
John Brown
(1800 - 1859)
Born in Torrington, Connecticut on May 9, 1800, John Brown was
the son of a wandering New Englander. Brown spent much of his youth
in Ohio, where he was taught in local schools to resent compulsory
education and by his parents to revere the Bible and hate slavery.
As a boy he herded cattle for Gen. William Hull's army during the
war of 1812; later he served as foreman of his family's tannery.
In 1820 he married Dianthe Lusk, who bore him seven children; five
years later they moved to Pennsylvania to operate a tannery of their
own. Within a year after Dianthe's death in 1831, Brown wed 16-year-old
Mary Anne Day, by whom he fathered 13 more children.
During the next 24 years Brown built and sold several tanneries,
speculated in land sales, raised sheep, and established a brokerage
for wool growers. Every venture failed, for he was too much a visionary,
not enough a businessman. As his financial burdens multiplied, his
thinking became increasingly metaphysical and he began to brood
over the plight of the weak and oppressed. He frequently sought
the company of blacks, for two years living in a freedmen's community
in North Elba, N.Y. In time he became a militant abolitionist, a
"conductor" on the Underground Railroad, and the organizer
of a self-protection league for free blacks and fugitive slaves.
By the time he was 50, Brown was entranced by visions of slave
uprisings, during which racists paid horribly for their sins, and
he came to regard himself as commissioned by God to make that vision
a reality. In August 1855, he followed five of his sons to Kansas
to help make the state a haven for anti-slavery settlers. The following
year, his hostility toward slave-staters exploded after they burned
and pillaged the free-state community of Lawrence. Having organized
a militia unit within his Osawatomie River colony, Brown led it
on a mission of revenge. On the evening of May 23, 1856, he and
six followers, including four of his sons, visited the homes of
pro-slavery men along Pottawatomie Creek, dragged their unarmed
inhabitants into the night, and hacked them to death with long-edged
swords. At once, "Old Brown of Osawatomie" became a feared
and hated target of slave-staters.
In autumn 1856, temporarily defeated but still committed to his
vision of a slave insurrection, Brown returned to Ohio. There and
during two subsequent trips to Kansas, he developed a grandiose
plan to free slaves throughout the South. Provided with moral and
financial support from prominent New England abolitionists, Brown
began by raiding plantations in Missouri but accomplished little.
In the summer of 1859, he transferred his operations to western
Virginia, collected an army of 21 men, including 5 blacks, and on
the night of October 16th raided the government armory and arsenal
at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia. From there he planned to arm
the thousands of slaves who, learning of his crusade, would flock
to his side. Instead, numerous bands of militia and a company of
U.S. Marines under Col. Robert E. Lee hastened to the river village,
where they trapped the raiders inside the fire-engine house and
on October 18th stormed the building. The fighting ended with ten
of Brown's people killed and seven captured, Brown among them.
After a sensational trial, he was found guilty of treason against
Virginia and was hanged amid much fanfare on December 2, 1859. The
stately, fearless, unrepentant manner in which he comported himself
in court and on the gallows made him a martyr in parts of the North.
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