Book Review: Lincoln’s Spies – Their Secret War To Save A Nation

Lincoln’s Spies – Their Secret War To Save The Union

By Douglas Waller

Lincoln's Spies - Their Secret War To Save A Nation

Lincoln’s Spies – Their Secret War To Save A Nation

Do you have some favorite Civil War books, books you have read and reread? I do. Are you always looking for more Civil War books that will become your favorites? I am. Are you looking for more books to add to your Civil War library? I always am. Would you like to know about a newly published Civil War book that is destined to become a Civil War classic, a book you will add to your Civil War library’s top shelf of favorites? I’d sure like to know about such a book.

Are you an experienced Civil War trooper of learning and reading, or are you a fresh recruit just beginning your campaign of Civil War education? Either way, you want to add good books to your Civil War library. I have a Civil War book recommendation for you. A good book about Civil War history that will become one of your favorites.

The new book is Lincoln’s Spies by Douglas Waller. It’s become one of my favorite Civil War books. Just as I’ve done, I think you will make space for it on your Civil War library’s top shelf of favorites.

 

Some notes I made in Lincoln's Spies.

Some notes I made in Lincoln’s Spies.

Douglas Waller’s new book, “Lincoln’s Spies – Their Secret War To Save The Union” is a treasure chest of information for those who want to learn about the Civil War. This is a fast-paced book that will capture and hold your attention. Each page is packed with information and you will be eager to read the next page. I found it hard to put down.

As I read this book I was constantly making notes in the margins, underlining sentences, and circling paragraphs with a good ol’ plain #2 pencil or a red pencil. I have facts, quotes, and stories noted from the beginning to the end of the book. My blog readers and Twitter followers will all be hearing about what I have learned from Douglas Waller’s “Lincoln’s Spies.” This book gave me understanding and value on my journey of learning about the Civil War. It filled many empty nooks and crannies of my Civil War knowledge.

Lincoln’s Spies focuses on four individuals who were Civil War spies: Allan Pinkerton, Elizabeth Van Lew, Lafayette Baker, and George Sharpe. Each of these spies lived a life of daring, intrigue, and excitement during a time of great change in the history of the United States of America. The stories of their lives intersect with the volatile story of the United States during the Civil War and Waller richly covers the people, times, and the events of the Civil War. Waller’s book is a deep well of Civil War information. I found his descriptions of the four main spies especially interesting.

Here are some brief looks at the four main spies of Lincoln’s Spies and a few book excerpts:

Allan Pinkerton

Allan Pinkerton

Allan Pinkerton

Allan Pinkerton was born in Scotland in 1819 and when he was ten-years-old his father died. Young Allan quit school but continued to read and study on his own, he learned to become a cooper to earn his living. He married and emigrated to the United States in 1842 where he built a cabin in Illinois. Pinkerton began a business working as a cooper in Illinois with wife Joan joining him there once the cabin was finished. Allan was an abolitionist and the Pinkerton’s cabin became a stop on the Underground Railroad.

Pinkerton’s career in detective work and spying began serendipitously when he was walking in the woods one day looking for trees he could use to make barrel staves. Pinkerton came upon some counterfeiters in the woods who were busy at a fire hammering out fake coins. He watched them for a spell, and then he went to alert the sheriff. Pinkerton and the sheriff returned to stake out the counterfeiter’s campsite for the night. After their stakeout, the sheriff returned with a posse and arrested the counterfeiters who had a bag of fake dimes. This experience of luckily finding counterfeiters at work in the woods, spying on them, helping the sheriff with a stakeout, and then the subsequent arrest of the crooks led Pinkerton into a life of police, detective, and spy work.

