John Brown's Day of Reckoning
The abolitionist's bloody raid on a federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry 150 years ago set the stage for the Civil War
- By Fergus M. Bordewich
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
As his men stepped off the railway bridge into town that October night in 1859, Brown dispatched contingents to seize the musket factory, rifle works, arsenal and adjacent brick fire-engine house. (Three men remained in Maryland to guard weapons that Brown hoped to distribute to slaves who joined him.) "I want to free all the negroes in this state," he told one of his first hostages, a night watchman. "If the citizens interfere with me, I must only burn the town and have blood." Guards were posted at the bridges. Telegraph lines were cut. The railroad station was seized. It was there that the raid's first casualty occurred, when a porter, a free black man named Hayward Shepherd, challenged Brown's men and was shot dead in the dark. Once key locations had been secured, Brown sent a detachment to seize several prominent local slave owners, including Col. Lewis W. Washington, a great-grandnephew of the first president.
Early reports claimed that Harpers Ferry had been taken by 50, then 150, then 200 white "insurrectionists" and "six hundred runaway negroes." Brown expected to have 1,500 men under his command by midday Monday. He later said he believed that he would eventually have armed as many as 5,000 slaves. But the bees did not swarm. (Only a handful of slaves lent Brown assistance.) Instead, as Brown's band watched dawn break over the craggy ridges enclosing Harpers Ferry, local white militias—similar to today's National Guard—were hastening to arms.
First to arrive were the Jefferson Guards, from nearby Charles Town. Uniformed in blue, with tall black Mexican War-era shakos on their heads and brandishing .58-caliber rifles, they seized the railway bridge, killing a former slave named Dangerfield Newby and cutting Brown off from his route of escape. Newby had gone north in a failed attempt to earn enough money to buy freedom for his wife and six children. In his pocket was a letter from his wife: "It is said Master is in want of money," she had written. "I know not what time he may sell me, and then all my bright hopes of the future are blasted, for their [sic] has been one bright hope to cheer me in all my troubles, that is to be with you."
As the day progressed, armed units poured in from Frederick, Maryland; Martinsburg and Shepherdstown, Virginia; and elsewhere. Brown and his raiders were soon surrounded. He and a dozen of his men held out in the engine house, a small but formidable brick building, with stout oak doors in front. Other small groups remained holed up in the musket factory and rifle works. Acknowledging their increasingly dire predicament, Brown sent out New Yorker William Thompson, bearing a white flag, to propose a cease-fire. But Thompson was captured and held in the Galt House, a local hotel. Brown then dispatched his son, Watson, 24, and ex-cavalryman Aaron Stevens, also under a white flag, but the militiamen shot them down in the street. Watson, although fatally wounded, managed to crawl back to the engine house. Stevens, shot four times, was arrested.
When the militia stormed the rifle works, the three men inside dashed for the shallow Shenandoah, hoping to wade across. Two of them—John Kagi, vice president of Brown's provisional government, and Lewis Leary, an African-American—were shot dead in the water. The black Oberlin student, John Copeland, reached a rock in the middle of the river, where he threw down his gun and surrendered. Twenty-year-old William Leeman slipped out of the engine house, hoping to make contact with the three men Brown had left as backup in Maryland. Leeman plunged into the Potomac and swam for his life. Trapped on an islet, he was shot dead as he tried to surrender. Throughout the afternoon, bystanders took potshots at his body.
Through loopholes—small openings through which guns could be fired—that they had drilled in the engine house's thick doors, Brown's men tried to pick off their attackers, without much success. One of their shots, however, killed the town's mayor, Fontaine Beckham, enraging the local citizenry. "The anger at that moment was uncontrollable," says Frye. "A tornado of rage swept over them." A vengeful mob pushed its way into the Galt House, where William Thompson was being held prisoner. They dragged him onto the railroad trestle, shot him in the head as he begged for his life and tossed him over the railing into the Potomac.
