railroad,[60] during which, it is estimated to have helped 2,500 enslaved people on their journey to Canada, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development.[60] Brown recruited other Underground Railroad stationmasters to strengthen the network.[57]

Brown made money surveying new roads. He was involved in erecting a school, which first met in his home—he was the first teacher[61]—, and attracting a preacher[62][63] for a Congregational Society in Richmond. Their first meetings were held at the farm and tannery compound.[64] He also helped to establish a post office, and in 1828 President John Quincy Adams named him the first postmaster of Randolph Township, Pennsylvania; he was reappointed by President Andrew Jackson, serving until he left Pennsylvania in 1835.[62][65] He carried the mail for some years from Meadville, Pennsylvania, through Randolph to Riceville, some 20 miles (32 km).[66] He paid a fine at Meadville for declining to serve in the militia. During this period, Brown operated an interstate cattle and leather business along with a kinsman, Seth Thompson, from eastern Ohio.[66] In 1829, some white families asked Brown to help them drive off Native Americans who hunted annually in the area. Calling it a mean act, Brown declined, even saying "I would sooner take my gun and help drive you out of the country."[67][68]

 
Mary Ann Brown (née Day), wife of John Brown, married in 1833, with Annie (left) and Sarah (right) in 1851

In 1831, Brown's son Frederick (I) died, at the age of 4. Brown fell ill, and his businesses began to suffer, leaving him in severe debt. In mid-1832, shortly after the death of a newborn son, his wife Dianthe also died, either in childbirth or as an immediate consequence of it.[69] He was left with the children John Jr., Jason, Owen, Ruth and Frederick (II).[70][e] On July 14, 1833, Brown married 17-year-old Mary Ann Day (1817–1884), originally from Washington County, New York;[72] she was the younger sister of Brown's housekeeper at the time.[73] They eventually had 13 children,[74][75] seven of whom were sons who worked with their father in the fight to abolish slavery.[76]

Back to Ohio

In 1836, Brown moved his family from Pennsylvania to Franklin Mills, Ohio, where he taught Sunday school.[77] He borrowed heavily to buy land in the area, including property along canals being built, and constructed and operated a tannery along the Cuyahoga River in partnership with Zenas Kent.[78] Zenas was the father of Marvin Kent; Franklin Mills now is known as Kent, Ohio, in Marvin's honor.[79] Brown continued to work on the Underground Railroad.[57]

Brown became a bank director and was estimated to be worth US$20,000 (equivalent to about $567,355 in 2022).[80] Like many businessmen in Ohio, he invested too heavily in credit and state bonds and suffered great financial losses in the Panic of 1837. In one episode of property loss, Brown was jailed when he attempted to retain ownership of a farm by occupying it against the claims of the new owner.[81]

 
Wood engraving of the pro-slavery mob setting fire to Gilman & Godfrey's warehouse, where Elijah Parish Lovejoy hid his printing press

In November 1837, Elijah Parish Lovejoy was murdered in Alton, Illinois for printing an abolitionist newspaper. Brown, deeply upset about the incident, became more militant in his behavior, comparable with Reverend Henry Highland Garnet.[57] Brown publicly vowed after the incident: "Here, before God, in the presence of these witnesses, from this time, I consecrate my life to the destruction of slavery!"[82] Brown objected to Black congregants being relegated to the balcony at his church[57] in Franklin Mills. According to daughter Ruth Brown's husband Henry Thompson, whose brother was killed at Harpers Ferry:

[H]e and his three sons, John, Jason, and Owen, were expelled from the Congregational church at Kent, then called Franklin, Ohio, for taking a colored man into their own pew; and the deacons of the church tried to persuade him to concede his error. My wife and various members of the family afterward joined the Wesley Methodists, but John Brown never connected himself with any church again.[42]

For three or four years he seemed to flounder hopelessly, moving from one activity to another without plan. He tried many different business efforts attempting to get out of debt. He bred horses briefly, but gave it up when he learned that buyers were using them as race horses.[83] He did some surveying, farming, and tanning.[84] Brown declared bankruptcy in federal court on September 28, 1842.[43] In 1843, three of his children — Charles, Peter, Austin — died of dysentery.[70]

From the mid-1840s, Brown had built a reputation as an expert in fine sheep and wool. For about one year, he ran Captain Oviatt's farm,[83] and he then entered into a partnership with Colonel Simon Perkins of Akron, Ohio, whose flocks and farms were managed by Brown and his sons.[85][f] Brown eventually moved into a home with his family across the street from the Perkins Stone Mansion.[86]

Springfield, Massachusetts

 
A daguerreotype of Brown taken by African-American photographer Augustus Washington in Springfield, Massachusetts, c. 1846–1847. Brown is holding the hand-colored flag of Subterranean Pass Way, his militant counterpart to the Underground Railroad.[87]

In 1846, Brown moved to Springfield, Massachusetts, as an agent for Ohio wool growers in their relations with New England manufacturers of woolen goods, but "also as a means of developing his scheme of emancipation".[88] The white leadership there, including "the publisher of The Republican, one of the nation's most influential newspapers, were deeply involved and emotionally invested in the anti-slavery movement".[89]

Brown made connections in Springfield that later yielded financial support he received from New England's great merchants, allowed him to hear and meet nationally famous abolitionists like Douglass and Sojourner Truth, and included the foundation of the League of Gileadites.[88][89] Brown's personal attitudes evolved in Springfield, as he observed the success of the city's Underground Railroad and made his first venture into militant, anti-slavery community organizing. In speeches, he pointed to the martyrs Elijah Lovejoy and Charles Turner Torrey as white people "ready to help blacks challenge slave-catchers".[90] In Springfield, Brown found a city that shared his own anti-slavery passions, and each seemed to educate the other. Certainly, with both successes and failures, Brown's Springfield years were a transformative period of his life that catalyzed many of his later actions.[89]

Two years before Brown's arrival in Springfield, in 1844, the city's African-American abolitionists had founded the Sanford Street Free Church, now known as St. John's Congregational Church, which became one of the most prominent abolitionist platforms in the United States. From 1846 until he left Springfield in 1850, Brown was a member of the Free Church, where he witnessed abolitionist lectures by the likes of Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth.[91] In 1847, after speaking at the Free Church, Douglass spent a night speaking with Brown, after which Douglass wrote, "From this night spent with John Brown in Springfield, Mass. [in] 1847, while I continued to write and speak against slavery, I became all the same less hopeful for its peaceful abolition."[89]

During Brown's time in Springfield, he became deeply involved in transforming the city into a major center of abolitionism, and one of the safest and most significant stops on the Underground Railroad.[92] Brown contributed to the 1848 republication, by his friend Henry Highland Garnet, of David Walker's An Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World (1829),[93] which he helped publicize.[94]

Before Brown left Springfield in 1850, the United States passed the Fugitive Slave Act, a law mandating that authorities in free states aid in the return of escaped slaves and imposing penalties on those who aid in their escape. In response, Brown founded a militant group to prevent the recapture of fugitives, the League of Gileadites,[93][g] operated by free Blacks—like the "strong-minded, brave, and dedicated" Eli Baptist, William Montague, and Thomas Thomas[89][h]—who risked being caught by slave catchers and sold into slavery.[57] Upon leaving Springfield in 1850, he instructed the League to act "quickly, quietly, and efficiently" to protect slaves that escaped to Springfield – words that would foreshadow Brown's later actions preceding Harpers Ferry.[95] From Brown's founding of the League of Gileadites onward, not one person was ever taken back into slavery from Springfield.[89]

His daughter Amelia died in 1846, followed by Emma in 1849.[85]

New York

 
John Brown's farmhouse, North Elba, New York, now a historic site and National Historic Landmark

In 1848, bankrupt and having lost the family's house, Brown heard of Gerrit Smith's Adirondack land grants to poor black men, in so remote a location that Brown later called it Timbuctoo, and decided to move his family there to establish a farm where he could provide guidance and assistance to the blacks who were attempting to establish farms in the area.[96] He bought from Smith land in the town of North Elba, New York (near Lake Placid), for $1 an acre ($2/ha).[97] It has a magnificent view[14] and has been called "the highest arable spot of land in the State."[98] After living with his family about two years in a small rented house, and returning for several years to Ohio, he had the current house – now a monument preserved by New York State – built for his family, viewing it as a place of refuge for them while he was away. According to youngest son Salmon, "frugality was observed from a moral standpoint, but one and all we were a well-fed, well-clad lot."[99]

After he was executed on December 2, 1859, his widow took his body there for burial; the trip took five days, and he was buried on December 8. Watson's body was located and buried there in 1882. In 1899 the remains of 12 of Brown's other collaborators, including his son Oliver, were located and brought to North Elba. They could not be identified well enough for separate burials, so they are buried together in a single casket donated by the town of North Elba; there is a collective plaque there now. Since 1895, the John Brown Farm State Historic Site has been owned by New York State and is now a National Historic Landmark.[96]

Actions in Kansas

Kansas Territory was in the midst of a state-level civil war from 1854 to 1860, referred to as the Bleeding Kansas period, between pro- and anti-slavery forces.[100] From 1854 to 1856, there had been eight killings in Kansas Territory attributable to slavery politics. There had been no organized action by abolitionists against pro-slavery forces by 1856.[101] The issue was to be decided by the voters of Kansas, but who these voters were was not clear; there was widespread voting fraud in favor of the pro-slavery forces, as a Congressional investigation confirmed.[100]

Move to Kansas

Five of Brown's sons — John Jr., Jason, Owen, Frederick, and Salmon — moved to Kansas Territory in the spring of 1855. Brown, his son Oliver, and his son-in-law Henry Thompson followed later that year[102] with a wagon loaded with weapons and ammunition.[103][i] Brown stayed with Florella (Brown) Adair and the Reverend Samuel Adair, his half-sister and her husband, who lived near Osawatomie. During that time, he rallied support to fight proslavery forces,[102] and became the leader of the antislavery forces in Kansas.[103][105]

Pottawatomie

 
John Brown, quarter-plate daguerreotype, attributed to Southworth & Hawes, Winter 1856, Massachusetts Historical Society

Brown and the free-state settlers intended to bring Kansas into the union as a slavery-free state.[106] After the winter snows thawed in 1856, the pro-slavery activists began a campaign to seize Kansas on their own terms. Brown was particularly affected by the sacking of Lawrence, the center of anti-slavery activity in Kansas, on May 21, 1856. A sheriff-led posse from Lecompton, the center of pro-slavery activity in Kansas, destroyed two abolitionist newspapers and the Free State Hotel. Only one man, a border ruffian, was killed.[107]

Preston Brooks's May 22 caning of anti-slavery Senator Charles Sumner in the United States Senate, news of which arrived by newswire (telegraph), also fueled Brown's anger. A pro-slavery writer, Benjamin Franklin Stringfellow, of the Squatter Sovereign, wrote that "[pro-slavery forces] are determined to repel this Northern invasion, and make Kansas a slave state; though our rivers should be covered with the blood of their victims, and the carcasses of the abolitionists should be so numerous in the territory as to breed disease and sickness, we will not be deterred from our purpose".[107] Brown was outraged by both the violence of the pro-slavery forces and what he saw as a weak and cowardly response by the antislavery partisans and the Free State settlers, whom he described as "cowards, or worse".[108]

The Pottawatomie massacre occurred during the night of May 24 and the morning of May 25, 1856. Under Brown's supervision, his sons and other abolitionist settlers took from their residences and killed five "professional slave hunters and militant pro-slavery" settlers.[109] The massacre was the match in the powderkeg that precipitated the bloodiest period in "Bleeding Kansas" history, a three-month period of retaliatory raids and battles in which 29 people died.[101]

Henry Clay Pate, who was part of the sacking of Lawrence was, either during or shortly before, commissioned as a Deputy United States Marshal.[110] On hearing news of John Brown's actions at the Pottawatomie Massacre, Pate set out with a band of thirty men to hunt Brown down.[111] During the hunt for Brown, two of his sons (Jason and John Junior) were captured (either by Pate or another marshal), charged with murder, and thrown in irons.[110][111] Brown and free-state militia gathered to confront Pate. Two of Pate's men were captured, which led to the conflict on June 2.[112]

Palmyra and Osawatomie

In the Battle of Black Jack of June 2, 1856, John Brown, nine of his followers, and 20 local men successfully defended a Free State settlement at Palmyra, Kansas, against an attack by Henry Clay Pate. Pate and 22 of his men were taken prisoner.[113]

In August, a company of over 300 Missourians under the command of General John W. Reid crossed into Kansas and headed towards Osawatomie, intending to destroy the Free State settlements there, and then march on Topeka and Lawrence.[114] On the morning of August 30, 1856, they shot and killed Brown's son Frederick and his neighbor David Garrison on the outskirts of Osawatomie. Brown, outnumbered more than seven to one, arranged his 38 men behind natural defenses along the road. Firing from cover, they managed to kill at least 20 of Reid's men and wounded 40 more.[115] Reid regrouped, ordering his men to dismount and charge into the woods. Brown's small group scattered and fled across the Marais des Cygnes River. One of Brown's men was killed during the retreat and four were captured. While Brown and his surviving men hid in the woods nearby, the Missourians plundered and burned Osawatomie. Though defeated, Brown's bravery and military shrewdness in the face of overwhelming odds brought him national attention and made him a hero to many Northern abolitionists.[116]

On September 7, Brown entered Lawrence to meet with Free State leaders and help fortify against a feared assault. At least 2,700 pro-slavery Missourians were once again invading Kansas. On September 14, they skirmished near Lawrence. Brown prepared for battle, but serious violence was averted when the new governor of Kansas, John W. Geary, ordered the warring parties to disarm and disband, and offered clemency to former fighters on both sides.[117]

Brown had become infamous and federal warrants were issued for his arrest due to his actions in Kansas. He became careful of how he travelled and whom he stayed with across the country.[118]

Raid at Harpers Ferry

Brown's plans

 
Three-quarter length portrait of John Brown, salt print, reproduction of daguerreotype attributed to Martin M. Lawrence, May 1859

Brown's plans for a major attack on American slavery began long before the raid. According to his wife Mary, interviewed while her husband was awaiting his execution, Brown had been planning the attack for 20 years.[119] Frederick Douglass noted that he made the plans before he fought in Kansas.[120] For instance, he spent the years between 1842 and 1849 settling his business affairs, moving his family to the Negro community at Timbuctoo, New York, and organizing in his own mind an anti-slavery raid that would strike a significant blow against the entire slave system, running slaves off Southern plantations.[121]

According to his first biographer James Redpath, "for thirty years, he secretly cherished the idea of being the leader of a servile insurrection: the American Moses, predestined by Omnipotence to lead the servile nations in our Southern States to freedom."[122] An acquaintance said: "As Moses was raised up and chosen of God to deliver the Children of Israel out of Egyptian bondage, ...he was...fully convinced in his own mind that he was to be the instrument in the hands of God to effect the emancipation of the slaves."[123]

Brown said that,

A few men in the right, and knowing that they are right, can overturn a mighty king. Fifty men, twenty men, in the Alleghenies would break slavery to pieces in two years.[124]

On December 2, 1859, in Charles Town, after failure of the raid and the date of his execution,

I John Brown, am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land; will never be purged away; but with Blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed [through the revolt supposed to start with Harpers Ferry] it [ending slavery] might be done."[125] (emphasis by Brown)

Brown kept his plans a secret, including the care he took not to share the plans with his men, according to Jeremiah Anderson, one of the participants in the raid.[126] His son Owen, the only one who survived of Brown's three participating sons, said in 1873 that he did not think his father wrote down the entire plan.[127] He did discuss his plans at length, for over a day, with Frederick Douglass, trying unsuccessfully to persuade Douglass, a black leader, to accompany him to Harpers Ferry (which Douglass thought a suicidal mission that could not succeed).[128]

Preparations

Financial and political backing

To attain financial backing and political support for the raid on Harpers Ferry, Brown spent most of 1857 meeting with abolitionists in Massachusetts, New York, and Connecticut.[129] Initially Brown returned to Springfield, where he received contributions, and also a letter of recommendation from a prominent and wealthy merchant, George Walker. Walker was the brother-in-law of Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, the secretary for the Massachusetts State Kansas Committee, who introduced Brown to several influential abolitionists in the Boston area in January 1857.[88][130]Amos Adams Lawrence, a prominent Boston merchant, secretly gave Brown a large amount of cash.[131] William Lloyd Garrison, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Theodore Parker and George Luther Stearns, and Samuel Gridley Howe also supported Brown,[131] although Garrison, a pacificist, disagreed about the need to use violence to end slavery.[132]

Most of the money for the raid came from the "Secret Six",[129][133] Franklin B. Sanborn, Samuel G. Howe M.D., businessman George L. Stearns, real estate tycoon Gerrit Smith, transcendentalist and reforming minister of the Unitarian church Theodore Parker, and Unitarian minister Thomas Wentworth Higginson. [129] Recent research has also highlighted the substantial contribution of Mary Ellen Pleasant, an African American entrepreneur and abolitionist, who donated $30,000 (equivalent to $942,214 in 2022) toward the cause.[134]

In Boston, he met Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson.[132] Even with the Secret Six and other contributors, Brown had not collected all money needed to fund the raid. He wrote an appeal, Old Browns Farewell, to abolitionists in the east with some success.[132]

In December 1857, an anti-slavery Mock Legislature, organized by Brown, met in Springdale, Iowa.[135] On several of Brown's trips across Iowa he preached at Hitchcock House, an Underground Railroad stop in Lewis, Iowa.[136]

"Virginia scheme"

 
William Maxon's house, near Springdale, Iowa, where John Brown's associates lived and trained, 1857–1859. Brown lived at the home of John Hunt Painter, less than a mile away.