“Friends and associates believed Allan Pinkerton was gifted with courage and unusual powers of observation. As a young man he had been a labor agitator, falling under the spell of Scottish revolutionaries. He now hated slavery and had become a fanatical abolitionist. He thought his parents had been atheists and he considered himself one as well. He had honed a sixth sense to anticipate criminal activity before it happened. He was stubbornly persistent, refusing to be worn down by adversity. Yet he could be a tiresome prig, who harangued employees, friends, and relatives about the virtues of honesty, integrity, and courage. He was a tyrant at home, completely dominating his wife and children. He had dark, brooding eyes set deeply under a wide brow with a heavy beard that covered his face, save for his upper lip that he occasionally shaved. He was dour and humorless, only occasionally showing a sense of humor.”
– A description of Allan Pinkerton. Note that in the image of Pinkerton he has let the hair of his upper lip grow out.
Lincolns Spies, pages 3-4.

“We Never Sleep”
– Pinkerton used a business logo of a wide-open eye along with these words.
Lincolns Spies, page 12.

“Plums arrived here with Nuts this morning–all right.”
– A coded message Pinkerton sent after he helped Abraham Lincoln arrive safely in Washington, D.C. for his first inaugural despite death threats to Lincoln. Pinkerton was the “Plums” and Lincoln was the “Nuts.”
Lincolns Spies, page 19.

Elizabeth Van Lew

Elizabeth Van Lew

Elizabeth Van Lew

Elizabeth Van Lew was born in Richmond, Virginia in 1818 where her father John was very successful in a lucrative hardware business. Wealthy hardware man John Van Lew also owned slaves, despite this the Van Lew family supported abolition. Elizabeth’s maternal grandfather was Hilary Baker who was mayor of Philadelphia from 1796 to 1798. Baker was also an abolitionist, as was his granddaughter. The young Elizabeth studied at a Quaker school in Philadelphia where her anti-slavery sentiments grew stronger.

When her father John died in 1843 Elizabeth and her abolitionist mother Eliza freed the Van Lew family’s slaves. The women paid some of them to continue working for them as servants. During the 1837-1844 depression Elizabeth used her $10,000 cash inheritance from her father to buy and set free some relatives of the slaves that she and her mother had freed. The Van Lew family would use their money to buy slaves and then set them free. Elizabeth Van Lew’s brother once went to Richmond’s slave market where he bought an entire enslaved family and then gave them all freedom so the family could remain together and not be separated under slavery.

With the start of the Civil War Elizabeth Van Lew and her mother began to care for wounded Union prisoners at Libby Prison in the Confederate capital of Richmond. Elizabeth took food and other supplies to the Yankee prisoners at Libby Prison to help make their captivity easier. She helped some escape by providing information about safe houses where they could find shelter during their escape. Elizabeth would gather information from the Yankee prisoners about Confederate troop strength and movements and then pass it on to Union commanders. Elizabeth Van Lew’s most important spy work began when she operated the “Richmond Underground,” a spy network that provided valuable information to Union army commanders. Her spy work was so useful that George Sharpe, the Army of the Potomac’s Intelligence Chief, said that Elizabeth’s spy efforts gave the army, “the greater portion of our intelligence in 1864-65.”

“Elizabeth Van Lew was a short woman, who had been quite fetching in her youth. But now in her forties and unmarried, she was considered by Richmond society to be an old maid. She loved her state, always speaking of Virginians in her soft southern accent as “our people”–although that love would be tested sorely in the years to come. She wore her dark blond hair always in tight curls that hung along her cheeks and neck. She had a thin, nervous-looking face with high cheekbones, pointed nose, and sparkling blue eyes that bore into anyone facing her stare. She was almost always attired in the antebellum style with black silk dress and bonnet whose ribbons tied under her chin in the front. She was clever to the point of “almost unearthly brilliance,” friends said, and decidedly feisty. She could be acid-tongued and scalding in her contempt for people whose social or political views clashed with her strong sense of right from wrong.”
– A description of Elizabeth Van Lew.
Lincolns Spies, page 30.

