Elijah Parish Lovejoy
1802-1837
The death of the American newspaper editor and abolitionist Elijah
Parish Lovejoy at the hands of a mob in Illinois gave the antislavery
cause its first martyr.
Elijah P. Lovejoy was born at Albion, Maine, on Nov. 9, 1802, the
son of a Presbyterian minister. He graduated from Waterville College
(renamed Colby) in 1826 and, after a brief period of school teaching
and newspaper work in St. Louis, Mo., studied for the ministry at
Princeton. On receiving his license to preach he returned to St.
Louis to edit a Presbyterian weekly, the Observer. His editorials
on slavery soon brought protests from his readers, for even the
gradual abolition of slavery that Lovejoy proposed was controversial.
A meeting of citizens in 1835 warned him to desist, but Lovejoy
refused to modify his position. On March 4, 1835, he married Celia
Ann French.
In early 1836 Lovejoy published a full account of the brutal lynching
of a free African American in St. Louis, including a report of the
trial that acquitted the mob leaders. Threats of personal harm and
lack of support by the Presbyterian General Assembly soon led him
to move to Alton, Ill., 25 miles away. When the Observer's press,
left unguarded on the Alton dock, was smashed and thrown into the
Mississippi River, local citizens pledged money for a new one.
Lovejoy's abolitionism, however, grew increasingly aggressive,
and his press was destroyed again in 1837, two months before he
helped form the Illinois auxiliary of the American Antislavery Society.
When his third press was thrown into the river, Lovejoy wrote in
his paper, "We distinctly avow it to be our settled purpose,
never, while life lasts, to yield to this new system of attempting
to destroy, by means of mob violence, the right of conscience, the
freedom of opinion, and of the press." By this time his uncompromising
abolitionism and defense of free speech had received national attention.
At the request of Alton's mayor the Observer's fourth press was
placed in a warehouse for safekeeping. Lovejoy's friends gathered
about 50 armed men to guard it. On the evening of November 7, some
20 or 30 local citizens surrounded the warehouse. Responsibility
for the first shot was never fixed, but one from within the building
killed a member of the attacking group. There was more firing from
both sides, and when several defenders rushed out to extinguish
a fire on the roof, Lovejoy, standing in an open doorway, fell with
five bullets in his body. He died within the hour. After his supporters
surrendered, the mob burned the warehouse.
The fact that Lovejoy died defending the freedom of speech and
press was the subject of hundreds of sermons and editorials throughout
the North. His death, wrote John Quincy Adams, "gave a shock
as of an earthquake throughout this continent."
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