With a free-state victory in the October elections, Kansas was quiet. Brown made his men return to Iowa, where he told them tidbits of his Virginia scheme.[137] In January 1858, Brown left his men in Springdale, Iowa, and set off to visit Frederick Douglass in Rochester, New York. There he discussed his plans with Douglass, and reconsidered Forbes' criticisms.[138] Brown wrote a Provisional Constitution that would create a government for a new state in the region of his invasion. He then traveled to Peterboro, New York, and Boston to discuss matters with the Secret Six. In letters to them, he indicated that, along with recruits, he would go into the South equipped with weapons to do "Kansas work".[139] While in Boston making secret preparations for his operation on Harper's Ferry, he was raising money for weapons that were manufactured in Connecticut. Abolitionist Chaplain Photius Fisk gave him a sizable donation and obtained his autograph which he later gave to the Kansas Historical Society.[140]

Brown started to wear a beard, "to change his usual appearance".[141]

Weapons

The Massachusetts Committee pledged to provide 200 Sharps Rifles and ammunition, which were being stored at Tabor, Iowa. The rifles were originally intended for use by free-staters in Kansas. After negotiation between the officers of the Massachusetts Kansas Committee and the National Committee, the rifles were transferred to the Massachusetts Committee for use in the Harpers Ferry raid.[142] Horatio N. Rust, a friend of Brown's, helped acquire for 1,000 pikes for the intended slave rebellion.[143]

Weapons were purchased and sent to Kennedy Farmhouse in Sharpsburg, Maryland, where they were stored.[144] Brown's plan was to make use of weapons, ammunition, and other military equipment stored at the armory, arsenal, and the rifle factory in Harpers Ferry.[145] There were an estimated 100,000 muskets and rifles at the armory and arsenal complex at the time.[146]

The more sophisticated weapons, like Sharps rifles and pistols, were to be used by Black and White officers. The remaining fighters would use spear-like pikes, shotguns, and muskets.[147]

Constitutional convention in Ontario

Brown and 12 of his followers, including his son Owen, traveled to Chatham, Ontario, where he convened on May 10 a Constitutional Convention.[148] The convention, with several dozen delegates including his friend James Madison Bell, was put together with the help of Dr. Martin Delany.[149] One-third of Chatham's 6,000 residents were fugitive slaves, and it was here that Brown was introduced to Harriet Tubman, who helped him recruit.[150] The convention's 34 blacks and 12 whites adopted Brown's Provisional Constitution. Brown had long used the terminology of the Subterranean Pass Way from the late 1840s, so it is possible that Delany conflated Brown's statements over the years. Regardless, Brown was elected commander-in-chief and named John Henrie Kagi his "Secretary of War". Richard Realf was named "Secretary of State". Elder Monroe, a black minister, was to act as president until another was chosen. A. M. Chapman was the acting vice president; Delany, the corresponding secretary. In 1859, "A Declaration of Liberty by the Representatives of the Slave Population of the United States of America" was written.[151][152]

Crisis

While in New York City, Brown was introduced to Hugh Forbes, an English mercenary, who had experience as a military tactician fighting with Giuseppe Garibaldi. Concerned about Brown's strategy, Forbes undermined and delayed the plans for the raid.[153]

Although nearly all of the delegates signed the constitution, few volunteered to join Brown's forces, although it will never be clear how many Canadian expatriates actually intended to join Brown because of a subsequent "security leak" that threw off plans for the raid, creating a hiatus in which Brown lost contact with many of the Canadian leaders. This crisis occurred when Hugh Forbes, Brown's mercenary, tried to expose the plans to Massachusetts Senator Henry Wilson and others. The Secret Six feared their names would be made public. Howe and Higginson wanted no delays in Brown's progress, while Parker, Stearns, Smith and Sanborn insisted on postponement. Stearns and Smith were the major sources of funds, and their words carried more weight. To throw Forbes off the trail and invalidate his assertions, Brown returned to Kansas in June, and remained in that vicinity for six months. There he joined forces with James Montgomery, who was leading raids into Missouri.

Continue to organize funds and forces

 
Portrait of John Brown, by Ole Peter Hansen Balling, 1872, National Portrait Gallery

On December 20, Brown led his own raid, in which he liberated 11 slaves, took captive two white men, and looted horses and wagons. The Governor of Missouri announced a reward of $3,000 (equivalent to $97,711 in 2022) for his capture. On January 20, 1859, he embarked on a lengthy journey to take the liberated slaves to Detroit and then on a ferry to Canada. While passing through Chicago, Brown met with abolitionists Allan Pinkerton, John Jones, and Henry O. Wagoner who arranged and raised the fare for the passage to Detroit[154] and purchased supplies for Brown. Jones's wife and fellow abolitionist, Mary Jane Richardson Jones, provided new clothes for Brown and his men, including the garb Brown was hanged in six months later.[155][156] On March 12, 1859, Brown met with Frederick Douglass and Detroit abolitionists George DeBaptiste, William Lambert, and others at William Webb's house in Detroit to discuss emancipation.[157] DeBaptiste proposed that conspirators blow up some of the South's largest churches. The suggestion was opposed by Brown, who felt humanity precluded such unnecessary bloodshed.[158]

Over the course of the next few months, he traveled again through Ohio, New York, Connecticut, and Massachusetts to drum up more support for the cause. On May 9, he delivered a lecture in Concord, Massachusetts, that Amos Bronson Alcott, Emerson, and Thoreau attended. Brown reconnoitered with the Secret Six.[159]

 
Leslie's illustration of U.S. Marines attacking John Brown's "Fort"

As he began recruiting supporters for an attack on slaveholders, Brown was joined by Harriet Tubman, "General Tubman", as he called her.[160] Her knowledge of support networks and resources in the border states of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Delaware was invaluable to Brown and his planners.[161] She also raised funds for Brown.[162]

Some abolitionists, including Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison, opposed his tactics, but Brown dreamed of fighting to create a new state for freed slaves and made preparations for military action. After he began the first battle, he believed, slaves would rise up and carry out a rebellion across the South.[161]

Brown's forces

The men that fought with Brown in Kansas gathered at Springdale, Iowa, a Quaker settlelment, about January 1858, to prepare to execute Brown's Virginia scheme.[163]

In June, Brown paid his last visit to his family in North Elba before departing for Harpers Ferry. He stayed one night en route in Hagerstown, Maryland, at the Washington House, on West Washington Street. On June 30, 1859, the hotel had at least 25 guests, including I. Smith and Sons, Oliver Smith and Owen Smith, and Jeremiah Anderson, all from New York. From papers found in the Kennedy Farmhouse after the raid, it is known that Brown wrote to Kagi that he would sign into a hotel as I. Smith and Sons.[159]

The men who prepared for the raid at Kennedy Farmhouse and participated in the raid with Brown included two groups of men:

A group that fought with him in Kansas and gathered at Springdale, Iowa, to prepare and drill for the raid,[164]
  • Jeremiah Goldsmith Anderson, 26, born in Indiana, served with Brown in Kansas, killed in the raid. [165]
  • Oliver Brown, 20, John Brown's son, served in Kansas, and he was mortally wounded during the raid[166]
  • Owen Brown, about 35, John Brown's son, fought in Kansas. He escaped the raid.[167]
  • John E. Cook, 29, reformer and former soldier, attended Oberlin College, he initially escaped capture, but was found and hanged[167]
  • Albert Hazlett, 23, fought in Kansas, escaped following the raid, but was captured and hanged[168]
  • John Henry Kagi, about 24, a teacher, became Brown's second in command, before the raid he printed copies of Brown's constitution in a printing shop he established in Hamilton, Ontario, mortally wounded during the raid[169]
  • William H. Leeman, 20, fought with the free-staters in Kansas for three years, beginning at the age of 17. He died during the raid.[170]
  • Aaron Dwight Stevens, about 28, was a former soldier and fighter in Kansas, who gave the men military training and drills. He was wounded during the raid, after which he was executed.[171]
  • Charles Plummer Tidd, 25, fought in Kansas. He escaped the raid and later served during the Civil War.[171]
Men he met when rounding up recruits for the raid:[164]
  • Watson Brown, son of John Brown, mortally wounded during the raid[172]
  • John Anthony Copeland Jr. was a free black man who joined John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry. He was captured during the raid and was executed[173]
  • Barclay Coppoc, 19, escaped capture following the raid. He fought in the Civil War.[174]
  • Edwin Coppoc, 24, captured and hanged.[175]
  • Shields Green, about 23, escaped slavery, captured and hanged.[168]
  • Lewis Sheridan Leary, a harness maker freed by his white father, mortally wounded during the raid[176]
  • Francis Jackson Meriam, 22, grandson of Francis Jackson who was a leader of Antislavery Societies. Meriam was an aristocrat. He escaped during the raid. Captain Meriam led an African American infantry group during the Civil War.[168]
  • Dangerfield Newby, 44, born a slave, escaped slavery, returned to Virginia to fight in the raid, where he was killed.[177]
  • Stewart Taylor, 23, a wagonmaker from Canada, mortally wounded during the raid.[178]
  • Dauphin Thompson, 21, married to Ruth Brown, John Brown's daughter, mortally wounded during the raid[178]
  • William Thompson, 26, mortally wounded during the raid[178]
 
Kennedy Farmhouse, depicting Brown in his favorite spot in the yard, made posthumously in 1902

They were at Kennedy Farmhouse, four to five miles away from Harpers Ferry. Brown's daughter and daughter-in-law, Anne and Martha, Oliver's wife, prepared food and kept the house for the men from August and throughout the month of September.[144]

The raid

Brown led his forces for Harper Ferry on the night of October 16, 1859.[179] The objective was to take the armory, the arsenal, the town, and then the rifle factory. Then, they wanted to free all the slaves in Harpers Ferry.[180] After that, they would move south with those newly freed people wanted to join the fight to free other enslaved people.[181] Brown told his men to take prisoners who disobeyed them and to fight only in self-defense.[182]

Initially, they met no resistance entering the town. John Brown's raiders cut the telegraph wires and easily captured the armory, which was being defended by a single watchman. They next rounded up hostages from nearby farms, including Colonel Lewis Washington, great-grandnephew of George Washington. They also spread the news to the local slaves that their liberation was at hand. Two of the hostages' slaves also died in the raid.[183]

When an eastbound Baltimore and Ohio Railroad train approached the town, Brown held it and then inexplicably allowed it to continue on its way. At the next station where the telegraph still worked, the conductor sent a telegram to B&O headquarters in Baltimore. The railroad sent telegrams to President Buchanan and Virginia Governor Henry A. Wise.[184]

 
Illustration of the interior of the Fort immediately before the door is broken down. Note hostages on the left.

By the morning of October 18 the engine house, later known as John Brown's Fort, was surrounded by a company of U.S. Marines under the command of First Lieutenant Israel Greene, USMC, with Colonel Robert E. Lee of the United States Army in overall command.[185]

Army First Lieutenant J. E. B. Stuart approached the engine-house to apprehend Brown and told the raiders their lives would be spared if they surrendered. Brown refused, saying, "No, I prefer to die here." Stuart then gave a signal and the Marines used sledgehammers and a makeshift battering ram to break down the engine room door. Lieutenant Israel Greene cornered Brown and struck him several times, wounding his head. In three minutes Brown and the survivors were captives.[186]

Altogether, Brown's men killed four townspeople and one Marine. Ten people were wounded, one of whom was a Marine.[187] Four of Brown's men were not captured, the rest died during the raid or were captured and executed.[164] Among the raiders killed were John Henry Kagi, Lewis Sheridan Leary, and Dangerfield Newby; those hanged besides Brown included John Copeland, Edwin Coppock, Aaron Stevens, and Shields Green.[188][189] Most of the enslaved people were returned to their slaveholders, and some were able to escape capture. A man named Phil was captured with Brown, and a man named Jim drowned in the Shenandoah.[190]

Brown and the others captured were held in the office of the armory. On October 18, 1859, Virginia Governor Henry A. Wise, Virginia Senator James M. Mason, and Representative Clement Vallandigham of Ohio arrived in Harpers Ferry. Brown conceded that he did not receive the support he expected from White and Black people. The questioning lasted several hours.[191]

The trial

 
Brown has just been captured and is interrogated by Virginia Gov. Henry A. Wise and others, October 18, 1859.
 
 
The old Court House at Charles Town, Jefferson County, Virginia, where John Brown was tried; it stands diagonally across the street from the jail (c. 1906).
 
Two houses in Charles Town. The one on the right was the Jefferson County Jail, where John Brown was imprisoned during and after his trial. It has been torn down and is now the site of the Charles Town post office.

Brown was charged with treason, and was tried in a Virginia state court at Governor Wise's request. Accordingly, the charge was treason against Virginia.[192] President Buchanan did not object.[193]

The answer provided in 1859 was more political ~ than legal. The president of the United States and the governor of Virginia decided that Brown would be tried in Virginia for treason against the Commonwealth of Virginia, and that is where he was tried. This decision thrust Virginia rather than the United States into the role of the offended sovereign and contributed incalculably to the widening abyss between North and South. John Brown was condemned not as an enemy of the American people but as an enemy of Virginia and, by logical extension, of Southern slaveholders.

— Brian McGinty, author of John Brown's trial[194]

Brown was tried with his men who had lived through the raid and had not escaped — Copeland, Coppoc, Green, and Stevens — on charges of murder, "conspiracy to foment a slave insurrection", and treason, as of October 26.[195]

On November 2, after a week-long trial in Charles Town, the county seat of Jefferson County,[196][197] and 45 minutes of deliberation, the jury found Brown guilty on all three counts.[197] He was sentenced to be hanged in public on December 2.[197] He was the first person executed for treason in the history of the United States.[11][12]

The trial attracted reporters who were able to send their articles via the new telegraph. They were reprinted in numerous papers. It was the first trial in the U.S. to be nationally reported.[198]

November 2 to December 2, 1859

Before his conviction, reporters were not allowed access to Brown, as the judge and Andrew Hunter feared that his statements, if quickly published, would exacerbate tensions, especially among the enslaved. This was much to Brown's frustration, as he stated that he wanted to make a full statement of his motives and intentions through the press.[199] Once he had been convicted, the restriction was lifted, and, glad for the publicity, he talked with reporters and anyone else who wanted to see him, except pro-slavery clergy.[71] Brown received more letters than he ever had in his life. He wrote replies constantly, hundreds of eloquent letters, often published in newspapers.[200]

Rescue and Victor Hugo's pardon plans

There were well-documented and specific plans to rescue Brown, as Virginia Governor Henry A. Wise wrote to President Buchanan. Throughout the weeks Brown and six of his collaborators were in the Jefferson County Jail in Charles Town, the town was filled with various types of troops and militia, hundreds and sometimes thousands of them. Brown's trips from the jail to the courthouse and back, and especially the short trip from the jail to the gallows, were heavily guarded. Wise halted all non-military transportation on the Winchester and Potomac Railroad (from Maryland south through Harpers Ferry to Charles Town and Winchester), from the day before through the day after the execution. Jefferson County was under martial law, [201] and the military orders in Charles Town for the execution day had 14 points.[202]

However, Brown said several times that he did not want to be rescued. He refused the assistance of Silas Soule, a friend from Kansas who infiltrated the Jefferson County Jail one day by getting himself arrested for drunken brawling and offered to break him out during the night and flee northward to New York State and possibly Canada. Brown told Silas that, aged 59, he was too old to live a life on the run from the federal authorities as a fugitive and wanted to accept his execution as a martyr for the abolitionist cause. As Brown wrote his wife and children from jail, he believed that his "blood will do vastly more towards advancing the cause I have earnestly endeavoured to promote, than all I have done in my life before."[203] "I am worth inconceivably more to hang than for any other purpose."[204]

Victor Hugo, from exile on Guernsey, tried to obtain a pardon for John Brown: he sent an open letter that was published by the press on both sides of the Atlantic. This text, written at Hauteville House on December 2, 1859, warned of a possible civil war:

Politically speaking, the murder of John Brown would be an uncorrectable sin. It would create in the Union a latent fissure that would in the long run dislocate it. Brown's agony might perhaps consolidate slavery in Virginia, but it would certainly shake the whole American democracy. You save your shame, but you kill your glory. Morally speaking, it seems a part of the human light would put itself out, that the very notion of justice and injustice would hide itself in darkness, on that day where one would see the assassination of Emancipation by Liberty itself.

The letter was initially published in the London News[dubious ] and was widely reprinted. After Brown's execution, Hugo wrote a number of additional letters about Brown and the abolitionist cause.[205]

Abolitionists in the United States saw Hugo's writings as evidence of international support for the anti-slavery cause. The most widely publicized commentary on Brown to reach America from Europe was an 1861 pamphlet, John Brown par Victor Hugo, that included a brief biography and reprinted two letters by Hugo, including that of December 9, 1859. The pamphlet's frontispiece was an engraving of a hanged man by Hugo that became widely associated with the execution.[206]

Last words, death and aftermath

On December 1, Mary Ann Brown, who had stayed away from the prison due to Brown's concern for her safety, visited her husband for several hours with permission from Governor Wise.[207]

On the day of his execution, December 2,[208] Brown read his Bible and wrote a final letter to his wife, which included the will he had written the previous day,[209][207][210] as large meetings were held in many cities in the Northeast. In many of the cases, "Negroes were the chief actors in creating excitement".[208]

 
John Brown's last words, passed to a jailer on his way to the gallows. From an albumen print; location of the original is unknown.

Brown was well read and knew that the last words of prominent people are valued. That morning, Brown wrote and gave to his jailor Avis the words he wanted to be remembered by:

I, John Brown, am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood. I had, as I now think, vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed it might be done.[211]

 
Brown sits on his coffin on his way to the gallows. Soldiers line up on both sides, to avoid a rescue.

At 11:00 a.m. Brown rode, sitting on his coffin in a furniture wagon, from the county jail through a crowd of 2,000 soldiers to a small field a few blocks away, where the gallows were.[209] The military, prepared for an attack, lined the square where Brown was to be hung, with "the greatest array of disciplined forces ever seen in Virginia", according to Major Preston.[207] Among the soldiers in the crowd were future Confederate general Stonewall Jackson, and John Wilkes Booth (the latter borrowing a militia uniform to gain admission to the execution).[209]

Brown, who did not want to have a minister with him, displayed "the most complete fearlessness of & insensibility to danger & death" as he walked to the gallows.[207] Brown was hanged at 11:15 a.m. and was pronounced dead 35 minutes later by the coroner.[212]

The poet Walt Whitman, in Year of Meteors, described viewing the execution.[213]

Funeral and burial

 
Brown's grave, 1896
 
Brown's tombstone, North Elba, New York

Brown's desire, as told to the jailor in Charles Town, was that his body be burned, "the ashes urned", and his dead sons disinterred and treated likewise.[214][215] He wanted his epitaph to be:

I have fought a good fight.
I have finished my course.
I have kept the faith. [2 Timothy 4:7][216]

However, according to the sheriff of Jefferson County, Virginia law did not allow the burning of bodies, and Mrs. Brown did not want it. Brown's body was placed in a wooden coffin with the noose still around his neck, and the coffin was then put on a train to take it away from Virginia to his family homestead in North Elba, New York for burial.[217]

His body needed to be prepared for burial; this was supposed to take place in Philadelphia. There were many Southern pro-slavery medical students and faculty in Philadelphia, and as a direct result, they left the city en masse on December 21, 1859, for Southern medical schools, never to return. When Mary and her husband's body arrived on December 3, Philadelphia Mayor Alexander Henry met the train, with many policemen, and said public order could not be maintained if the casket remained in Philadelphia. In fact he "made a fake casket, covered with flowers and flags[,] which was carefully lifted from the coach"; the crowd followed the sham casket. The genuine casket was immediately sent onwards.[218][219] It was transported through places special to Brown during his life. His corpse was transported via Troy, New York, Rutland, Vermont, and across Lake Champlain by boat. His corpse arrived at the Brown farm at North Elba, New York.[220] Brown's body was washed, dressed, and placed, with difficulty, in a 5-foot-10-inch (1.78 m) walnut coffin, in New York.[221] He was buried on December 8, 1859.[222] Abolitionist Rev. Joshua Young gave a prayer, and James Miller McKim and Wendell Phillips spoke.[220][222]

In the North, large memorial meetings took place, church bells rang, minute guns were fired, and famous writers such as Emerson and Thoreau joined many Northerners in praising Brown.[223]

On July 4, 1860, family and admirers of Brown gathered at his farm for a memorial. This was the last time that the surviving members of Brown's family gathered together. The farm was sold, except for the burial plot. By 1882, John Jr., Owen, Jason, and Ruth, widow of Henry Thompson, lived in Ohio; his wife and their two unmarried daughters in California.[224] By 1886, Owen, Jason, and Ruth were living near Pasadena, California, where they were honored in a parade.[225]

Senate investigation

On December 14, 1859, the U.S. Senate appointed a bipartisan committee to investigate the Harpers Ferry raid and to determine whether any citizens contributed arms, ammunition or money to John Brown's men. The Democrats attempted to implicate the Republicans in the raid; the Republicans tried to disassociate themselves from Brown and his acts.[226][227]