“She developed an early empathy for the slaves in her home and elsewhere. Their backbreaking work and the beatings she witnessed on city streets horrified her. On family vacations at western Virginia’s Hot Springs, a resort to escape the summer heat, she became friends with a slave trader’s daughter and was repelled by what she learned of the dreadful business.”
– Elizabeth Van Lew was an abolitionist.
Lincolns Spies, page 33.

“Slave power is arrogant, is jealous and intrusive, is cruel, is despotic, not only over the slave but over the community, the state”
– Elizabeth Van Lew
Lincolns Spies, page 33.

“Madness was upon the people!”
– Elizabeth Van Lew regarding Virginia seceding from the Union.
Lincolns Spies, page 36.

Learn Civil War History Podcast: Elizabeth Van Lew – A Union Spymaster in Richmond

Listen and learn about Elizabeth Van Lew.

 

 

Lafayette Baker

Lafayette Baker

Lafayette Baker

Lafayette Baker was born in New York in 1826. His family called him”Lafe” and he grew up to become a mechanic, he was good at repairing farm equipment. In 1853 Baker was in San Francisco after his younger brother urged him to come west like so many other young men to seek his fortune in the booming Gold Rush economy. Baker had no luck finding gold, he instead earned some money as a mechanic and as a saloon bouncer. In 1856 he joined the San Francisco Vigilance Committee, a very tough group of men.

The San Francisco Vigilance Committee’s purpose was to control the climbing rate of lawlessness in San Fransisco caused by the huge amount of men of questionable character flooding into the city seeking their fortunes. Baker joined with hundreds of other committeemen who wore uniforms and carried swords as they worked for San Francisco. They were a tough crew, they took the law into their own hands, there were quick trials sometimes followed by equally quick hangings. Baker enjoyed the unlimited power and force of being a vigilante. He was good at this work.

The San Francisco Vigilance Committee eventually faded away and by 1861 Baker was in Washington, D.C. where he hoped to gain a job in President Abraham Lincoln’s new administration. Through some conniving, Baker met with General Winfield Scott. He started his spy career when Scott hired him, based on Baker’s California vigilante experience–which Baker exaggerated somewhat, to work as an espionage agent. Baker made a spy mission into Virginia, which had some mishaps, but he provided valuable information about Confederate troops in Virginia to General Scott. Scott then advanced Baker to the rank of captain. He served from September 1862 until November 1863 as the Provost Marshall of Washington, D.C. and administered the National Detective Bureau.

Reflecting back to his San Francisco vigilante days, Baker’s actions as a detective were questionable. He or his men literally used strong-arm tactics in their detective work. They gave little consideration or importance to obtaining warrants of those they chased after, or for their constitutional rights. After President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in April 1865 Baker’s men gathered the names of two of the conspirators, including the name of the assassin, John Wilkes Booth.

“Baker was a handsome man, with brown hair, a full red beard, and piercing gray eyes that were almost hypnotic. He stood five feet ten inches tall, a muscular 180 pounds, agile, almost catlike in his quick movements, always seemingly restless. H was a fine horseman, a crack shot. He did not swear or drink, priding himself on being a member of Sons of Temperance, a male brotherhood sworn against alcohol, which had started in New York City in 1842 and spread across the country. He was obsessed with Roman history. On his trip from California to New York, he devoured a book on a man who would become one of his role models: Eugéne Francois Vidocq, the famed and, Baker acknowledged, unsavory French detective who helped create France’s security police. Baker was as devious and manipulating as Vidocq, prone to lie about himself, with “the heart of a sneak thief,” according to one profile of him.”
– A description of Lafayette Baker.
Lincolns Spies, page 40.

“In 1856 he joined the 2,200 members of the San Francisco Vigilance Committee, each of whom was known only by his number. Baker’s was 208.”
– Lafayette Baker begins his work as a detective and spy.
Lincolns Spies, page 43.