By nightfall, conditions inside the engine house had grown desperate. Brown's men had not eaten for more than 24 hours. Only four remained unwounded. The bloody corpses of slain raiders, including Brown's 20-year-old son, Oliver, lay at their feet. They knew there was no hope of escape. Eleven white hostages and two or three of their slaves were pressed against the back wall, utterly terrified. Two pumpers and hose carts were pushed against the doors, to brace against an assault expected at any moment. Yet if Brown felt defeated, he didn't show it. As his son Watson writhed in agony, Brown told him to die "as becomes a man."
Soon perhaps a thousand men—many uniformed and disciplined, others drunk and brandishing weapons from shotguns to old muskets—would fill the narrow lanes of Harpers Ferry, surrounding Brown's tiny band. President James Buchanan had dispatched a company of Marines from Washington, under the command of one of the Army's most promising officers: Lt. Col. Robert E. Lee. Himself a slave owner, Lee had only disdain for abolitionists, who "he believed were exacerbating tensions by agitating among slaves and angering masters," says Elizabeth Brown Pryor, author of Reading the Man: A Portrait of Robert E. Lee Through His Private Letters. "He held that although slavery was regrettable, it was an institution sanctioned by God and as such would disappear only when God ordained it." Dressed in civilian clothes, Lee reached Harpers Ferry around midnight. He gathered the 90 Marines behind a nearby warehouse and worked out a plan of attack. In the predawn darkness, Lee's aide, a flamboyant young cavalry lieutenant, boldly approached the engine house, carrying a white flag. He was met at the door by Brown, who asked that he and his men be allowed to retreat across the river to Maryland, where they would free their hostages. The soldier promised only that the raiders would be protected from the mob and put on trial. "Well, lieutenant, I see we can't agree," replied Brown. The lieutenant stepped aside, and with his hand gave a prearranged signal to attack. Brown could have shot him dead—"just as easily as I could kill a musquito," he recalled later. Had he done so, the course of the Civil War might have been different. The lieutenant was J.E.B. Stuart, who would go on to serve brilliantly as Lee's cavalry commander.
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Comments (14)
Where are the personal papers of Reverend Joshua Young? His congregation in Burlington is turning two hundred and wishes to answer a few questions about his time with us.
Posted by Elizabeth Curtiss on April 14,2010 | 05:40 PM
Re: John Brown's Day of Reckoning By Fergus M. Bordewich
Smithsonian magazine, October 2009
The article by Mr Bordewich left the reader with the impression that all the sons of John Brown who participated in the raid on Harpers Ferry were killed during the attack.
An article was published in a local Huntingdon County Pennsylvania newspaper the Daily News October 16, 2009 that traced Owen Browns escape from the Maryland farm house, three miles from Harpers Ferry, where he was guarding the pikes and other weapons that were to be distributed if his fathers raid was successful.
Owen used the "Subterranean Pass-Way " from Chambersburg, Franklin County through Huntingdon County Pennsylvania north to Meadville, Pennsylvania. Owen's journey was told later in his life in the Atlantic Monthly, March 1874.
Posted by George John Drobnock on November 29,2009 | 10:39 AM
Outside of his determination for a cause that he believed in, I found little to admire regarding John Brown. His obsession with slavery ironically seemed to go beyond human nature itself, regardless the color of skin of anyone who opposed or disagreed with him. Not only did he massacre and butcher individuals in Kansas, but during the events at Harpers Ferry, he put the lives of a community, his men, his own life, as well as the lives of two of his sons at risk, showing no remorse or compassion as his sons were near death. The first casualty at Harpers Ferry was a man of color, who ironically was attempting to hinder the raid. Additional innocent people lost their lives at the hands of Brown and his fellow fanatics and yet Brown was anticipating thousands of slaves and supposed supporters from nearby regions to volunteer to die as well. Whether the bees had swarmed or not, as John Brown had predicted they would, Frederick Douglas was correct in his assertion that Brown was "going into a perfect steel trap" because Brown had chosen perhaps arguably the least defensible arsenal in the United States at that time. Similar to the Union troops that filled the crater at the battle of Petersburg, VA at the close of the Civil War, Brown and his men were sitting targets. It is quite clear that John Brown was not any less fanatical than John Wilkes Booth. It would not surprise me in the least if Brown's actions may have set Booth down an opposite and yet similar path to ruin. John Brown was hardly "an angel of light."