The Senate committee heard testimony from 32 witnesses, including Liam Dodson, one of the surviving abolitionists. The report, authored by chairman James Murray Mason, a pro-slavery Democrat from Virginia, was published in June 1860. It found no direct evidence of a conspiracy, but implied that the raid was a result of Republican doctrines.[227] The two committee Republicans published a minority report, but were apparently more concerned about denying Northern culpability than clarifying the nature of Brown's efforts. Republicans such as Abraham Lincoln rejected any connection with the raid, calling Brown "insane".[228]

The investigation was performed in a tense environment in both houses of Congress. One senator wrote to his wife that "The members on both sides are mostly armed with deadly weapons and it is said that the friends of each are armed in the galleries." After a heated exchange of insults, a Mississippian attacked Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania with a Bowie knife in the House of Representatives. Stevens' friends prevented a fight.[229]

The Senate committee was very cautious in its questions of two of Brown's backers, Samuel Howe and George Stearns, out of fear of stoking violence. Howe and Stearns later said that the questions were asked in a manner that permitted them to give honest answers without implicating themselves.[229] Civil War historian James M. McPherson stated that "A historian reading their testimony, however, will be convinced that they told several falsehoods."[230]

Aftermath of the raid

 
Old John Brown's Career, 1860 poster

John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry was among the last in a series of events that led to the American Civil War.[231] Southern slaveowners, hearing initial reports that hundreds of abolitionists were involved, were relieved the effort was so small, but feared other abolitionists would emulate Brown and attempt to lead slave rebellions.[232] Future Confederate President Jefferson Davis feared "thousands of John Browns".[233] Therefore, the South reorganized the decrepit militia system. These militias, well-established by 1861, became a ready-made Confederate army, making the South better prepared for war.[234]

Southern Democrats charged that Brown's raid was an inevitable consequence of the political platform of what they invariably called "the Black Republican Party". In light of the upcoming elections in November 1860, the Republicans tried to distance themselves as much as possible from Brown, condemning the raid and dismissing its leader as an insane fanatic. As one historian explains, Brown was successful in polarizing politics: "Brown's raid succeeded brilliantly. It drove a wedge through the already tentative and fragile Opposition–Republican coalition and helped to intensify the sectional polarization that soon tore the Democratic party and the Union apart."[234]

Many abolitionists in the North viewed Brown as a martyr, sacrificed for the sins of the nation. Immediately after the raid, William Lloyd Garrison published a column in The Liberator, judging Brown's raid "well-intended but sadly misguided" and "wild and futile".[235] However, he defended Brown's character from detractors in the Northern and Southern press, and argued that those who supported the principles of the American Revolution could not consistently oppose Brown's raid. On the day Brown was hanged, Garrison reiterated the point in Boston: "whenever commenced, I cannot but wish success to all slave insurrections".[236]

Frederick Douglass believed that Brown's "zeal in the cause of my race was far greater than mine – it was as the burning sun to my taper light – mine was bounded by time, his stretched away to the boundless shores of eternity. I could live for the slave, but he could die for him."[237]

Viewpoints

Contemporaries

Between 1859 and Lincoln's assassination in 1865, Brown was the most famous American: emblem to the North, as Wendell Phillips put it,[238] and traitor to the South. According to Frederick Douglass, "He was with the troops during that war, he was seen in every camp fire, and our boys pressed onward to victory and freedom, timing their feet to the stately stepping of Old John Brown as his soul went marching on."[239] Douglass called him "a brave and glorious old man. ...History has no better illustration of pure, disinterested benevolence."[240]

Other black leaders of the time—Martin Delany, Henry Highland Garnet, Harriet Tubman—also knew and respected Brown. "Tubman thought Brown was the greatest white man who ever lived",[241] and she said later he did more for American blacks than Lincoln did.[242]

Black businesses across the North closed on the day of his execution.[243] Church bells tolled across the North.[12] In response to the death sentence, Ralph Waldo Emerson remarked that "[John Brown] will make the gallows glorious like the Cross."[244] In 1863, Julia Ward Howe wrote the popular hymn the Battle Hymn of the Republic to the tune of John Brown's body, which included a line "As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free", comparing Brown's sacrifice to that of Jesus Christ.[12]

According to W. E. B. Du Bois in his 1909 biography, John Brown. Brown's raid stood as "a great white light – an unwavering, unflickering brightness, blinding by its all-seeing brilliance, making the whole world simply a light and a darkness – a right and a wrong."[245]

According to his friend and financier, the rich abolitionist Gerrit Smith, "If I were asked to point out the man in all this world I think most truly a Christian, I would point to John Brown."[246][247]

Historians and other writers

Writers continue to vigorously debate Brown's personality, sanity, motivations, morality, and relation to abolitionism.[15] Once the Reconstruction era had ended, with the country distancing itself from the anti-slavery cause, and martial law imposed in the South, the historical view of Brown changed. Historian James Loewen surveyed American history textbooks prior to 1995 and noted that until about 1890, historians considered Brown perfectly sane, but from about 1890 until 1970, he was generally portrayed as insane.[248] Oswald Garrison Villard, the grandson of abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison, wrote a favorable 1910 biography of Brown, though it also added fuel to the anti-Brown fire by criticizing him as a muddled, pugnacious, bumbling, and homicidal madman.[15][249] Villard himself was a pacifist and admired Brown in many respects, but his interpretation of the facts provided a paradigm for later anti-Brown writers. Similarly, a 1923 textbook stated, "The farther we getaway from the excitement of 1859 the more we are disposed to consider this extraordinary man the victim of mental delusions."[250] In 1978, NYU historian Albert Fried concluded that historians who portrayed Brown as a dysfunctional figure are "really informing me of their predilections, their judgment of the historical event, their identification with the moderates and opposition to the 'extremists.'"[251] This view of Brown has come to prevail in academic writing and in journalism. Biographer Louis DeCaro Jr. wrote in 2007, "there is no consensus of fairness with respect to Brown in either the academy or the media."[252] Biographer Stephen B. Oates has described Brown as "maligned as a demented dreamer ... (but) in fact one of the most perceptive human beings of his generation".[253]

External videos
  Presentation by Reynolds on John Brown, Abolitionist: The Man Who Killed Slavery, Sparked the Civil War, and Seeded Civil Rights, May 12, 2005, C-SPAN

Some writers describe Brown as a monomaniacal zealot, others as a hero. In 1931, the United Daughters of the Confederacy and Sons of Confederate Veterans erected a counter-monument, to Heyward Shepherd, a free black man who was the first fatality of the Harpers Ferry raid, claiming without evidence that he was a "representative of Negroes of the neighborhood, who would not take part".[254] By the mid-20th century, some scholars were fairly convinced that Brown was a fanatic and killer, while some African Americans sustained a positive view of him.[255] According to Stephen Oates, "unlike most Americans at his time, he had no racism. He treated blacks equally. ...He was a success, a tremendous success because he was a catalyst of the Civil War. He didn't cause it but he set fire to the fuse that led to the blow up."[256] Journalist Richard Owen Boyer considered Brown "an American who gave his life that millions of other Americans might be free", and others held similarly positive views.[257][258][259]

Some historians, such as Paul Finkelman, compare Brown to contemporary terrorists such as Osama bin Laden and Timothy McVeigh,[15][260][261] Finkelman calling him "simply part of a very violent world" and further stating that Brown "is a bad tactician, a bad strategist, he's a bad planner, he's not a very good general – but he's not crazy".[15] Historian James Gilbert labels Brown a terrorist by 21st-century criteria.[262] Gilbert writes: "Brown's deeds conform to contemporary definitions of terrorism, and his psychological predispositions are consistent with the terrorist model."[263] In contrast, biographer David S. Reynolds gives Brown credit for starting the Civil War or "killing slavery", and cautions others against identifying Brown with terrorism.[264] Reynolds saw Brown as inspiring the Civil Rights Movement a century later, adding "it is misleading to identify Brown with modern terrorists."[264][265] Malcolm X said that white people could not join his black nationalist Organization of Afro-American Unity, but "if John Brown were still alive, we might accept him".[266]

In his posthumous The Impending Crisis, 1848–1861 (1976), David Potter argued that the emotional effect of Brown's raid exceeded the philosophical effect of the Lincoln–Douglas debates, and reaffirmed a deep division between North and South.[266] Biographer Louis A. DeCaro Jr., who has debunked many historical allegations about Brown's early life and public career, concludes that although he "was hardly the only abolitionist to equate slavery with sin, his struggle against slavery was far more personal and religious than it was for many abolitionists, just as his respect and affection for black people was far more personal and religious than it was for most enemies of slavery".[267] Historian and Brown documentary scholar Louis Ruchames wrote: "Brown's action was one of great idealism and placed him in the company of the great liberators of mankind."[268]

Several 21st-century works about Brown are notable for the absence of hostility that characterized similar works a century earlier (when Lincoln's anti-slavery views were de-emphasized).[269] Journalist and documentary writer Ken Chowder considers Brown "stubborn ... egoistical, self-righteous, and sometimes deceitful; yet ... at certain times, a great man" and argues that Brown has been adopted by both the left and right, and his actions "spun" to fit the world view of the spinner at various times in American history.[15] The shift to an appreciative perspective moves many white historians toward the view long held by black scholars such as W. E. B. Du Bois, Benjamin Quarles, and Lerone Bennett, Jr.[270]

Influences

The connection between John Brown's life and many of the slave uprisings in the Caribbean was clear from the outset. Brown was born during the period of the Haitian Revolution, which saw Haitian slaves revolting against the French. The role the revolution played in helping to formulate Brown's abolitionist views directly is not clear; however, the revolution had an obvious effect on the general view towards slavery in the northern United States, and in the Southern states it was a warning of horror (as they viewed it) possibly to come. As W. E. B. Du Bois notes, the involvement of slaves in the American Revolutions, and the "upheaval in Hayti, and the new enthusiasm for human rights, led to a wave of emancipation which started in Vermont during the Revolution and swept through New England and Pennsylvania, ending finally in New York and New Jersey".[271]

The 1839 slave insurrection aboard the Spanish ship La Amistad, off the coast of Cuba, provides a poignant example of John Brown's support and appeal towards Caribbean slave revolts. On La Amistad, Joseph Cinqué and approximately 50 other slaves captured the ship, slated to transport them from Havana to Puerto Príncipe, Cuba, in July 1839, and attempted to return to Africa. However, through trickery, the ship ended up in the United States, where Cinque and his men stood trial. Ultimately, the courts acquitted the men because at the time the international slave trade was illegal in the United States.[272] According to Brown's daughter, "Turner and Cinque stood first in esteem" among Brown's black heroes. Furthermore, she noted Brown's "admiration of Cinques' character and management in carrying his points with so little bloodshed!"[273] In 1850, Brown would refer affectionately to the revolt, in saying "Nothing so charms the American people as personal bravery. Witness the case of Cinques, of everlasting memory, on board the Amistad."[274]

The specific knowledge John Brown gained from the tactics employed in the Haitian Revolution, and other Caribbean revolts, was of paramount importance when Brown turned his sights to the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia. As Brown's cohort Richard Realf explained to a committee of the 36th Congress, "he had posted himself in relation to the wars of Toussaint L'Ouverture;[275] he had become thoroughly acquainted with the wars in Hayti and the islands round about."[276] By studying the slave revolts of the Caribbean region, Brown learned a great deal about how to properly conduct guerilla warfare. A key element to the prolonged success of this warfare was the establishment of maroon communities, which are essentially colonies of runaway slaves. As a contemporary article notes, Brown would use these establishments to "retreat from and evade attacks he could not overcome. He would maintain and prolong a guerilla war, of which ... Haiti afforded" an example.[277]

The idea of creating maroon communities was the impetus for the creation of John Brown's "Provisional Constitution and Ordinances for the People of the United States", which helped to detail how such communities would be governed. However, the idea of maroon colonies of slaves is not an idea exclusive to the Caribbean region. In fact, maroon communities riddled the southern United States between the mid-1600s and 1864, especially in the Great Dismal Swamp region of Virginia and North Carolina. Similar to the Haitian Revolution, the Seminole Wars, fought in modern-day Florida, saw the involvement of maroon communities, which although outnumbered by native allies were more effective fighters.[277]

Although the maroon colonies of North America undoubtedly had an effect on John Brown's plan, their impact paled in comparison to that of the maroon communities in places like Haiti, Jamaica, and Surinam. Accounts by Brown's friends and cohorts prove this idea. Richard Realf, a cohort of Brown in Kansas, noted that Brown not only studied the slave revolts in the Caribbean, but focused more specifically on the maroons of Jamaica and those involved in Haiti's liberation.[278] Brown's friend Richard Hinton similarly noted that Brown knew "by heart" the occurrences in Jamaica and Haiti.[279] Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a cohort of Brown's and a member of the Secret Six, stated that Brown's plan involved getting "together bands and families of fugitive slaves" and "establish them permanently in those [mountain] fastnesses, like the Maroons of Jamaica and Surinam".[280]

Legacy

Of all the major figures associated with the American Civil War Brown is one of the most studied and pondered.[281][282] "As a nation, we are unable to get over John Brown."[283]: 89  Kate Field raised money to give to the State of New York for what was to be, in her words, "John Brown's Grave and Farm" (now John Brown Farm State Historic Site).[284] At the centenary of the raid in 1959, a "sanitized" play about him was produced at Harper's Ferry.[285]

 
A life-sized white marble statue of John Brown is on the former campus of the Western University at the Quindaro Townsite in Kansas City, Kansas.
 
The Western University campus hosted the John Brown statue.

In 2007 Brown was inducted into the National Abolition Hall of Fame, in Peterboro, New York.

John Brown Day

  • May 1: In 1999, John Brown Day was celebrated on May 1.[286]
  • May 7: In 2016, John Brown Lives! Friends of Freedom celebrated May 7 as John Brown Day.[287] In 2018, it was May 5. Spirit of John Brown Freedom Awards were given to environmentalist Jen Kretser, poet Martín Espada, and to Soffiyah Elijah, attorney and executive director of the Alliance of Families for Justice, which advocates for prison reform.[288] In 2022, the day chosen was May 14.[289]
  • May 9: The John Brown Farm, Tannery & Museum, in Guys Mills, Pennsylvania, holds community celebrations on John Brown's birthday, May 9.[290]
  • August 17: In 1906, the Niagara Movement, predecessor of the NAACP, celebrated John Brown Day on August 17.
  • October 16: In 2017, the Vermont Legislature designated October 16, the date of the raid, as John Brown Day.[291][292]

Meetings in honor of John Brown

In 1946, the John Brown Memorial Association held its 24th annual pilgrimage to the grave in North Elba, where there were memorial services.[293]

At the 150th anniversary of the raid In 2009, a two-day symposium, "John Brown Comes Home", was held, on the influence of Brown's raid, using facilities in adjacent Lake Placid. Speakers included Bernadine Dohrn and a great-great-great-granddaughter of Brown.[294][295]

Museums

 
A statue of Brown is in front of the John Brown Museum in Osawatomie, Kansas.

All of these museums except the one in Harpers Ferry are places Brown lived or stayed.

  • Barnum's American Museum in New York, destroyed by fire in 1868, contained according to a November 7, 1859, advertisement "a full-length Wax Figure of OSAWATOMIE BROWN, taken from life, and a KNIFE found on the body of his son, at Harper's Ferry".[298] An agent of Barnum traveled to Harpers Ferry in November, saw Brown, and offered him $100 (equivalent to $3,257 in 2022) for "his clothes and pike, and his certificate of their genuineness."[299] By December 7 the exhibits included "his autograph Commission to a Lieutenancy as well as TWO PIKES or spears taken at Harper's Ferry".[300] On December 16 the Museum added, with document vouching for its authenticity, "the link of the shackles that Cook and Coppock cut in two...that consequently permitted them to escape."[301] Also exhibited were the Augustus Washington 1847 daguerrotype of Brown (see above) and the now-lost painting by Louis Ransom of the famous, apocryphal incident of Brown kissing a black baby on his way to the gallows, reproduced in an Currier & Ives print (see Paintings). The latter was only exhibited for two months in 1863; Barnum withdrew it to save the building from destruction during the anti-Negro riot that broke out shortly.[208]

Statues

Streets

Storer College

  • Storer College began as the first graded school for blacks in West Virginia. Its location in Harpers Ferry was because of the importance of Brown and his raid. The Arsenal engine house, renamed John Brown's Fort, was moved to the Storer campus in 1909.[308] It was used as the college museum.
    • A plaque honoring Brown was attached to the Fort in 1918, while it was on the Storer campus.
 
A plaque is on John Brown's Fort which says "That this nation might have; new birth of freedom that slavery should be removed forever from American soil John Brown and his 21 men gave their lives to commemorate their heroism this tablet is placed on this building which has since been known as John Brown's fort by the alumni of storer college 1918".
In 1931, after years of controversy, a tablet was erected in Harpers Ferry by the Sons of Confederate Veterans and the United Daughters of the Confederacy, honoring the key "Lost Cause" belief that their slaves were happy and neither wanted freedom nor supported John Brown. (See Heyward Shepherd monument.) The president of Storer participated in the dedication. In response, W. E. B. DuBois, co-founder of the NAACP, wrote text for a new plaque in 1932. The Storer College administration would not allow it to be put it up, nor did the National Park Service after becoming owner of the Fort. In 2006, it was placed at the site on the former Storer campus where the Fort had been located.

Other John Brown sites

Media

Two notable screen portrayals of Brown were given by actor Raymond Massey. The 1940 film Santa Fe Trail, starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland, depicted Brown completely unsympathetically as a villainous madman and Massey plays him with a constant, wild-eyed stare. The film gave the impression that he did not oppose slavery, even to the point of having a black "mammy" character say, after an especially fierce battle, "Mr. Brown done promised us freedom, but ... if this is freedom, I don't want no part of it". Massey portrayed Brown again in the little-known, low-budget Seven Angry Men, in which he was not only the main character, but depicted in a much more restrained, sympathetic way.[323] Massey, along with Tyrone Power and Judith Anderson, starred in the acclaimed 1953 dramatic reading of Stephen Vincent Benét's epic Pulitzer Prize-winning poem John Brown's Body (1928).[324]

Numerous American poets have written poems about him, including John Greenleaf Whittier, Louisa May Alcott, and Walt Whitman.[325] The Polish poet Cyprian Kamil Norwid wrote two poems praising Brown: "John Brown" and the better known "Do obywatela Johna Brown" ("To Citizen John Brown").[326] Marching Song (1932) is an unpublished play about the legend of John Brown by Orson Welles.[327] Russell Banks's 1998 biographical novel about Brown, Cloudsplitter, was a Pulitzer Prize finalist. It is narrated by Brown's surviving son Owen.[328] James McBride's 2013 novel The Good Lord Bird tells Brown's story through the eyes of a young slave, Henry Shackleford, who accompanies Brown to Harpers Ferry. The novel won the 2013 National Book Award for Fiction.[329] A limited episode series based on the book was released starring Ethan Hawke as John Brown.[330]

Paintings

 
In a Currier and Ives print from 1863, John Brown is depicted as Christ-like, en route to his execution, with a black mother and her mulatto child. Above his head is the flag of Virginia, and its motto, Sic semper tyrannis.

A well-known image of Brown in the later 19th century is a Currier and Ives print, based on a lost painting by Louis Ransom.[331][332] It portrays Brown as a Christ-like figure. The "Virgin and Child" typically depicted with Christ are here a black mother and mulatto child. Legend says that Brown kissed the mythical baby but virtually all scholars agree that this did not in fact happen.[333] Above Brown's head, like a halo, is the flag of Virginia and its motto, Sic semper tyrannis ("Thus always to tyrants"). According to Brown's supporters, the government of Virginia was tyrannical and according to fugitive slaves, it "is as well the black man's, as the white man's motto".[334]

 
Brown is in Tragic Prelude, a mural in the Kansas State Capitol. He carries in one hand a Bible and in the other a Beecher's Bible rifle. Union and Confederate forces are fighting, with casualties. A tornado approaches in the background, as does a prairie fire, both common in Kansas.

In 1938, Kansas painter John Steuart Curry was commissioned to prepare murals for the Kansas State Capitol in Topeka, Kansas. He chose as his subject the Kansan John Brown, seen by many as the most important man in Kansas history. In the resulting mural, Tragic Prelude, Brown holds a Bible in one hand and a Beecher's Bible rifle in the other. Behind him are Union and Confederate troops, with dead soldiers; a reference to the Bleeding Kansas period, which Brown was at the center of, and which was commonly seen to have been a dress rehearsal or a tragic prelude to the increasingly inevitable Civil War.[335]

 
Frederick Douglass argued against John Brown's plan to attack the arsenal at Harpers Ferry is a painting by Jacob Lawrence.

In 1941, Jacob Lawrence illustrated Brown's life in The Legend of John Brown, a series of 22 gouache paintings. By 1977, these were in such fragile condition that they could not be displayed, and the Detroit Institute of Arts had to commission Lawrence to recreate the series as silkscreen prints. The result was a limited-edition portfolio of 22 hand-screened prints, published with a poem, John Brown, by Robert Hayden, commissioned specifically for the project. Though Brown had been a popular topic for many painters, The Legend of John Brown was the first series to explore his legacy from an African-American perspective.[336]

Paintings such as Thomas Hovenden's The Last Moments of John Brown immortalize an apocryphal story in which a black woman offers the condemned Brown her baby to kiss on his way to the gallows. The tale was probably invented by journalist James Redpath.[337]

Historical markers

Archival material

Court material and related documents

The indictments, summons, sentences, bills of exception, and similar documents for Brown and his raiders are held by the Jefferson County Circuit Clerk, and have been digitized by West Virginia Archives and History.[340] Two separate collections of relevant letters were published. The first is the messages, mostly telegrams, sent and received by Governor Wise.[341] The Senate of Maryland published the many internal telegrams of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.[184]

Much material is missing. The order book, which had the minutes of John Brown's trial,[342] was evidently possessed by Brown's judge Richard Parker in 1888.[343] As of 2022, its location is unknown. Among the missing material used at his trial as evidence of sedition were bundles of printed copies of his Provisional Constitution, prepared for the "state" Brown intended to set up in the Appalachian Mountains. Even less known is Brown's "Declaration of Liberty", imitating the Declaration of Independence.[344]

According to Prosecutor Andrew Hunter,

John Brown had with him when captured at Harpers Ferry a carpet-bag in which were his constitution for a provisional government and other papers. He had placed it in one corner of the engine house, and there it was found when the marines charged and captured the survivors. Mr. Hunter took possession of the carpet-bag and carried it to Charlestown. He kept it and its contents. He added to the papers the letters which were forwarded to the prisoners and not delivered to them. Ordinary letters were allowed to pass to the prisoners after Mr. Hunter had examined them. But those letters which seemed to contain information bearing upon the organization in the North, Mr. Hunter confiscated and kept. He had between seventy and eighty of these letters, and he placed them in John Brown's carpet-bag. Other important documents bearing upon the secret history of the case went into the same receptacle, and much of the matter nobody but Mr. Hunter saw.[345]

There was correspondence from Frederick Douglass and Gerrit Smith, among many others. Hugh Forbes said that the carpet-bag may have contained "an abundant supply of my correspondence".[346][347] (After Brown's arrest, Smith, Douglass, and future biographer and friend Franklin Sanborn began destroying correspondence and other documents because they feared criminal charges for aiding Brown.[348][349])

The carpet-bag also contained maps of Kentucky, North Carolina, and Virginia that showed the locations of State arsenals with proposed routes for attacks and retreats.[8][345][350]

Hunter personally took the carpet-bag to Richmond, because he thought it would be safer there. He was at the time a member of the Virginia State Senate. In 1865, when Lee advised that he could no longer defend Richmond, Hunter did not want the "Yankees" to find the carpet-bag. He thought that the Capitol was as safe a place as any in Richmond, and he asked Commonwealth Secretary George Wythe Munford if he could hide it in the Capitol. "Munford told me that he has taken the carpet-bag up to the cock-loft of the Capitol and had let down the bag between the wall and the plastering, and I believe those papers are there yet."[345]

Wise sent attorney Henry Hudnall to Charles Town to put in order Hunter's documents. In a letter to Wise of November 17, he refers to "a large quantity of matter", including "nearly a half bushel of letters" just of Tidd alone.[351]

In 1907–08 there appeared in print a varied collection of letters and other documents a Union soldier from Massachusetts took from Hunter's office in the Charles Town courthouse in 1862, when it was being used as a Union barracks.[343][352][353][354]

Correspondence and other archival material

The West Virginia Archives and History owns the largest single collection on Brown, the Boyd B. Stutler Collection. A negative microfilm of the material is held by the Ohio Historical Society.[355][356]

The Hudson Library and Historical Society of Hudson, Ohio, Brown's home town, prepared annotated listings of Brown's many ancestors, siblings, and children.[357] Since John Brown moved around a lot, had a large family, and had a lot to say, he carried on a voluminous correspondence, including letters to editors,[358] and was repeatedly interviewed by reporters, as he made himself available. Archival material on him and his circle is therefore abundant, and widely scattered. There has never been a complete edition of his extant correspondence; the one scholarly attempt, from 1885, produced a book of 645 pages. Editor F. B. Sanborn stated that he had enough letters for another book.[359] A 2015 book was published just of the letters Brown wrote in the last month of his life, from jail.[360] Additional letters were found and published in the 20th century.[361][362][363] Archival material concerning John Brown's time in Crawford County, Pennsylvania, including his tannery, is held by the Pelletier Library, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania.[364] Clark Atlanta University holds a small collection.[365]

Brown biographer Oswald Garrison Villard surveys the manuscript collections in his 1910 biography.[366] The archive of Villard is in the Columbia University Library. Kansas Memory has a collection of materials regarding Brown's activities in Kansas.[367] A project of the Kansas Historical Society, it holds the collection of Brown biographer Richard J. Hinton.[368]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ John Brown moved his grandfather's tombstone to his farm in North Elba, New York.[20] In 1857, Brown stated that he descended from Peter Browne, one of the Pilgrim Fathers, who landed from the Mayflower at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1620. There are some historians that believe that his ancestor was Peter Brown, who arrived in Connecticut in 1650.[21]
  2. ^ Brown was said by Sanbord to have been the fourth of eight children, but it's not clear who the other children of Owen and Ruth were and if the eight children included their adopted son, Levi.[22]
  3. ^ Brown eventually listed surveyor's implements in his will.[41]
  4. ^ Snodgrass said that he lived in (nearby) Randolph Township, Pennsylvania.[57]
  5. ^ According to a Pennsylvania friend who visited him in jail in Charles Town just before his execution, he mentioned that Crawford County, Pennsylvania, was important to him because two of his children and his wife were buried there.[71]
  6. ^ Later, in 1852, Brown received five first prizes for his sheep and cattle at the Ohio State Fair.[83]
  7. ^ In the Bible, Mount Gilead was the place where only the bravest of Israelites gathered to face an invading enemy. Brown founded the League with the words, "Nothing so charms the American people as personal bravery. [Blacks] would have ten times the number [of white friends than] they now have were they but half as much in earnest to secure their dearest rights as they are to ape the follies and extravagances of their white neighbors, and to indulge in idle show, in ease, and in luxury."[95]
  8. ^ Brown gave his rocking chair to the mother of his beloved black porter, Thomas Thomas, as a gesture of affection when he moved away from Springfield.[89]
  9. ^ Brown's wife Mary refused to relocate to Kansas.[104]