Posted by William Lewis on November 12,2009 | 09:16 AM
While I am sympathetic to Brown, is it not true that he also killed some women or children in Kansas?
Posted by j linder on November 7,2009 | 11:20 PM
I have been reading the companion book to the series of the Civil War recently on NPR. I stumbled on Smithstonian Oct 2009 and foun article by Fergus m Bordewich (p62) The article and illustrations are great!
Posted by JohnHOLT on October 30,2009 | 02:44 PM
In response to B.J Sims' question about the song "John Brown's Body," it appeared first in the 1850s as a religious camp meeting song that started, 'Say, brothers, will you meet us? On Canaan's happy shore?' The tune was picked up and the words changed by members of the Massachusetts Volunteer Militia to tease one of their young members, John Brown. As the song spread to other units it was assumed that the John Brown in the song was the one captured in Harpers Ferry. At some point Julia Ward Howe heard the song and published new lyrics in the Atlantic Monthly as "Battle Humn of the Republic." The young John Brown of the first version of the song didn't live long enough to hear later ones. He was drowned in the Shennandoah River at Front Royal Virginia early in the War.
Posted by Reader Services on October 19,2009 | 02:34 PM
I am proud to be the great great great granddaughter of Rev Joshua Young who preformed the funeral service for John Brown on Dec. 8,1859, in N. Elba, N.Y.
Posted by Diane Ingrick Steece on October 17,2009 | 01:47 PM
I think one of J. Brown's sons is buried in Altadena California.
Posted by robbie harper-sutton-johnson on October 12,2009 | 12:56 PM
I was wondering under what circumstances did the song "John Brown's Body" emerge and what role did it play during the Civil War?
Posted by B.J. Sims on October 12,2009 | 11:51 AM
Hey, it's no big deal. I was only expressing my concern about the omission of Shields Green from the article, but if there's no space, so let it be. This too shall pass. Best, Hb
Posted by Herb Boyd on October 1,2009 | 05:08 PM
John Brown was my second great grand father. When I was a kid I remember my uncle, C. Brown, telling me that John Brown had ample opportunity to flee Harper's Ferry when he realized that he wouldn't be getting the support that he'd expected. Instead however he chose to stay, believing that taking a stand and sacrificing his life was the only way to have a real impact on the entire country.
Posted by Matthew B. on September 30,2009 | 03:56 PM
I want to be an archeoligist someday to
Posted by on September 28,2009 | 11:51 AM
John Brown also had men in Kansas fight under his leadership and they were the late George & William Partridge & William W. Caine formerly of Wisconsin.
Amos Lawrence (cotton Whig)founder of Lawrence University of Appleton, Wisconsin provided John Brown with money and Sharpes Rifles.
The Wisconsin Republican Party sponsored John Brown & Gerritt Smith at a rally at Market Garden Milwuakee, Wisconsin June of 1857 for the anti-slavery cause. Takeing up a collection for John Brown's Kansas activities with the Underground Railroad through Iowa from Kansas with James redpath.
Posted by tom on September 25,2009 | 04:40 AM
John Brown, along with most of the raiders, are buried at his farm in North Elba (Lake Placid), NY. A symposium is planned Dec 5 that includes authors Margaret Washington, Russell Banks and Louis DeCaro, Jr, a panel that includes a person who was sold into slavery in the United States at age 16 (over 50,000 live in slavery in the US, 25 million+ world-wide), Alice Mecoy, a descendant of John Brown, author Kevin Bales, George Homes, Exec Dir of CORE, Bernadine Dorn. Activities include on Dec 6 a re-enactment of his cortege home across Lake Champlain, his body laying in state at the Essex County Courthouse, and burial at his grave (Dec 2), gospel concerts and much more.
www.johnbrowncominghome.com
Posted by Naj Wikoff on September 23,2009 | 07:52 PM