References

  1. ^ RBS (Rebecca Buffum Spring) (December 2, 1859). "A Visit to John Brown. By a lady". New-York Tribune. p. 6. from the original on February 13, 2021. Retrieved March 12, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  2. ^ DeCaro 2005a, Introduction.
  3. ^ DeCaro 2005a, p. 248.
  4. ^ The martyrdom of John Brown : the proceedings of a public meeting held in London, on the 2nd December, 1863, to commemorate the fourth anniversary of John Brown's death. London: Emancipation Society. 1864. Within 22 page document.
  5. ^ Wyatt-Brown 1975, p. 426.
  6. ^ Smith 1895, p. 323.
  7. ^ Foner, Philip S. (1964). Frederick Douglass: Selections from His Writings. New York: International Publishers. pp. 25–26. OCLC 911783030.
  8. ^ a b "The Harper's Ferry Outbreak". New York Daily Herald. October 21, 1859. p. 1. from the original on April 28, 2021. Retrieved September 14, 2020 – via newspapers.com.
    Reprinted in The Liberator, October 28, 1859
  9. ^ Hinton 2011, p. 637.
  10. ^ Sanborn, Franklin (c. 1900). John Brown and his friends. Slavery and anti-slavery: A transnational archive. N.p. p. 7. from the original on March 11, 2022. Retrieved March 11, 2022 – via HathiTrust.
  11. ^ a b "Treason in the United States". Elizabethtown Post (Elizabethtown, New York). December 3, 1859. p. 2. from the original on April 13, 2022. Retrieved March 18, 2022 – via NYS Historic Newspapers.
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  13. ^ Anderson, Osborne Perry (1861). A Voice from Harper's Ferry. Boston: Published by the author. pp. 5–7.
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  38. ^ Villard 1910, p. 13–14.
  39. ^ a b c Sanborn & Brown 1878, p. 8.
  40. ^ a b c Wyatt-Brown 1975, p. 427.
  41. ^ a b c d e Villard 1910, p. 17.
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  47. ^ Hinton 2011, p. 13.
  48. ^ Du Bois 2015, p. 22.
  49. ^ Villard 1910, p. 18.
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john, brown, abolitionist, john, brown, 1800, december, 1859, prominent, leader, american, abolitionist, movement, decades, preceding, civil, first, reaching, national, prominence, 1850s, radical, abolitionism, fighting, bleeding, kansas, brown, captured, trie. John Brown May 9 1800 December 2 1859 was a prominent leader in the American abolitionist movement in the decades preceding the Civil War First reaching national prominence in the 1850s for his radical abolitionism and fighting in Bleeding Kansas Brown was captured tried and executed by the Commonwealth of Virginia for a raid and incitement of a slave rebellion at Harpers Ferry in 1859 John BrownBrown in a photograph by Augustus Washington c 1846 1847Born 1800 05 09 May 9 1800Torrington Connecticut U S DiedDecember 2 1859 1859 12 02 aged 59 Charles Town Virginia now West Virginia U S Cause of deathExecution by hangingResting placeNorth Elba New York U S 44 15 08 N 73 58 18 W 44 252240 N 73 971799 W 44 252240 73 971799MonumentsVarious Statues in Kansas City Kansas and North Elba New York Tragic Prelude mural in the Kansas State Capitol John Brown Farm State Historic Site North Elba New York John Brown Museum and John Brown Historic Park Osawatomie Kansas Museum and Statue Akron Ohio John Brown Tannery Site Guys Mills PennsylvaniaKnown forInvolvement in Bleeding Kansas Raid on Harpers Ferry Virginia MovementAbolitionismCriminal charge s Treason against the Commonwealth of Virginia murder inciting slave insurrectionSpousesDianthe Lusk m 1820 died 1832 wbr Mary Ann Day m 1833 wbr Children20 including John Jr Owen and WatsonParentOwen Brown father SignatureAn evangelical Christian of strong religious convictions Brown was profoundly influenced by the Puritan faith of his upbringing 1 2 He believed that he was an instrument of God 3 raised to strike the death blow to American slavery a sacred obligation 4 Brown was the leading exponent of violence in the American abolitionist movement 5 believing it was necessary to end American slavery after decades of peaceful efforts had failed 6 7 Brown said that in working to free the enslaved he was following Christian ethics including the Golden Rule 8 and the Declaration of Independence which states that all men are created equal 9 He stated that in his view these two principles meant the same thing 10 Brown first gained national attention when he led anti slavery volunteers and his sons during the Bleeding Kansas crisis of the late 1850s a state level civil war over whether Kansas would enter the Union as a slave state or a free state He was dissatisfied with abolitionist pacifism saying of pacifists These men are all talk What we need is action action In May 1856 Brown and his sons killed five supporters of slavery in the Pottawatomie massacre a response to the sacking of Lawrence by pro slavery forces Brown then commanded anti slavery forces at the Battle of Black Jack and the Battle of Osawatomie In October 1859 Brown led a raid on the federal armory at Harpers Ferry Virginia which became West Virginia intending to start a slave liberation movement that would spread south he had prepared a Provisional Constitution for the revised slavery free United States that he hoped to bring about He seized the armory but seven people were killed and ten or more were injured Brown intended to arm slaves with weapons from the armory but only a few slaves joined his revolt Those of Brown s men who had not fled were killed or captured by local militia and U S Marines the latter led by Robert E Lee Brown was tried for treason against the Commonwealth of Virginia the murder of five men and inciting a slave insurrection He was found guilty of all charges and was hanged on December 2 1859 the first person executed for treason against a U S state in the history of the United States 11 12 The Harpers Ferry raid and Brown s trial both covered extensively in national newspapers escalated tensions that in the next year led to the South s long threatened secession and the American Civil War Southerners feared that others would soon follow in Brown s footsteps encouraging and arming slave rebellions He was a hero and icon in the North Union soldiers marched to the new song John Brown s Body that portrayed him as a heroic martyr Brown has been variously described as a heroic martyr and visionary and as a madman and terrorist 13 14 15 Contents 1 Early life and family 1 1 Family and childhood 1 2 Young adulthood 1 3 Pennsylvania 1 4 Back to Ohio 1 5 Springfield Massachusetts 1 6 New York 2 Actions in Kansas 2 1 Move to Kansas 2 2 Pottawatomie 2 3 Palmyra and Osawatomie 3 Raid at Harpers Ferry 3 1 Brown s plans 3 2 Preparations 3 2 1 Financial and political backing 3 2 2 Virginia scheme 3 2 3 Weapons 3 2 4 Constitutional convention in Ontario 3 2 5 Crisis 3 2 6 Continue to organize funds and forces 3 3 Brown s forces 3 4 The raid 4 The trial 4 1 November 2 to December 2 1859 4 2 Rescue and Victor Hugo s pardon plans 5 Last words death and aftermath 5 1 Funeral and burial 5 2 Senate investigation 5 3 Aftermath of the raid 6 Viewpoints 6 1 Contemporaries 6 2 Historians and other writers 7 Influences 8 Legacy 8 1 John Brown Day 8 2 Meetings in honor of John Brown 8 3 Museums 8 4 Statues 8 5 Streets 8 6 Storer College 8 7 Other John Brown sites 8 8 Media 8 9 Paintings 8 10 Historical markers 9 Archival material 9 1 Court material and related documents 9 2 Correspondence and other archival material 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 Further reading 14 1 Bibliographies 14 2 Primary sources 14 3 Secondary sources 14 4 Historical fiction 14 5 Movie 14 6 Opera 14 7 Plays 14 8 Poetry 14 9 Further online resources 15 External linksEarly life and familyFamily and childhood nbsp The house in which Brown was born in Torrington Connecticut was photographed in 1896 and destroyed by fire in 1918 16 17 18 John Brown was born May 9 1800 in Torrington Connecticut 19 the son of Owen Brown 1771 1856 a and Ruth Mills 1772 1808 22 Owen Brown s father was Capt John Brown of English descent who died in the Revolutionary War in New York on September 3 1776 23 His mother of Dutch and Welsh descent 24 was the daughter of Gideon Mills an officer in the Revolutionary Army 23 Although Brown described his parents as poor but respectable at some point 22 Owen Brown became a leading and wealthy citizen of Hudson 23 25 He operated a tannery and employed Jesse Grant father of President Ulysses S Grant Jesse lived with the Brown family for some years 25 The founder of Hudson David Hudson with whom John s father had frequent contact was an abolitionist and an advocate of forcible resistance by the slaves 26 The fourth child of Owen and Ruth 22 b Brown s older siblings were Anna Ruth born in 1798 Salmon born 1802 and Oliver Owen born in 1804 27 28 Frederick identified by Owen as his sixth son was born in 1807 29 Frederick visited Brown when he was in jail awaiting execution 30 He had an adopted brother Levi Blakeslee born some time before 1805 31 Salmon became a lawyer politician and newspaper editor 29 While Brown was very young his father moved the family briefly to his hometown West Simsbury Connecticut 23 In 1805 the family moved again to Hudson Ohio in the Western Reserve which at the time was mostly wilderness 32 it became the most anti slavery region of the country 33 Owen hated slavery 34 and participated in Hudson s anti slavery activity and debate offering a safe house to Underground Railroad fugitives 35 Owen became a supporter of Oberlin College after Western Reserve College would not allow a Black man to enroll in the school 36 Owen was an Oberlin trustee from 1835 to 1844 36 Other Brown family members were abolitionists but John and his eccentric brother Oliver were the most active and forceful 37 John s mother Ruth died a few hours after the death of her newborn girl in December 1808 38 In his memoir Brown wrote that he mourned his mother for years 39 40 While he respected his father s new wife 39 40 Sallie Root 29 he never felt an emotional bond with her 39 40 Owen married a third time to Lucy Hinsdale a formerly married woman 29 Owen had a total of 6 daughters and 10 sons 29 With no school beyond the elementary level in Hudson at that time Brown studied at the school of the abolitionist Elizur Wright father of the famous Elizur Wright in nearby Tallmadge 41 In a story he told to his family when he was 12 years old and away from home moving cattle Brown worked for a man with a colored boy who was beaten before him with an iron shovel He asked the man why he was treated thus and the answer was that he was a slave According to Brown s son in law Henry Thompson it was that moment when John Brown decided to dedicate his life to improving African Americans condition 42 43 As a child in Hudson John got to know local Native Americans and learned some of their language 22 He accompanied them on hunting excursions and invited them to eat in his home 44 45 Young adulthood At 16 Brown left his family for New England to acquire a liberal education and become a Gospel minister 46 He consulted and conferred with Jeremiah Hallock then clergyman at Canton Connecticut whose wife was a relative of Brown s and as advised proceeded to Plainfield Massachusetts where under the instruction of Moses Hallock he prepared for college He would have continued at Amherst College 41 47 but he suffered from inflammation of the eyes which ultimately became chronic and precluded further studies He returned to Ohio 23 Back in Hudson Brown taught himself surveying from a book 48 c He worked briefly at his father s tannery before opening a successful tannery outside of town with his adopted brother Levi Blakeslee 41 The two kept bachelor s quarters and Brown was a good cook 41 He had his bread baked by a widow Mrs Amos Lusk As the tanning business had grown to include journeymen and apprentices Brown persuaded her to take charge of his housekeeping She and her daughter Dianthe moved into his log cabin Brown married Dianthe in 1820 49 There is no known picture of her 50 but he described Dianthe as a remarkably plain but neat industrious and economical girl of excellent character earnest piety and practical common sense 51 Their first child John Jr was born 13 months later During 12 years of married life Dianthe gave birth to seven children among them Owen and died from complications of childbirth in 1832 52 Brown knew the Bible thoroughly and could catch even small errors in Bible recitation He never used tobacco nor drank tea coffee or alcohol After the Bible his favorite books were the series of Plutarch s Parallel Lives and he enjoyed reading about Napoleon and Oliver Cromwell 53 He felt that truly successful men were those with their own libraries 54 Pennsylvania See also John Brown Farm Tannery amp Museum nbsp John Brown s Tannery in 1885Brown left Hudson Ohio where he had a successful tannery to be better situated to operate a safe and productive Underground Railroad station 55 56 He moved to Richmond Township in Crawford County Pennsylvania in 1825 55 56 d and lived there until 1835 57 longer than he did anywhere else 58 He bought 200 acres 81 hectares of land cleared an eighth of it and quickly built a cabin a two story tannery with 18 vats and a barn in the latter was a secret well ventilated room to hide escaping slaves 55 56 He transported refugees across the state border into New York and to an important Underground Railroad connection in Jamestown 57 about 55 miles 89 km from Richmond Township 59 The escapees were hidden in the wagon he used to move the mail hides for his tannery and survey equipment 57 For ten years his farm was an important stop on the Underground Railroad 60 during which it is estimated to have helped 2 500 enslaved people on their journey to Canada according to the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development 60 Brown recruited other Underground Railroad stationmasters to strengthen the network 57 Brown made money surveying new roads He was involved in erecting a school which first met in his home he was the first teacher 61 and attracting a preacher 62 63 for a Congregational Society in Richmond Their first meetings were held at the farm and tannery compound 64 He also helped to establish a post office and in 1828 President John Quincy Adams named him the first postmaster of Randolph Township Pennsylvania he was reappointed by President Andrew Jackson serving until he left Pennsylvania in 1835 62 65 He carried the mail for some years from Meadville Pennsylvania through Randolph to Riceville some 20 miles 32 km 66 He paid a fine at Meadville for declining to serve in the militia During this period Brown operated an interstate cattle and leather business along with a kinsman Seth Thompson from eastern Ohio 66 In 1829 some white families asked Brown to help them drive off Native Americans who hunted annually in the area Calling it a mean act Brown declined even saying I would sooner take my gun and help drive you out of the country 67 68 nbsp Mary Ann Brown nee Day wife of John Brown married in 1833 with Annie left and Sarah right in 1851In 1831 Brown s son Frederick I died at the age of 4 Brown fell ill and his businesses began to suffer leaving him in severe debt In mid 1832 shortly after the death of a newborn son his wife Dianthe also died either in childbirth or as an immediate consequence of it 69 He was left with the children John Jr Jason Owen Ruth and Frederick II 70 e On July 14 1833 Brown married 17 year old Mary Ann Day 1817 1884 originally from Washington County New York 72 she was the younger sister of Brown s housekeeper at the time 73 They eventually had 13 children 74 75 seven of whom were sons who worked with their father in the fight to abolish slavery 76 Back to Ohio In 1836 Brown moved his family from Pennsylvania to Franklin Mills Ohio where he taught Sunday school 77 He borrowed heavily to buy land in the area including property along canals being built and constructed and operated a tannery along the Cuyahoga River in partnership with Zenas Kent 78 Zenas was the father of Marvin Kent Franklin Mills now is known as Kent Ohio in Marvin s honor 79 Brown continued to work on the Underground Railroad 57 Brown became a bank director and was estimated to be worth US 20 000 equivalent to about 567 355 in 2022 80 Like many businessmen in Ohio he invested too heavily in credit and state bonds and suffered great financial losses in the Panic of 1837 In one episode of property loss Brown was jailed when he attempted to retain ownership of a farm by occupying it against the claims of the new owner 81 nbsp Wood engraving of the pro slavery mob setting fire to Gilman amp Godfrey s warehouse where Elijah Parish Lovejoy hid his printing pressIn November 1837 Elijah Parish Lovejoy was murdered in Alton Illinois for printing an abolitionist newspaper Brown deeply upset about the incident became more militant in his behavior comparable with Reverend Henry Highland Garnet 57 Brown publicly vowed after the incident Here before God in the presence of these witnesses from this time I consecrate my life to the destruction of slavery 82 Brown objected to Black congregants being relegated to the balcony at his church 57 in Franklin Mills According to daughter Ruth Brown s husband Henry Thompson whose brother was killed at Harpers Ferry H e and his three sons John Jason and Owen were expelled from the Congregational church at Kent then called Franklin Ohio for taking a colored man into their own pew and the deacons of the church tried to persuade him to concede his error My wife and various members of the family afterward joined the Wesley Methodists but John Brown never connected himself with any church again 42 For three or four years he seemed to flounder hopelessly moving from one activity to another without plan He tried many different business efforts attempting to get out of debt He bred horses briefly but gave it up when he learned that buyers were using them as race horses 83 He did some surveying farming and tanning 84 Brown declared bankruptcy in federal court on September 28 1842 43 In 1843 three of his children Charles Peter Austin died of dysentery 70 From the mid 1840s Brown had built a reputation as an expert in fine sheep and wool For about one year he ran Captain Oviatt s farm 83 and he then entered into a partnership with Colonel Simon Perkins of Akron Ohio whose flocks and farms were managed by Brown and his sons 85 f Brown eventually moved into a home with his family across the street from the Perkins Stone Mansion 86 Springfield Massachusetts nbsp A daguerreotype of Brown taken by African American photographer Augustus Washington in Springfield Massachusetts c 1846 1847 Brown is holding the hand colored flag of Subterranean Pass Way his militant counterpart to the Underground Railroad 87 In 1846 Brown moved to Springfield Massachusetts as an agent for Ohio wool growers in their relations with New England manufacturers of woolen goods but also as a means of developing his scheme of emancipation 88 The white leadership there including the publisher of The Republican one of the nation s most influential newspapers were deeply involved and emotionally invested in the anti slavery movement 89 Brown made connections in Springfield that later yielded financial support he received from New England s great merchants allowed him to hear and meet nationally famous abolitionists like Douglass and Sojourner Truth and included the foundation of the League of Gileadites 88 89 Brown s personal attitudes evolved in Springfield as he observed the success of the city s Underground Railroad and made his first venture into militant anti slavery community organizing In speeches he pointed to the martyrs Elijah Lovejoy and Charles Turner Torrey as white people ready to help blacks challenge slave catchers 90 In Springfield Brown found a city that shared his own anti slavery passions and each seemed to educate the other Certainly with both successes and failures Brown s Springfield years were a transformative period of his life that catalyzed many of his later actions 89 Two years before Brown s arrival in Springfield in 1844 the city s African American abolitionists had founded the Sanford Street Free Church now known as St John s Congregational Church which became one of the most prominent abolitionist platforms in the United States From 1846 until he left Springfield in 1850 Brown was a member of the Free Church where he witnessed abolitionist lectures by the likes of Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth 91 In 1847 after speaking at the Free Church Douglass spent a night speaking with Brown after which Douglass wrote From this night spent with John Brown in Springfield Mass in 1847 while I continued to write and speak against slavery I became all the same less hopeful for its peaceful abolition 89 During Brown s time in Springfield he became deeply involved in transforming the city into a major center of abolitionism and one of the safest and most significant stops on the Underground Railroad 92 Brown contributed to the 1848 republication by his friend Henry Highland Garnet of David Walker s An Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World 1829 93 which he helped publicize 94 Before Brown left Springfield in 1850 the United States passed the Fugitive Slave Act a law mandating that authorities in free states aid in the return of escaped slaves and imposing penalties on those who aid in their escape In response Brown founded a militant group to prevent the recapture of fugitives the League of Gileadites 93 g operated by free Blacks like the strong minded brave and dedicated Eli Baptist William Montague and Thomas Thomas 89 h who risked being caught by slave catchers and sold into slavery 57 Upon leaving Springfield in 1850 he instructed the League to act quickly quietly and efficiently to protect slaves that escaped to Springfield words that would foreshadow Brown s later actions preceding Harpers Ferry 95 From Brown s founding of the League of Gileadites onward not one person was ever taken back into slavery from Springfield 89 His daughter Amelia died in 1846 followed by Emma in 1849 85 New York Main article John Brown Farm State Historic Site nbsp John Brown s farmhouse North Elba New York now a historic site and National Historic LandmarkIn 1848 bankrupt and having lost the family s house Brown heard of Gerrit Smith s Adirondack land grants to poor black men in so remote a location that Brown later called it Timbuctoo and decided to move his family there to establish a farm where he could provide guidance and assistance to the blacks who were attempting to establish farms in the area 96 He bought from Smith land in the town of North Elba New York near Lake Placid for 1 an acre 2 ha 97 It has a magnificent view 14 and has been called the highest arable spot of land in the State 98 After living with his family about two years in a small rented house and returning for several years to Ohio he had the current house now a monument preserved by New York State built for his family viewing it as a place of refuge for them while he was away According to youngest son Salmon frugality was observed from a moral standpoint but one and all we were a well fed well clad lot 99 After he was executed on December 2 1859 his widow took his body there for burial the trip took five days and he was buried on December 8 Watson s body was located and buried there in 1882 In 1899 the remains of 12 of Brown s other collaborators including his son Oliver were located and brought to North Elba They could not be identified well enough for separate burials so they are buried together in a single casket donated by the town of North Elba there is a collective plaque there now Since 1895 the John Brown Farm State Historic Site has been owned by New York State and is now a National Historic Landmark 96 Actions in KansasKansas Territory was in the midst of a state level civil war from 1854 to 1860 referred to as the Bleeding Kansas period between pro and anti slavery forces 100 From 1854 to 1856 there had been eight killings in Kansas Territory attributable to slavery politics There had been no organized action by abolitionists against pro slavery forces by 1856 101 The issue was to be decided by the voters of Kansas but who these voters were was not clear there was widespread voting fraud in favor of the pro slavery forces as a Congressional investigation confirmed 100 Move to Kansas Five of Brown s sons John Jr Jason Owen Frederick and Salmon moved to Kansas Territory in the spring of 1855 Brown his son Oliver and his son in law Henry Thompson followed later that year 102 with a wagon loaded with weapons and ammunition 103 i Brown stayed with Florella Brown Adair and the Reverend Samuel Adair his half sister and her husband who lived near Osawatomie During that time he rallied support to fight proslavery forces 102 and became the leader of the antislavery forces in Kansas 103 105 Pottawatomie Main articles Pottawatomie massacre and Bleeding Kansas nbsp John Brown quarter plate daguerreotype attributed to Southworth amp Hawes Winter 1856 Massachusetts Historical SocietyBrown and the free state settlers intended to bring Kansas into the union as a slavery free state 106 After the winter snows thawed in 1856 the pro slavery activists began a campaign to seize Kansas on their own terms Brown was particularly affected by the sacking of Lawrence the center of anti slavery activity in Kansas on May 21 1856 A sheriff led posse from Lecompton the center of pro slavery activity in Kansas destroyed two abolitionist newspapers and the Free State Hotel Only one man a border ruffian was killed 107 Preston Brooks s May 22 caning of anti slavery Senator Charles Sumner in the United States Senate news of which arrived by newswire telegraph also fueled Brown s anger A pro slavery writer Benjamin Franklin Stringfellow of the Squatter Sovereign wrote that pro slavery forces are determined to repel this Northern invasion and make Kansas a slave state though our rivers should be covered with the blood of their victims and the carcasses of the abolitionists should be so numerous in the territory as to breed disease and sickness we will not be deterred from our purpose 107 Brown was outraged by both the violence of the pro slavery forces and what he saw as a weak and cowardly response by the antislavery partisans and the Free State settlers whom he described as cowards or worse 108 The Pottawatomie massacre occurred during the night of May 24 and the morning of May 25 1856 Under Brown s supervision his sons and other abolitionist settlers took from their residences and killed five professional slave hunters and militant pro slavery settlers 109 The massacre was the match in the powderkeg that precipitated the bloodiest period in Bleeding Kansas history a three month period of retaliatory raids and battles in which 29 people died 101 Henry Clay Pate who was part of the sacking of Lawrence was either during or shortly before commissioned as a Deputy United States Marshal 110 On hearing news of John Brown s actions at the Pottawatomie Massacre Pate set out with a band of thirty men to hunt Brown down 111 During the hunt for Brown two of his sons Jason and John Junior were captured either by Pate or another marshal charged with murder and thrown in irons 110 111 Brown and free state militia gathered to confront Pate Two of Pate s men were captured which led to the conflict on June 2 112 Palmyra and Osawatomie In the Battle of Black Jack of June 2 1856 John Brown nine of his followers and 20 local men successfully defended a Free State settlement at Palmyra Kansas against an attack by Henry Clay Pate Pate and 22 of his men were taken prisoner 113 In August a company of over 300 Missourians under the command of General John W Reid crossed into Kansas and headed towards Osawatomie intending to destroy the Free State settlements there and then march on Topeka and Lawrence 114 On the morning of August 30 1856 they shot and killed Brown s son Frederick and his neighbor David Garrison on the outskirts of Osawatomie Brown outnumbered more than seven to one arranged his 38 men behind natural defenses along the road Firing from cover they managed to kill at least 20 of Reid s men and wounded 40 more 115 Reid regrouped ordering his men to dismount and charge into the woods Brown s small group scattered and fled across the Marais des Cygnes River One of Brown s men was killed during the retreat and four were captured While Brown and his surviving men hid in the woods nearby the Missourians plundered and burned Osawatomie Though defeated Brown s bravery and military shrewdness in the face of overwhelming odds brought him national attention and made him a hero to many Northern abolitionists 116 On September 7 Brown entered Lawrence to meet with Free State leaders and help fortify against a feared assault At least 2 700 pro slavery Missourians were once again invading Kansas On September 14 they skirmished near Lawrence Brown prepared for battle but serious violence was averted when the new governor of Kansas John W Geary ordered the warring parties to disarm and disband and offered clemency to former fighters on both sides 117 Brown had become infamous and federal warrants were issued for his arrest due to his actions in Kansas He became careful of how he travelled and whom he stayed with across the country 118 Raid at Harpers FerryMain article John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry See also List of sources for John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry Brown s plans nbsp Three quarter length portrait of John Brown salt print reproduction of daguerreotype attributed to Martin M Lawrence May 1859Brown s plans for a major attack on American slavery began long before the raid According to his wife Mary interviewed while her husband was awaiting his execution Brown had been planning the attack for 20 years 119 Frederick Douglass noted that he made the plans before he fought in Kansas 120 For instance he spent the years between 1842 and 1849 settling his business affairs moving his family to the Negro community at Timbuctoo New York and organizing in his own mind an anti slavery raid that would strike a significant blow against the entire slave system running slaves off Southern plantations 121 According to his first biographer James Redpath for thirty years he secretly cherished the idea of being the leader of a servile insurrection the American Moses predestined by Omnipotence to lead the servile nations in our Southern States to freedom 122 An acquaintance said As Moses was raised up and chosen of God to deliver the Children of Israel out of Egyptian bondage he was fully convinced in his own mind that he was to be the instrument in the hands of God to effect the emancipation of the slaves 123 Brown said that A few men in the right and knowing that they are right can overturn a mighty king Fifty men twenty men in the Alleghenies would break slavery to pieces in two years 124 On December 2 1859 in Charles Town after failure of the raid and the date of his execution I John Brown am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with Blood I had as I now think vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed through the revolt supposed to start with Harpers Ferry it ending slavery might be done 125 emphasis by Brown Brown kept his plans a secret including the care he took not to share the plans with his men according to Jeremiah Anderson one of the participants in the raid 126 His son Owen the only one who survived of Brown s three participating sons said in 1873 that he did not think his father wrote down the entire plan 127 He did discuss his plans at length for over a day with Frederick Douglass trying unsuccessfully to persuade Douglass a black leader to accompany him to Harpers Ferry which Douglass thought a suicidal mission that could not succeed 128 Preparations Financial and political backing To attain financial backing and political support for the raid on Harpers Ferry Brown spent most of 1857 meeting with abolitionists in Massachusetts New York and Connecticut 129 Initially Brown returned to Springfield where he received contributions and also a letter of recommendation from a prominent and wealthy merchant George Walker Walker was the brother in law of Franklin Benjamin Sanborn the secretary for the Massachusetts State Kansas Committee who introduced Brown to several influential abolitionists in the Boston area in January 1857 88 130 Amos Adams Lawrence a prominent Boston merchant secretly gave Brown a large amount of cash 131 William Lloyd Garrison Thomas Wentworth Higginson Theodore Parker and George Luther Stearns and Samuel Gridley Howe also supported Brown 131 although Garrison a pacificist disagreed about the need to use violence to end slavery 132 Most of the money for the raid came from the Secret Six 129 133 Franklin B Sanborn Samuel G Howe M D businessman George L Stearns real estate tycoon Gerrit Smith transcendentalist and reforming minister of the Unitarian church Theodore Parker and Unitarian minister Thomas Wentworth Higginson 129 Recent research has also highlighted the substantial contribution of Mary Ellen Pleasant an African American entrepreneur and abolitionist who donated 30 000 equivalent to 942 214 in 2022 toward the cause 134 In Boston he met Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson 132 Even with the Secret Six and other contributors Brown had not collected all money needed to fund the raid He wrote an appeal Old Browns Farewell to abolitionists in the east with some success 132 In December 1857 an anti slavery Mock Legislature organized by Brown met in Springdale Iowa 135 On several of Brown s trips across Iowa he preached at Hitchcock House an Underground Railroad stop in Lewis Iowa 136 Virginia scheme nbsp William Maxon s house near Springdale Iowa where John Brown s associates lived and trained 1857 1859 Brown lived at the home of John Hunt Painter less than a mile away With a free state victory in the October elections Kansas was quiet Brown made his men return to Iowa where he told them tidbits of his Virginia scheme 137 In January 1858 Brown left his men in Springdale Iowa and set off to visit Frederick Douglass in Rochester New York There he discussed his plans with Douglass and reconsidered Forbes criticisms 138 Brown wrote a Provisional Constitution that would create a government for a new state in the region of his invasion He then traveled to Peterboro New York and Boston to discuss matters with the Secret Six In letters to them he indicated that along with recruits he would go into the South equipped with weapons to do Kansas work 139 While in Boston making secret preparations for his operation on Harper s Ferry he was raising money for weapons that were manufactured in Connecticut Abolitionist Chaplain Photius Fisk gave him a sizable donation and obtained his autograph which he later gave to the Kansas Historical Society 140 Brown started to wear a beard to change his usual appearance 141 Weapons The Massachusetts Committee pledged to provide 200 Sharps Rifles and ammunition which were being stored at Tabor Iowa The rifles were originally intended for use by free staters in Kansas After negotiation between the officers of the Massachusetts Kansas Committee and the National Committee the rifles were transferred to the Massachusetts Committee for use in the Harpers Ferry raid 142 Horatio N Rust a friend of Brown s helped acquire for 1 000 pikes for the intended slave rebellion 143 Weapons were purchased and sent to Kennedy Farmhouse in Sharpsburg Maryland where they were stored 144 Brown s plan was to make use of weapons ammunition and other military equipment stored at the armory arsenal and the rifle factory in Harpers Ferry 145 There were an estimated 100 000 muskets and rifles at the armory and arsenal complex at the time 146 The more sophisticated weapons like Sharps rifles and pistols were to be used by Black and White officers The remaining fighters would use spear like pikes shotguns and muskets 147 Constitutional convention in Ontario Brown and 12 of his followers including his son Owen traveled to Chatham Ontario where he convened on May 10 a Constitutional Convention 148 The convention with several dozen delegates including his friend James Madison Bell was put together with the help of Dr Martin Delany 149 One third of Chatham s 6 000 residents were fugitive slaves and it was here that Brown was introduced to Harriet Tubman who helped him recruit 150 The convention s 34 blacks and 12 whites adopted Brown s Provisional Constitution Brown had long used the terminology of the Subterranean Pass Way from the late 1840s so it is possible that Delany conflated Brown s statements over the years Regardless Brown was elected commander in chief and named John Henrie Kagi his Secretary of War Richard Realf was named Secretary of State Elder Monroe a black minister was to act as president until another was chosen A M Chapman was the acting vice president Delany the corresponding secretary In 1859 A Declaration of Liberty by the Representatives of the Slave Population of the United States of America was written 151 152 Crisis While in New York City Brown was introduced to Hugh Forbes an English mercenary who had experience as a military tactician fighting with Giuseppe Garibaldi Concerned about Brown s strategy Forbes undermined and delayed the plans for the raid 153 Although nearly all of the delegates signed the constitution few volunteered to join Brown s forces although it will never be clear how many Canadian expatriates actually intended to join Brown because of a subsequent security leak that threw off plans for the raid creating a hiatus in which Brown lost contact with many of the Canadian leaders This crisis occurred when Hugh Forbes Brown s mercenary tried to expose the plans to Massachusetts Senator Henry Wilson and others The Secret Six feared their names would be made public Howe and Higginson wanted no delays in Brown s progress while Parker Stearns Smith and Sanborn insisted on postponement Stearns and Smith were the major sources of funds and their words carried more weight To throw Forbes off the trail and invalidate his assertions Brown returned to Kansas in June and remained in that vicinity for six months There he joined forces with James Montgomery who was leading raids into Missouri Continue to organize funds and forces nbsp Portrait of John Brown by Ole Peter Hansen Balling 1872 National Portrait GalleryOn December 20 Brown led his own raid in which he liberated 11 slaves took captive two white men and looted horses and wagons The Governor of Missouri announced a reward of 3 000 equivalent to 97 711 in 2022 for his capture On January 20 1859 he embarked on a lengthy journey to take the liberated slaves to Detroit and then on a ferry to Canada While passing through Chicago Brown met with abolitionists Allan Pinkerton John Jones and Henry O Wagoner who arranged and raised the fare for the passage to Detroit 154 and purchased supplies for Brown Jones s wife and fellow abolitionist Mary Jane Richardson Jones provided new clothes for Brown and his men including the garb Brown was hanged in six months later 155 156 On March 12 1859 Brown met with Frederick Douglass and Detroit abolitionists George DeBaptiste William Lambert and others at William Webb s house in Detroit to discuss emancipation 157 DeBaptiste proposed that conspirators blow up some of the South s largest churches The suggestion was opposed by Brown who felt humanity precluded such unnecessary bloodshed 158 Over the course of the next few months he traveled again through Ohio New York Connecticut and Massachusetts to drum up more support for the cause On May 9 he delivered a lecture in Concord Massachusetts that Amos Bronson Alcott Emerson and Thoreau attended Brown reconnoitered with the Secret Six 159 nbsp Leslie s illustration of U S Marines attacking John Brown s Fort As he began recruiting supporters for an attack on slaveholders Brown was joined by Harriet Tubman General Tubman as he called her 160 Her knowledge of support networks and resources in the border states of Pennsylvania Maryland and Delaware was invaluable to Brown and his planners 161 She also raised funds for Brown 162 Some abolitionists including Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison opposed his tactics but Brown dreamed of fighting to create a new state for freed slaves and made preparations for military action After he began the first battle he believed slaves would rise up and carry out a rebellion across the South 161 Brown s forces Main article John Brown s raiders The men that fought with Brown in Kansas gathered at Springdale Iowa a Quaker settlelment about January 1858 to prepare to execute Brown s Virginia scheme 163 In June Brown paid his last visit to his family in North Elba before departing for Harpers Ferry He stayed one night en route in Hagerstown Maryland at the Washington House on West Washington Street On June 30 1859 the hotel had at least 25 guests including I Smith and Sons Oliver Smith and Owen Smith and Jeremiah Anderson all from New York From papers found in the Kennedy Farmhouse after the raid it is known that Brown wrote to Kagi that he would sign into a hotel as I Smith and Sons 159 The men who prepared for the raid at Kennedy Farmhouse and participated in the raid with Brown included two groups of men A group that fought with him in Kansas and gathered at Springdale Iowa to prepare and drill for the raid 164 Jeremiah Goldsmith Anderson 26 born in Indiana served with Brown in Kansas killed in the raid 165 Oliver Brown 20 John Brown s son served in Kansas and he was mortally wounded during the raid 166 Owen Brown about 35 John Brown s son fought in Kansas He escaped the raid 167 John E Cook 29 reformer and former soldier attended Oberlin College he initially escaped capture but was found and hanged 167 Albert Hazlett 23 fought in Kansas escaped following the raid but was captured and hanged 168 John Henry Kagi about 24 a teacher became Brown s second in command before the raid he printed copies of Brown s constitution in a printing shop he established in Hamilton Ontario mortally wounded during the raid 169 William H Leeman 20 fought with the free staters in Kansas for three years beginning at the age of 17 He died during the raid 170 Aaron Dwight Stevens about 28 was a former soldier and fighter in Kansas who gave the men military training and drills He was wounded during the raid after which he was executed 171 Charles Plummer Tidd 25 fought in Kansas He escaped the raid and later served during the Civil War 171 Men he met when rounding up recruits for the raid 164 Watson Brown son of John Brown mortally wounded during the raid 172 John Anthony Copeland Jr was a free black man who joined John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry He was captured during the raid and was executed 173 Barclay Coppoc 19 escaped capture following the raid He fought in the Civil War 174 Edwin Coppoc 24 captured and hanged 175 Shields Green about 23 escaped slavery captured and hanged 168 Lewis Sheridan Leary a harness maker freed by his white father mortally wounded during the raid 176 Francis Jackson Meriam 22 grandson of Francis Jackson who was a leader of Antislavery Societies Meriam was an aristocrat He escaped during the raid Captain Meriam led an African American infantry group during the Civil War 168 Dangerfield Newby 44 born a slave escaped slavery returned to Virginia to fight in the raid where he was killed 177 Stewart Taylor 23 a wagonmaker from Canada mortally wounded during the raid 178 Dauphin Thompson 21 married to Ruth Brown John Brown s daughter mortally wounded during the raid 178 William Thompson 26 mortally wounded during the raid 178 nbsp Kennedy Farmhouse depicting Brown in his favorite spot in the yard made posthumously in 1902They were at Kennedy Farmhouse four to five miles away from Harpers Ferry Brown s daughter and daughter in law Anne and Martha Oliver s wife prepared food and kept the house for the men from August and throughout the month of September 144 The raid Main article John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry Timeline of the raid Brown led his forces for Harper Ferry on the night of October 16 1859 179 The objective was to take the armory the arsenal the town and then the rifle factory Then they wanted to free all the slaves in Harpers Ferry 180 After that they would move south with those newly freed people wanted to join the fight to free other enslaved people 181 Brown told his men to take prisoners who disobeyed them and to fight only in self defense 182 Initially they met no resistance entering the town John Brown s raiders cut the telegraph wires and easily captured the armory which was being defended by a single watchman They next rounded up hostages from nearby farms including Colonel Lewis Washington great grandnephew of George Washington They also spread the news to the local slaves that their liberation was at hand Two of the hostages slaves also died in the raid 183 When an eastbound Baltimore and Ohio Railroad train approached the town Brown held it and then inexplicably allowed it to continue on its way At the next station where the telegraph still worked the conductor sent a telegram to B amp O headquarters in Baltimore The railroad sent telegrams to President Buchanan and Virginia Governor Henry A Wise 184 nbsp Illustration of the interior of the Fort immediately before the door is broken down Note hostages on the left By the morning of October 18 the engine house later known as John Brown s Fort was surrounded by a company of U S Marines under the command of First Lieutenant Israel Greene USMC with Colonel Robert E Lee of the United States Army in overall command 185 Army First Lieutenant J E B Stuart approached the engine house to apprehend Brown and told the raiders their lives would be spared if they surrendered Brown refused saying No I prefer to die here Stuart then gave a signal and the Marines used sledgehammers and a makeshift battering ram to break down the engine room door Lieutenant Israel Greene cornered Brown and struck him several times wounding his head In three minutes Brown and the survivors were captives 186 Altogether Brown s men killed four townspeople and one Marine Ten people were wounded one of whom was a Marine 187 Four of Brown s men were not captured the rest died during the raid or were captured and executed 164 Among the raiders killed were John Henry Kagi Lewis Sheridan Leary and Dangerfield Newby those hanged besides Brown included John Copeland Edwin Coppock Aaron Stevens and Shields Green 188 189 Most of the enslaved people were returned to their slaveholders and some were able to escape capture A man named Phil was captured with Brown and a man named Jim drowned in the Shenandoah 190 Brown and the others captured were held in the office of the armory On October 18 1859 Virginia Governor Henry A Wise Virginia Senator James M Mason and Representative Clement Vallandigham of Ohio arrived in Harpers Ferry Brown conceded that he did not receive the support he expected from White and Black people The questioning lasted several hours 191 The trialMain article Virginia v John Brown nbsp Brown has just been captured and is interrogated by Virginia Gov Henry A Wise and others October 18 1859 nbsp nbsp The old Court House at Charles Town Jefferson County Virginia where John Brown was tried it stands diagonally across the street from the jail c 1906 nbsp Two houses in Charles Town The one on the right was the Jefferson County Jail where John Brown was imprisoned during and after his trial It has been torn down and is now the site of the Charles Town post office Brown was charged with treason and was tried in a Virginia state court at Governor Wise s request Accordingly the charge was treason against Virginia 192 President Buchanan did not object 193 The answer provided in 1859 was more political than legal The president of the United States and the governor of Virginia decided that Brown would be tried in Virginia for treason against the Commonwealth of Virginia and that is where he was tried This decision thrust Virginia rather than the United States into the role of the offended sovereign and contributed incalculably to the widening abyss between North and South John Brown was condemned not as an enemy of the American people but as an enemy of Virginia and by logical extension of Southern slaveholders Brian McGinty author of John Brown s trial 194 Brown was tried with his men who had lived through the raid and had not escaped Copeland Coppoc Green and Stevens on charges of murder conspiracy to foment a slave insurrection and treason as of October 26 195 On November 2 after a week long trial in Charles Town the county seat of Jefferson County 196 197 and 45 minutes of deliberation the jury found Brown guilty on all three counts 197 He was sentenced to be hanged in public on December 2 197 He was the first person executed for treason in the history of the United States 11 12 The trial attracted reporters who were able to send their articles via the new telegraph They were reprinted in numerous papers It was the first trial in the U S to be nationally reported 198 November 2 to December 2 1859 Before his conviction reporters were not allowed access to Brown as the judge and Andrew Hunter feared that his statements if quickly published would exacerbate tensions especially among the enslaved This was much to Brown s frustration as he stated that he wanted to make a full statement of his motives and intentions through the press 199 Once he had been convicted the restriction was lifted and glad for the publicity he talked with reporters and anyone else who wanted to see him except pro slavery clergy 71 Brown received more letters than he ever had in his life He wrote replies constantly hundreds of eloquent letters often published in newspapers 200 Rescue and Victor Hugo s pardon plans There were well documented and specific plans to rescue Brown as Virginia Governor Henry A Wise wrote to President Buchanan Throughout the weeks Brown and six of his collaborators were in the Jefferson County Jail in Charles Town the town was filled with various types of troops and militia hundreds and sometimes thousands of them Brown s trips from the jail to the courthouse and back and especially the short trip from the jail to the gallows were heavily guarded Wise halted all non military transportation on the Winchester and Potomac Railroad from Maryland south through Harpers Ferry to Charles Town and Winchester from the day before through the day after the execution Jefferson County was under martial law 201 and the military orders in Charles Town for the execution day had 14 points 202 However Brown said several times that he did not want to be rescued He refused the assistance of Silas Soule a friend from Kansas who infiltrated the Jefferson County Jail one day by getting himself arrested for drunken brawling and offered to break him out during the night and flee northward to New York State and possibly Canada Brown told Silas that aged 59 he was too old to live a life on the run from the federal authorities as a fugitive and wanted to accept his execution as a martyr for the abolitionist cause As Brown wrote his wife and children from jail he believed that his blood will do vastly more towards advancing the cause I have earnestly endeavoured to promote than all I have done in my life before 203 I am worth inconceivably more to hang than for any other purpose 204 Victor Hugo from exile on Guernsey tried to obtain a pardon for John Brown he sent an open letter that was published by the press on both sides of the Atlantic This text written at Hauteville House on December 2 1859 warned of a possible civil war Politically speaking the murder of John Brown would be an uncorrectable sin It would create in the Union a latent fissure that would in the long run dislocate it Brown s agony might perhaps consolidate slavery in Virginia but it would certainly shake the whole American democracy You save your shame but you kill your glory Morally speaking it seems a part of the human light would put itself out that the very notion of justice and injustice would hide itself in darkness on that day where one would see the assassination of Emancipation by Liberty itself The letter was initially published in the London News dubious discuss and was widely reprinted After Brown s execution Hugo wrote a number of additional letters about Brown and the abolitionist cause 205 Abolitionists in the United States saw Hugo s writings as evidence of international support for the anti slavery cause The most widely publicized commentary on Brown to reach America from Europe was an 1861 pamphlet John Brown par Victor Hugo that included a brief biography and reprinted two letters by Hugo including that of December 9 1859 The pamphlet s frontispiece was an engraving of a hanged man by Hugo that became widely associated with the execution 206 Last words death and aftermathOn December 1 Mary Ann Brown who had stayed away from the prison due to Brown s concern for her safety visited her husband for several hours with permission from Governor Wise 207 On the day of his execution December 2 208 Brown read his Bible and wrote a final letter to his wife which included the will he had written the previous day 209 207 210 as large meetings were held in many cities in the Northeast In many of the cases Negroes were the chief actors in creating excitement 208 nbsp John Brown s last words passed to a jailer on his way to the gallows From an albumen print location of the original is unknown Brown was well read and knew that the last words of prominent people are valued That morning Brown wrote and gave to his jailor Avis the words he wanted to be remembered by I John Brown am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood I had as I now think vainly flattered myself that without very much bloodshed it might be done 211 nbsp Brown sits on his coffin on his way to the gallows Soldiers line up on both sides to avoid a rescue At 11 00 a m Brown rode sitting on his coffin in a furniture wagon from the county jail through a crowd of 2 000 soldiers to a small field a few blocks away where the gallows were 209 The military prepared for an attack lined the square where Brown was to be hung with the greatest array of disciplined forces ever seen in Virginia according to Major Preston 207 Among the soldiers in the crowd were future Confederate general Stonewall Jackson and John Wilkes Booth the latter borrowing a militia uniform to gain admission to the execution 209 Brown who did not want to have a minister with him displayed the most complete fearlessness of amp insensibility to danger amp death as he walked to the gallows 207 Brown was hanged at 11 15 a m and was pronounced dead 35 minutes later by the coroner 212 The poet Walt Whitman in Year of Meteors described viewing the execution 213 See also John Brown s last speech Funeral and burial Main article John Brown s body nbsp Brown s grave 1896 nbsp Brown s tombstone North Elba New YorkBrown s desire as told to the jailor in Charles Town was that his body be burned the ashes urned and his dead sons disinterred and treated likewise 214 215 He wanted his epitaph to be I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith 2 Timothy 4 7 216 dd dd However according to the sheriff of Jefferson County Virginia law did not allow the burning of bodies and Mrs Brown did not want it Brown s body was placed in a wooden coffin with the noose still around his neck and the coffin was then put on a train to take it away from Virginia to his family homestead in North Elba New York for burial 217 His body needed to be prepared for burial this was supposed to take place in Philadelphia There were many Southern pro slavery medical students and faculty in Philadelphia and as a direct result they left the city en masse on December 21 1859 for Southern medical schools never to return When Mary and her husband s body arrived on December 3 Philadelphia Mayor Alexander Henry met the train with many policemen and said public order could not be maintained if the casket remained in Philadelphia In fact he made a fake casket covered with flowers and flags which was carefully lifted from the coach the crowd followed the sham casket The genuine casket was immediately sent onwards 218 219 It was transported through places special to Brown during his life His corpse was transported via Troy New York Rutland Vermont and across Lake Champlain by boat His corpse arrived at the Brown farm at North Elba New York 220 Brown s body was washed dressed and placed with difficulty in a 5 foot 10 inch 1 78 m walnut coffin in New York 221 He was buried on December 8 1859 222 Abolitionist Rev Joshua Young gave a prayer and James Miller McKim and Wendell Phillips spoke 220 222 In the North large memorial meetings took place church bells rang minute guns were fired and famous writers such as Emerson and Thoreau joined many Northerners in praising Brown 223 On July 4 1860 family and admirers of Brown gathered at his farm for a memorial This was the last time that the surviving members of Brown s family gathered together The farm was sold except for the burial plot By 1882 John Jr Owen Jason and Ruth widow of Henry Thompson lived in Ohio his wife and their two unmarried daughters in California 224 By 1886 Owen Jason and Ruth were living near Pasadena California where they were honored in a parade 225 Senate investigation On December 14 1859 the U S Senate appointed a bipartisan committee to investigate the Harpers Ferry raid and to determine whether any citizens contributed arms ammunition or money to John Brown s men The Democrats attempted to implicate the Republicans in the raid the Republicans tried to disassociate themselves from Brown and his acts 226 227 The Senate committee heard testimony from 32 witnesses including Liam Dodson one of the surviving abolitionists The report authored by chairman James Murray Mason a pro slavery Democrat from Virginia was published in June 1860 It found no direct evidence of a conspiracy but implied that the raid was a result of Republican doctrines 227 The two committee Republicans published a minority report but were apparently more concerned about denying Northern culpability than clarifying the nature of Brown s efforts Republicans such as Abraham Lincoln rejected any connection with the raid calling Brown insane 228 The investigation was performed in a tense environment in both houses of Congress One senator wrote to his wife that The members on both sides are mostly armed with deadly weapons and it is said that the friends of each are armed in the galleries After a heated exchange of insults a Mississippian attacked Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania with a Bowie knife in the House of Representatives Stevens friends prevented a fight 229 The Senate committee was very cautious in its questions of two of Brown s backers Samuel Howe and George Stearns out of fear of stoking violence Howe and Stearns later said that the questions were asked in a manner that permitted them to give honest answers without implicating themselves 229 Civil War historian James M McPherson stated that A historian reading their testimony however will be convinced that they told several falsehoods 230 Aftermath of the raid nbsp Old John Brown s Career 1860 posterJohn Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry was among the last in a series of events that led to the American Civil War 231 Southern slaveowners hearing initial reports that hundreds of abolitionists were involved were relieved the effort was so small but feared other abolitionists would emulate Brown and attempt to lead slave rebellions 232 Future Confederate President Jefferson Davis feared thousands of John Browns 233 Therefore the South reorganized the decrepit militia system These militias well established by 1861 became a ready made Confederate army making the South better prepared for war 234 Southern Democrats charged that Brown s raid was an inevitable consequence of the political platform of what they invariably called the Black Republican Party In light of the upcoming elections in November 1860 the Republicans tried to distance themselves as much as possible from Brown condemning the raid and dismissing its leader as an insane fanatic As one historian explains Brown was successful in polarizing politics Brown s raid succeeded brilliantly It drove a wedge through the already tentative and fragile Opposition Republican coalition and helped to intensify the sectional polarization that soon tore the Democratic party and the Union apart 234 Many abolitionists in the North viewed Brown as a martyr sacrificed for the sins of the nation Immediately after the raid William Lloyd Garrison published a column in The Liberator judging Brown s raid well intended but sadly misguided and wild and futile 235 However he defended Brown s character from detractors in the Northern and Southern press and argued that those who supported the principles of the American Revolution could not consistently oppose Brown s raid On the day Brown was hanged Garrison reiterated the point in Boston whenever commenced I cannot but wish success to all slave insurrections 236 Frederick Douglass believed that Brown s zeal in the cause of my race was far greater than mine it was as the burning sun to my taper light mine was bounded by time his stretched away to the boundless shores of eternity I could live for the slave but he could die for him 237 ViewpointsContemporaries See also Virginia v John Brown Aftermath Between 1859 and Lincoln s assassination in 1865 Brown was the most famous American emblem to the North as Wendell Phillips put it 238 and traitor to the South According to Frederick Douglass He was with the troops during that war he was seen in every camp fire and our boys pressed onward to victory and freedom timing their feet to the stately stepping of Old John Brown as his soul went marching on 239 Douglass called him a brave and glorious old man History has no better illustration of pure disinterested benevolence 240 Other black leaders of the time Martin Delany Henry Highland Garnet Harriet Tubman also knew and respected Brown Tubman thought Brown was the greatest white man who ever lived 241 and she said later he did more for American blacks than Lincoln did 242 Black businesses across the North closed on the day of his execution 243 Church bells tolled across the North 12 In response to the death sentence Ralph Waldo Emerson remarked that John Brown will make the gallows glorious like the Cross 244 In 1863 Julia Ward Howe wrote the popular hymn the Battle Hymn of the Republic to the tune of John Brown s body which included a line As He died to make men holy let us die to make men free comparing Brown s sacrifice to that of Jesus Christ 12 According to W E B Du Bois in his 1909 biography John Brown Brown s raid stood as a great white light an unwavering unflickering brightness blinding by its all seeing brilliance making the whole world simply a light and a darkness a right and a wrong 245 According to his friend and financier the rich abolitionist Gerrit Smith If I were asked to point out the man in all this world I think most truly a Christian I would point to John Brown 246 247 Historians and other writers Writers continue to vigorously debate Brown s personality sanity motivations morality and relation to abolitionism 15 Once the Reconstruction era had ended with the country distancing itself from the anti slavery cause and martial law imposed in the South the historical view of Brown changed Historian James Loewen surveyed American history textbooks prior to 1995 and noted that until about 1890 historians considered Brown perfectly sane but from about 1890 until 1970 he was generally portrayed as insane 248 Oswald Garrison Villard the grandson of abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison wrote a favorable 1910 biography of Brown though it also added fuel to the anti Brown fire by criticizing him as a muddled pugnacious bumbling and homicidal madman 15 249 Villard himself was a pacifist and admired Brown in many respects but his interpretation of the facts provided a paradigm for later anti Brown writers Similarly a 1923 textbook stated The farther we getaway from the excitement of 1859 the more we are disposed to consider this extraordinary man the victim of mental delusions 250 In 1978 NYU historian Albert Fried concluded that historians who portrayed Brown as a dysfunctional figure are really informing me of their predilections their judgment of the historical event their identification with the moderates and opposition to the extremists 251 This view of Brown has come to prevail in academic writing and in journalism Biographer Louis DeCaro Jr wrote in 2007 there is no consensus of fairness with respect to Brown in either the academy or the media 252 Biographer Stephen B Oates has described Brown as maligned as a demented dreamer but in fact one of the most perceptive human beings of his generation 253 External videos nbsp Presentation by Reynolds on John Brown Abolitionist The Man Who Killed Slavery Sparked the Civil War and Seeded Civil Rights May 12 2005 C SPANSome writers describe Brown as a monomaniacal zealot others as a hero In 1931 the United Daughters of the Confederacy and Sons of Confederate Veterans erected a counter monument to Heyward Shepherd a free black man who was the first fatality of the Harpers Ferry raid claiming without evidence that he was a representative of Negroes of the neighborhood who would not take part 254 By the mid 20th century some scholars were fairly convinced that Brown was a fanatic and killer while some African Americans sustained a positive view of him 255 According to Stephen Oates unlike most Americans at his time he had no racism He treated blacks equally He was a success a tremendous success because he was a catalyst of the Civil War He didn t cause it but he set fire to the fuse that led to the blow up 256 Journalist Richard Owen Boyer considered Brown an American who gave his life that millions of other Americans might be free and others held similarly positive views 257 258 259 Some historians such as Paul Finkelman compare Brown to contemporary terrorists such as Osama bin Laden and Timothy McVeigh 15 260 261 Finkelman calling him simply part of a very violent world and further stating that Brown is a bad tactician a bad strategist he s a bad planner he s not a very good general but he s not crazy 15 Historian James Gilbert labels Brown a terrorist by 21st century criteria 262 Gilbert writes Brown s deeds conform to contemporary definitions of terrorism and his psychological predispositions are consistent with the terrorist model 263 In contrast biographer David S Reynolds gives Brown credit for starting the Civil War or killing slavery and cautions others against identifying Brown with terrorism 264 Reynolds saw Brown as inspiring the Civil Rights Movement a century later adding it is misleading to identify Brown with modern terrorists 264 265 Malcolm X said that white people could not join his black nationalist Organization of Afro American Unity but if John Brown were still alive we might accept him 266 In his posthumous The Impending Crisis 1848 1861 1976 David Potter argued that the emotional effect of Brown s raid exceeded the philosophical effect of the Lincoln Douglas debates and reaffirmed a deep division between North and South 266 Biographer Louis A DeCaro Jr who has debunked many historical allegations about Brown s early life and public career concludes that although he was hardly the only abolitionist to equate slavery with sin his struggle against slavery was far more personal and religious than it was for many abolitionists just as his respect and affection for black people was far more personal and religious than it was for most enemies of slavery 267 Historian and Brown documentary scholar Louis Ruchames wrote Brown s action was one of great idealism and placed him in the company of the great liberators of mankind 268 Several 21st century works about Brown are notable for the absence of hostility that characterized similar works a century earlier when Lincoln s anti slavery views were de emphasized 269 Journalist and documentary writer Ken Chowder considers Brown stubborn egoistical self righteous and sometimes deceitful yet at certain times a great man and argues that Brown has been adopted by both the left and right and his actions spun to fit the world view of the spinner at various times in American history 15 The shift to an appreciative perspective moves many white historians toward the view long held by black scholars such as W E B Du Bois Benjamin Quarles and Lerone Bennett Jr 270 InfluencesThe connection between John Brown s life and many of the slave uprisings in the Caribbean was clear from the outset Brown was born during the period of the Haitian Revolution which saw Haitian slaves revolting against the French The role the revolution played in helping to formulate Brown s abolitionist views directly is not clear however the revolution had an obvious effect on the general view towards slavery in the northern United States and in the Southern states it was a warning of horror as they viewed it possibly to come As W E B Du Bois notes the involvement of slaves in the American Revolutions and the upheaval in Hayti and the new enthusiasm for human rights led to a wave of emancipation which started in Vermont during the Revolution and swept through New England and Pennsylvania ending finally in New York and New Jersey 271 The 1839 slave insurrection aboard the Spanish ship La Amistad off the coast of Cuba provides a poignant example of John Brown s support and appeal towards Caribbean slave revolts On La Amistad Joseph Cinque and approximately 50 other slaves captured the ship slated to transport them from Havana to Puerto Principe Cuba in July 1839 and attempted to return to Africa However through trickery the ship ended up in the United States where Cinque and his men stood trial Ultimately the courts acquitted the men because at the time the international slave trade was illegal in the United States 272 According to Brown s daughter Turner and Cinque stood first in esteem among Brown s black heroes Furthermore she noted Brown s admiration of Cinques character and management in carrying his points with so little bloodshed 273 In 1850 Brown would refer affectionately to the revolt in saying Nothing so charms the American people as personal bravery Witness the case of Cinques of everlasting memory on board the Amistad 274 The specific knowledge John Brown gained from the tactics employed in the Haitian Revolution and other Caribbean revolts was of paramount importance when Brown turned his sights to the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry Virginia As Brown s cohort Richard Realf explained to a committee of the 36th Congress he had posted himself in relation to the wars of Toussaint L Ouverture 275 he had become thoroughly acquainted with the wars in Hayti and the islands round about 276 By studying the slave revolts of the Caribbean region Brown learned a great deal about how to properly conduct guerilla warfare A key element to the prolonged success of this warfare was the establishment of maroon communities which are essentially colonies of runaway slaves As a contemporary article notes Brown would use these establishments to retreat from and evade attacks he could not overcome He would maintain and prolong a guerilla war of which Haiti afforded an example 277 The idea of creating maroon communities was the impetus for the creation of John Brown s Provisional Constitution and Ordinances for the People of the United States which helped to detail how such communities would be governed However the idea of maroon colonies of slaves is not an idea exclusive to the Caribbean region In fact maroon communities riddled the southern United States between the mid 1600s and 1864 especially in the Great Dismal Swamp region of Virginia and North Carolina Similar to the Haitian Revolution the Seminole Wars fought in modern day Florida saw the involvement of maroon communities which although outnumbered by native allies were more effective fighters 277 Although the maroon colonies of North America undoubtedly had an effect on John Brown s plan their impact paled in comparison to that of the maroon communities in places like Haiti Jamaica and Surinam Accounts by Brown s friends and cohorts prove this idea Richard Realf a cohort of Brown in Kansas noted that Brown not only studied the slave revolts in the Caribbean but focused more specifically on the maroons of Jamaica and those involved in Haiti s liberation 278 Brown s friend Richard Hinton similarly noted that Brown knew by heart the occurrences in Jamaica and Haiti 279 Thomas Wentworth Higginson a cohort of Brown s and a member of the Secret Six stated that Brown s plan involved getting together bands and families of fugitive slaves and establish them permanently in those mountain fastnesses like the Maroons of Jamaica and Surinam 280 LegacySee also Virginia v John Brown Aftermath Of all the major figures associated with the American Civil War Brown is one of the most studied and pondered 281 282 As a nation we are unable to get over John Brown 283 89 Kate Field raised money to give to the State of New York for what was to be in her words John Brown s Grave and Farm now John Brown Farm State Historic Site 284 At the centenary of the raid in 1959 a sanitized play about him was produced at Harper s Ferry 285 nbsp A life sized white marble statue of John Brown is on the former campus of the Western University at the Quindaro Townsite in Kansas City Kansas nbsp The Western University campus hosted the John Brown statue In 2007 Brown was inducted into the National Abolition Hall of Fame in Peterboro New York John Brown Day May 1 In 1999 John Brown Day was celebrated on May 1 286 May 7 In 2016 John Brown Lives Friends of Freedom celebrated May 7 as John Brown Day 287 In 2018 it was May 5 Spirit of John Brown Freedom Awards were given to environmentalist Jen Kretser poet Martin Espada and to Soffiyah Elijah attorney and executive director of the Alliance of Families for Justice which advocates for prison reform 288 In 2022 the day chosen was May 14 289 May 9 The John Brown Farm Tannery amp Museum in Guys Mills Pennsylvania holds community celebrations on John Brown s birthday May 9 290 August 17 In 1906 the Niagara Movement predecessor of the NAACP celebrated John Brown Day on August 17 October 16 In 2017 the Vermont Legislature designated October 16 the date of the raid as John Brown Day 291 292 Meetings in honor of John Brown In 1946 the John Brown Memorial Association held its 24th annual pilgrimage to the grave in North Elba where there were memorial services 293 At the 150th anniversary of the raid In 2009 a two day symposium John Brown Comes Home was held on the influence of Brown s raid using facilities in adjacent Lake Placid Speakers included Bernadine Dohrn and a great great great granddaughter of Brown 294 295 Museums nbsp A statue of Brown is in front of the John Brown Museum in Osawatomie Kansas John Brown Museum Harpers Ferry National Historical Park Harpers Ferry West Virginia 296 John Brown Farm State Historic Site North Elba New York John Brown Farm Tannery and Museum Guys Mills Pennsylvania 297 John Brown House Chambersburg Pennsylvania John Brown Museum Osawatomie Kansas John Brown Raid Headquarters Kennedy Farm Samples Manor MarylandAll of these museums except the one in Harpers Ferry are places Brown lived or stayed Barnum s American Museum in New York destroyed by fire in 1868 contained according to a November 7 1859 advertisement a full length Wax Figure of OSAWATOMIE BROWN taken from life and a KNIFE found on the body of his son at Harper s Ferry 298 An agent of Barnum traveled to Harpers Ferry in November saw Brown and offered him 100 equivalent to 3 257 in 2022 for his clothes and pike and his certificate of their genuineness 299 By December 7 the exhibits included his autograph Commission to a Lieutenancy as well as TWO PIKES or spears taken at Harper s Ferry 300 On December 16 the Museum added with document vouching for its authenticity the link of the shackles that Cook and Coppock cut in two that consequently permitted them to escape 301 Also exhibited were the Augustus Washington 1847 daguerrotype of Brown see above and the now lost painting by Louis Ransom of the famous apocryphal incident of Brown kissing a black baby on his way to the gallows reproduced in an Currier amp Ives print see Paintings The latter was only exhibited for two months in 1863 Barnum withdrew it to save the building from destruction during the anti Negro riot that broke out shortly 208 Statues Nothing came of the proposal that Kansas send a statue of Brown as one of its two representatives honored in the U S Capitol The first statue of Brown and the only one not at one of his residences is that located on the new John Brown Memorial Plaza on the former campus of the closed black Western University site of a freedmen s school founded in 1865 the first black school west of the Mississippi River The statue is the one surviving structure of the entire Quindaro Townsite a ghost town today part of Kansas City Kansas 27th Street and Sewell Avenue a major Underground Railroad station a key port on the Missouri River for fugitive slaves and contrabands escaping from the slave state of Missouri The pillar and the life sized statue of Brown were erected by descendants of slaves in 1911 at a cost of 2 000 equivalent to 62 814 in 2022 302 Lettering reads Erected to the Memory of John Brown by a Grateful People There is a bronze plaque In March 2018 the statue was defaced with swastikas and Hail Satan 303 At the John Brown Farm State Historic Site near Lake Placid New York there is a 1935 statue of Brown escorting a black child to freedom The artist was Joseph Pollia The cost of the statue and pedestal was contributed in small sums by Negroes of the United States 304 A statue 1933 is at the John Brown Museum Brown s home in Osawatomie Kansas It was sponsored by the Women s Relief Corps Department of Kansas 305 The only other sculptures of Brown are two busts the first by black sculptor Edmonia Lewis 306 which she presented to Henry Highland Garnet and the other at Tufts University by Edward Brackett 307 Streets Only one major street in the world honors Brown the Avenue John Brown in Port au Prince Haiti near an avenue honoring abolitionist Senator Charles Sumner A rural John Brown Road is near Torrington Connecticut his birthplace Small roads near museums in North Elba New York and Guys Mills Pennsylvania are named for Brown There is a Harpers Ferry Street in Davie Florida and in Ellwood City and Beaver Falls Pennsylvania in Northwest Pennsylvania near the Ohio border near the route Owen Brown took seeking refuge after the raid in his brother John Jr s house in Ashtabula County Ohio there is a Harpers Ferry Road and intersecting with it a smaller John Brown Road In Osawatomie Kansas is John Brown Highway Storer College Storer College began as the first graded school for blacks in West Virginia Its location in Harpers Ferry was because of the importance of Brown and his raid The Arsenal engine house renamed John Brown s Fort was moved to the Storer campus in 1909 308 It was used as the college museum A plaque honoring Brown was attached to the Fort in 1918 while it was on the Storer campus nbsp A plaque is on John Brown s Fort which says That this nation might have new birth of freedom that slavery should be removed forever from American soil John Brown and his 21 men gave their lives to commemorate their heroism this tablet is placed on this building which has since been known as John Brown s fort by the alumni of storer college 1918 In 1931 after years of controversy a tablet was erected in Harpers Ferry by the Sons of Confederate Veterans and the United Daughters of the Confederacy honoring the key Lost Cause belief that their slaves were happy and neither wanted freedom nor supported John Brown See Heyward Shepherd monument The president of Storer participated in the dedication In response W E B DuBois co founder of the NAACP wrote text for a new plaque in 1932 The Storer College administration would not allow it to be put it up nor did the National Park Service after becoming owner of the Fort In 2006 it was placed at the site on the former Storer campus where the Fort had been located dd Other John Brown sites John Brown s Fort Harpers Ferry National Historical Park John Brown House Akron Ohio where he lived from 1844 to 1854 is 2020 not open to the public but is being renovated by the Summit County Historical Society of Akron Ohio There is a John Brown Memorial near the House 309 They are in the Perkins Park area of the Akron Zoo The memorial was not erected within the zoo the zoo incorporated the land where it is It is not well marked and is not normally open to the public nor is the house though this is expected to change 310 311 312 The monument was erected in 1910 8 000 people attended 309 and Jason Brown at the time John Brown s oldest living child spoke 313 The wagon that carried Brown from jail to his execution is preserved by the Jefferson County West Virginia Museum in Charles Town 314 A wagon used by Brown when transporting freed slaves from Missouri across Iowa is preserved at the Iowa Historical Society 315 An approximate replica of the firehouse was built in 2012 at the Discovery Park of America museum park in Union City Tennessee There is a marker explaining the link with John Brown s raid 316 317 318 Iowa has set up the John Brown Freedom Trail marking his journey across Iowa leaving Kansas en route to Chatham Ontario 319 Lewis Iowa Fighting Slavery Aiding Runaways John Brown Freedom Trail December 20 1858 March 12 1859 Because of the impossibility of colored boys entering work shops where useful trades are taught a John Brown Industrial College was planned at Bonner Springs Kansas a suburb of Kansas City and 80 acres 32 ha purchased 320 321 322 Media Two notable screen portrayals of Brown were given by actor Raymond Massey The 1940 film Santa Fe Trail starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland depicted Brown completely unsympathetically as a villainous madman and Massey plays him with a constant wild eyed stare The film gave the impression that he did not oppose slavery even to the point of having a black mammy character say after an especially fierce battle Mr Brown done promised us freedom but if this is freedom I don t want no part of it Massey portrayed Brown again in the little known low budget Seven Angry Men in which he was not only the main character but depicted in a much more restrained sympathetic way 323 Massey along with Tyrone Power and Judith Anderson starred in the acclaimed 1953 dramatic reading of Stephen Vincent Benet s epic Pulitzer Prize winning poem John Brown s Body 1928 324 Numerous American poets have written poems about him including John Greenleaf Whittier Louisa May Alcott and Walt Whitman 325 The Polish poet Cyprian Kamil Norwid wrote two poems praising Brown John Brown and the better known Do obywatela Johna Brown To Citizen John Brown 326 Marching Song 1932 is an unpublished play about the legend of John Brown by Orson Welles 327 Russell Banks s 1998 biographical novel about Brown Cloudsplitter was a Pulitzer Prize finalist It is narrated by Brown s surviving son Owen 328 James McBride s 2013 novel The Good Lord Bird tells Brown s story through the eyes of a young slave Henry Shackleford who accompanies Brown to Harpers Ferry The novel won the 2013 National Book Award for Fiction 329 A limited episode series based on the book was released starring Ethan Hawke as John Brown 330 Paintings nbsp In a Currier and Ives print from 1863 John Brown is depicted as Christ like en route to his execution with a black mother and her mulatto child Above his head is the flag of Virginia and its motto Sic semper tyrannis A well known image of Brown in the later 19th century is a Currier and Ives print based on a lost painting by Louis Ransom 331 332 It portrays Brown as a Christ like figure The Virgin and Child typically depicted with Christ are here a black mother and mulatto child Legend says that Brown kissed the mythical baby but virtually all scholars agree that this did not in fact happen 333 Above Brown s head like a halo is the flag of Virginia and its motto Sic semper tyrannis Thus always to tyrants According to Brown s supporters the government of Virginia was tyrannical and according to fugitive slaves it is as well the black man s as the white man s motto 334 nbsp Brown is in Tragic Prelude a mural in the Kansas State Capitol He carries in one hand a Bible and in the other a Beecher s Bible rifle Union and Confederate forces are fighting with casualties A tornado approaches in the background as does a prairie fire both common in Kansas In 1938 Kansas painter John Steuart Curry was commissioned to prepare murals for the Kansas State Capitol in Topeka Kansas He chose as his subject the Kansan John Brown seen by many as the most important man in Kansas history In the resulting mural Tragic Prelude Brown holds a Bible in one hand and a Beecher s Bible rifle in the other Behind him are Union and Confederate troops with dead soldiers a reference to the Bleeding Kansas period which Brown was at the center of and which was commonly seen to have been a dress rehearsal or a tragic prelude to the increasingly inevitable Civil War 335 nbsp Frederick Douglass argued against John Brown s plan to attack the arsenal at Harpers Ferry is a painting by Jacob Lawrence In 1941 Jacob Lawrence illustrated Brown s life in The Legend of John Brown a series of 22 gouache paintings By 1977 these were in such fragile condition that they could not be displayed and the Detroit Institute of Arts had to commission Lawrence to recreate the series as silkscreen prints The result was a limited edition portfolio of 22 hand screened prints published with a poem John Brown by Robert Hayden commissioned specifically for the project Though Brown had been a popular topic for many painters The Legend of John Brown was the first series to explore his legacy from an African American perspective 336 Paintings such as Thomas Hovenden s The Last Moments of John Brown immortalize an apocryphal story in which a black woman offers the condemned Brown her baby to kiss on his way to the gallows The tale was probably invented by journalist James Redpath 337 Historical markers According to the Historical Marker Database 338 Brown is mentioned on the following historical markers At his birthplace in Torrington Connecticut on John Brown Road Baldwin City Kansas Battle of black Jack Franklin County Kansas At the site of the Pottawatomie massacre Lawrence Kansas John Brown and the Siege of Lawrence September 14 15 1856 Near Netawaka Kansas Battle of the Spurs Osawatomie Kansas At the site of the Battle of Osawatomie in John Brown Memorial Park Soldiers Monument Commemorating the 5 persons killed including one of Brown s sons This inscription is also in commemoration of the heroism of Capt John Brown who commanded at the Battle of Osawatomie August 30 1856 who died and conquered American slavery on the scaffold at Charlestown Va Dec 2 1859 1935 plaque by The Woman s Relief Corps Department of Kansas Old Stone Church Marker Built by Rev Samuel Adair brother in law of John Brown 1861 Topeka Kansas Capital of Kansas In the late 1850s negroes bound north on the underground railway were hidden here by John Brown Near Trading Post Kansas Marais des Cygnes Massacre site of a fort built by Brown after the massacre Murder on the Marais des Cygnes Hagerstown Maryland at the site of the Washington House Hotel where Brown stayed on his way to Harpers Ferry Hyattsville Maryland Osborne Perry Anderson who fought with Brown Sharpsburg Maryland at the site of the Kennedy Farm Marlborough Massachusetts at the John Brown Bell once in Harpers Ferry since 1892 on display in Marlborough The second most famous American bell after the Liberty Bell Detroit Michigan at the house of William Webb site of the Frederick Douglass John Brown meeting Hudson Ohio At his boyhood home 339 First Congregational Church in Hudson At a November 1837 prayer meeting church member and anti slavery leader John Brown made his first public vow to destroy slavery Another marker mentions Brown at the former site of the church Chambersburg Pennsylvania Abolitionist John Brown Boards in Chambersburg In rural Crawford County Pennsylvania there is a John Brown Road and on it two historical markers at the site of Brown s house and tannery Indiana Pennsylvania marker for Albert Hazlett a member of Brown s party who was also hanged at Charles Town in 1860 King of Prussia Pennsylvania Valley Forge National Historic Park Knox s Quarters John Brown Farm Kent Ohio marker for Underground Railroad stops mentions John Brown s residence in Kent then called Franklin Mills during the 1830s Mont Alto Pennsylvania John Brown Raid where John Cooke one of Brown s followers was captured Two markers Near Amissville Virginia Dangerfield Newby marker Winchester Virginia A Malicious Design Burning the Winchester Medical College The body of John Brown s son Watson was brought there for dissection by medical students Charles Town West Virginia Jefferson County Courthouse Where John Brown Was Tried Two Treason Trials The other had nothing to do with Brown Hanging Site of John Brown Creation of a Martyr Prelude to War Site of the execution of John Brown Edge Hill Cemetery John Brown Raid Victims Beallair home of Colonel Lewis Washington held hostage by Brown Focus of Action Jefferson County in the Civil War Harpers Ferry West Virginia Pilgrimage Marks the site of an 1896 visit by the National League of Colored Women Holy Ground Marks 1906 visit by members of the Niagara Movement predecessor of the NAACP on what they called John Brown Day August 17 John Brown plaque erected in 1918 by the alumni of Storer College John Brown plaque erected in 1932 by the NAACP John Brown Fort A Nation s Armory Arsenal Square for the deposit of arms John Brown Monument on the site of the original location of John Brown s Fort John Brown s Last Stand at the same location Allstadt House John Brown s Hostages Prelude to War The John Brown Raiders all those who participated in the raid In Honor of Private Luke Quinn killed during the capture of John Brown The Murphy Farm location of John Brown s Fort between 1895 and 1910 Hayward Shepard Another Perspective Heyward Shepherd Chatham Ontario John Brown s Convention 1858 Archival materialCourt material and related documents The indictments summons sentences bills of exception and similar documents for Brown and his raiders are held by the Jefferson County Circuit Clerk and have been digitized by West Virginia Archives and History 340 Two separate collections of relevant letters were published The first is the messages mostly telegrams sent and received by Governor Wise 341 The Senate of Maryland published the many internal telegrams of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad 184 Much material is missing The order book which had the minutes of John Brown s trial 342 was evidently possessed by Brown s judge Richard Parker in 1888 343 As of 2022 update its location is unknown Among the missing material used at his trial as evidence of sedition were bundles of printed copies of his Provisional Constitution prepared for the state Brown intended to set up in the Appalachian Mountains Even less known is Brown s Declaration of Liberty imitating the Declaration of Independence 344 According to Prosecutor Andrew Hunter John Brown had with him when captured at Harpers Ferry a carpet bag in which were his constitution for a provisional government and other papers He had placed it in one corner of the engine house and there it was found when the marines charged and captured the survivors Mr Hunter took possession of the carpet bag and carried it to Charlestown He kept it and its contents He added to the papers the letters which were forwarded to the prisoners and not delivered to them Ordinary letters were allowed to pass to the prisoners after Mr Hunter had examined them But those letters which seemed to contain information bearing upon the organization in the North Mr Hunter confiscated and kept He had between seventy and eighty of these letters and he placed them in John Brown s carpet bag Other important documents bearing upon the secret history of the case went into the same receptacle and much of the matter nobody but Mr Hunter saw 345 There was correspondence from Frederick Douglass and Gerrit Smith among many others Hugh Forbes said that the carpet bag may have contained an abundant supply of my correspondence 346 347 After Brown s arrest Smith Douglass and future biographer and friend Franklin Sanborn began destroying correspondence and other documents because they feared criminal charges for aiding Brown 348 349 The carpet bag also contained maps of Kentucky North Carolina and Virginia that showed the locations of State arsenals with proposed routes for attacks and retreats 8 345 350 Hunter personally took the carpet bag to Richmond because he thought it would be safer there He was at the time a member of the Virginia State Senate In 1865 when Lee advised that he could no longer defend Richmond Hunter did not want the Yankees to find the carpet bag He thought that the Capitol was as safe a place as any in Richmond and he asked Commonwealth Secretary George Wythe Munford if he could hide it in the Capitol Munford told me that he has taken the carpet bag up to the cock loft of the Capitol and had let down the bag between the wall and the plastering and I believe those papers are there yet 345 Wise sent attorney Henry Hudnall to Charles Town to put in order Hunter s documents In a letter to Wise of November 17 he refers to a large quantity of matter including nearly a half bushel of letters just of Tidd alone 351 In 1907 08 there appeared in print a varied collection of letters and other documents a Union soldier from Massachusetts took from Hunter s office in the Charles Town courthouse in 1862 when it was being used as a Union barracks 343 352 353 354 Correspondence and other archival material The West Virginia Archives and History owns the largest single collection on Brown the Boyd B Stutler Collection A negative microfilm of the material is held by the Ohio Historical Society 355 356 The Hudson Library and Historical Society of Hudson Ohio Brown s home town prepared annotated listings of Brown s many ancestors siblings and children 357 Since John Brown moved around a lot had a large family and had a lot to say he carried on a voluminous correspondence including letters to editors 358 and was repeatedly interviewed by reporters as he made himself available Archival material on him and his circle is therefore abundant and widely scattered There has never been a complete edition of his extant correspondence the one scholarly attempt from 1885 produced a book of 645 pages Editor F B Sanborn stated that he had enough letters for another book 359 A 2015 book was published just of the letters Brown wrote in the last month of his life from jail 360 Additional letters were found and published in the 20th century 361 362 363 Archival material concerning John Brown s time in Crawford County Pennsylvania including his tannery is held by the Pelletier Library Allegheny College Meadville Pennsylvania 364 Clark Atlanta University holds a small collection 365 Brown biographer Oswald Garrison Villard surveys the manuscript collections in his 1910 biography 366 The archive of Villard is in the Columbia University Library Kansas Memory has a collection of materials regarding Brown s activities in Kansas 367 A project of the Kansas Historical Society it holds the collection of Brown biographer Richard J Hinton 368 See alsoBibliography of the American Civil War List of incidents of civil unrest in the United States Origins of the American Civil War Radical RepublicansNotes John Brown moved his grandfather s tombstone to his farm in North Elba New York 20 In 1857 Brown stated that he descended from Peter Browne one of the Pilgrim Fathers who landed from the Mayflower at Plymouth Massachusetts in 1620 There are some historians that believe that his ancestor was Peter Brown who arrived in Connecticut in 1650 21 Brown was said by Sanbord to have been the fourth of eight children but it s not clear who the other children of Owen and Ruth were and if the eight children included their adopted son Levi 22 Brown eventually listed surveyor s implements in his will 41 Snodgrass said that he lived in nearby Randolph Township Pennsylvania 57 According to a Pennsylvania friend who visited him in jail in Charles Town just before his execution he mentioned that Crawford County Pennsylvania was important to him because two of his children and his wife were buried there 71 Later in 1852 Brown received five first prizes for his sheep and cattle at the Ohio State Fair 83 In the Bible Mount Gilead was the place where only the bravest of Israelites gathered to face an invading enemy Brown founded the League with the words Nothing so charms the American people as personal bravery Blacks would have ten times the number of white friends than they now have were they but half as much in earnest to secure their dearest rights as they are to ape the follies and extravagances of their white neighbors and to indulge in idle show in ease and in luxury 95 Brown gave his rocking chair to the mother of his beloved black porter Thomas Thomas as a gesture of affection when he moved away from Springfield 89 Brown s wife Mary refused to relocate to Kansas 104 References RBS Rebecca Buffum Spring December 2 1859 A Visit to John Brown By a lady New York Tribune p 6 Archived from the original on February 13 2021 Retrieved March 12 2021 via newspapers com DeCaro 2005a Introduction DeCaro 2005a p 248 The martyrdom of John Brown the proceedings of a public meeting held in London on the 2nd December 1863 to commemorate the fourth anniversary of John Brown s death London Emancipation Society 1864 Within 22 page document Wyatt Brown 1975 p 426 Smith 1895 p 323 Foner Philip S 1964 Frederick Douglass Selections from His Writings New York International Publishers pp 25 26 OCLC 911783030 a b The Harper s Ferry Outbreak New York Daily Herald October 21 1859 p 1 Archived from the original on April 28 2021 Retrieved September 14 2020 via newspapers com Reprinted in The Liberator October 28 1859 Hinton 2011 p 637 Sanborn Franklin c 1900 John Brown and his friends Slavery and anti slavery A transnational archive N p p 7 Archived from the original on March 11 2022 Retrieved March 11 2022 via HathiTrust a b Treason in the United States Elizabethtown Post Elizabethtown New York December 3 1859 p 2 Archived from the original on April 13 2022 Retrieved March 18 2022 via NYS Historic Newspapers a b c d Loewen 2008 p 179 Anderson Osborne Perry 1861 A Voice from Harper s Ferry Boston Published by the author pp 5 7 a b Watson Brown s Remains Indianapolis Journal October 18 1882 p 2 Archived from the original on November 16 2020 Retrieved November 8 2020 via newspaperarchive com a b c d e f Ken Chowder The Father of American Terrorism Archived from the original on November 7 2018 Retrieved November 17 2016 American Heritage February March 2000 John Brown House Burns Birthplace of Famous Kansas Abolitionist in New England No More Topeka State Journal July 2 1918 p 8 Archived from the original on September 27 2021 Retrieved September 27 2021 via Chronicling America Historical cottage House in which John Brown was born at West Torrington Conn still in existence Massena Observer Massena New York November 9 1899 p 8 Archived from the original on February 16 2022 Retrieved February 16 2022 via NYS Historic Newspapers John Brown s birthplace to be preserved His soul goes marching on The Argus Albany New York August 26 1900 p 5 Archived from the original on February 16 2022 Retrieved February 16 2022 via NYS Historic Newspapers Torrington Historical Society 2017 John Brown Birthplace Site Archived from the original on November 21 2018 Retrieved November 15 2018 Brown Phil 1999 Longstreet Highroad Guide to the New York Adirondacks Taylor Trade Publishing p PT91 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458 7 James M McPherson Battle Cry of Freedom New York Oxford University Press 1988 p 207 Potter David M 1976 Fehrenbacher Don Edward ed The Impending Crisis 1848 1861 Harper amp Row pp 356 384 ISBN 0 06 131929 5 Reynolds 2005 p 6 Horwitz Tony December 2011 Why John Brown still scares us 150 years after the start of the Civil War we wonder if he may have been right American History 46 5 38 via Gale Academic OneFile a b Daniel W Crofts Reluctant Confederates Upper South Unionists in the Secession Crisis 1989 pp 70 ff Garrison William Lloyd October 28 1859 The Tragedy at Harper s Ferry The Liberator Boston Massachusetts p 2 Archived from the original on February 18 2006 Retrieved March 9 2022 via Fair use org Garrison Wm Lloyd December 16 1859 Speech of Wm Lloyd Garrison At the Meeting in Tremont Temple The Liberator Boston Massachusetts p 2 Archived from the original on November 10 2020 Retrieved November 10 2020 via newspapers com Douglass Frederick 1881 John Brown An Address at the 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transcript National Park Service June 2 2005 Archived from the original on April 26 2007 Retrieved March 9 2022 An Ever Present Bone of Contention The Heyward Shepherd Memorial www wvculture org Archived from the original on May 26 2008 Retrieved January 9 2018 DeCaro Louis A Jr 2005b Black People s Ally White People s Bogeyman A John Brown Story In Taylor Andrew Herrington Eldrid eds The Afterlife of John Brown New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 11 26 doi 10 1007 978 1 4039 7846 2 2 inactive January 31 2024 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link Oates Stephen Dr Stephen B Oates on John Brown National Park Service Harpers Ferry National Historical Park archived from the original on May 10 2009 Blake Russell December 2006 Review of Peterson Merrill D John Brown The Legend Revisite H CivWar Archived from the original on January 13 2017 Timothy Patrick McCarthy John Stauffer 2012 Prophets Of Protest Reconsidering The History Of American Abolitionism New Press p 29 ISBN 978 1595588548 See also Connie A Miller Sr 2008 Frederick Douglass American Hero and International Icon of The Nineteenth Century Xlibris p 166 ISBN 978 1441576491 and Lori McManus 2011 Key People of the Civil War Capstone PressInc p 15 ISBN 978 1432939199 Finkelman Paul Spring 2011 John Brown America s First Terrorist Prologue Magazine 43 1 16 27 Archived from the original on June 23 2016 Retrieved June 9 2016 says no R Blakeslee Gilpin 2011 John Brown Still Lives America s Long Reckoning With Violence Equality amp Change U of North Carolina Press p 198 ISBN 978 0807869277 Archived from the original on June 9 2016 Retrieved November 22 2015 Moyer Teresa S Shackel Paul A 2008 The Making of Harpers Ferry National Historical Park A Devil Two Rivers and a Dream AltaMira Press p 101 ISBN 978 0759110663 Archived from the original on May 3 2016 Retrieved November 22 2015 Gilbert James N 2005 A Behavioral Analysis of John Brown Martyr or 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Archived from the original on July 21 2021 Retrieved May 16 2021 Meyer Eugene L 2018 Five for Freedom The African American Soldiers in John Brown s Army Chicago Lawrence Hill Books Chicago Review Press p 200 ISBN 978 1613735725 John Brown Day set for May 1 Adirondack Daily Enterprise Saranac Lake New York April 15 1999 p 3 Archived from the original on February 16 2022 Retrieved February 16 2022 via NYS Historic Newspapers Celebrating Juneteenth and Timbuctoo Parks amp Trails New York June 6 2016 Archived from the original on October 23 2020 Retrieved December 3 2020 Virtanen Michael April 30 2018 John Brown celebration at the farmstead Adirondack Explorer 1 Archived from the original on April 13 2022 Retrieved March 16 2022 John Brown Lives John Brown Day 2022 Archived from the original on March 4 2022 Retrieved March 2 2022 John Brown Farm Tannery amp Museum Visit Pennsylvania 2019 Archived from the original on May 2 2021 Retrieved April 25 2021 Rathke Lisa October 7 2017 John Brown 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