George Sharpe

George Sharpe

George Sharpe

George Sharpe was from Kingston, New York, a small town in Ulster County located on a bank of the Hudson River. The people of Kingston had strong anti-slavery beliefs and by 1855, sensing that conflict between North and South was coming, Kingston had six militia companies drilling and training in town. After Fort Sumter fell to the Confederates in April 1861 President Abraham Lincoln called for 75,000 state militiamen to volunteer for ninety days of service. They were needed to meet the challenge of the newly formed Confederacy and its fighting forces.

In response to President Lincoln’s call, a meeting was held in Kingston where important men climbed on top of barrel-heads and gave rallying speeches to encourage young men to volunteer in the militia. Captain George Henry Sharpe of the 20th New York Militia, also known as the “Ulster Guard,” stood on top of a barrel and asked young men to come and serve with him in the militia. Soon Captain Sharpe had 248 men in his Company B which became part of the 20th New York Militia. This began George Sharpe’s Civil War journey, a journey in which he would continually advance in the army and one where he eventually became the country’s master spy. Sharpe became the Army of the Potomac’s Intelligence Chief and created an organization whose purpose was to learn and gather information about the Confederates.

“George Henry Sharpe was born on February 26, 1828. He was Henry and Helen’s only child. For some mysterious reason, the boy in later years attached an e to the end of his last name. Sharpe’s mother lived until age ninety, but throughout her life she was tormented by a nauseous stomach that left her constantly vomiting. She treated her attacks of biliousness with homeopathy, which she believed worked best. George never knew his father. Henry died in 1830 after suffering two paralytic strokes at an asylum in New York, just before his son turned two years old. Sharpe’s surrogate father–or at least the only father he felt he ever had–became Severyn Bruyn, a local banker who served as trustee of Henry Sharp’s considerable estate and doled out an allowance to George until he turned twenty-one and was allowed to control his own finances.”
– George Sharpe’s early life of family difficulties.
Lincolns Spies, pages 26-27.

“Sharpe’s superiors considered him a natural military leader, with a magnetic personality that made men want to follow him. He had a balding head, sad eyes, and a droopy mustache that gave him the look more of a city preacher than a combat commander. He was a learned man. I the breast pocket of his uniform coat he kept always a small, well-thumbed book of verses by his favorite poets, which he routinely read to his men. They never objected to his recitals.”
– A description of George Sharpe.
Lincolns Spies, page 25.

More Book Excerpts

Examples of the jewels of information included in Douglas Waller’s treasure chest of a Civil War book.

“Seventy-four-year-old Winfield Scott, a hero of the War of 1812 and the Mexican-American War, was now in decrepit shape. Years of consuming rich foods had made “Old Fuss and Feathers” (his nickname because he enjoyed military pomp) so fat at 350 pounds, he could not walk even short distances and had to be hoisted onto a strong horse to review his troops. Scott found stairs so painful to climb because of the gout he suffered that Lincoln walked down from his second-floor White House office to confer with the general. Yet Scott’s mental acuity, as well as his ego, remained fit and trim.”
Lincolns Spies, page 45.

“Jefferson Davis was inaugurated for a six-year term on a rainy February 22 and moved his family into the old Brockenbrough mansion at Clay and 12th Streets, which became the Confederate White House. Haggard and worn looking, Davis was afflicted with neuralgia, digestive disorders, venereal disease, and bronchial problems and had lost sight in one eye. A workaholic who buried himself in paperwork and did not budget his time wisely, Davis was inaccessible, haughty, and peevish–not suffering fools lightly and feuding with his generals. A week after his inaugural, the Rebel president declared martial law in Richmond. He had reason to do so. Crime was becoming a problem in the refugee-swollen city. Not all the citizens of the capital of the Confederacy–indeed the entire Confederacy, Davis quickly realized–could be counted on to be loyal to the cause. Van Lew was one of them.”
Lincolns Spies, page 124.

“Sharpe checked his watch. It was shortly before 3 p.m. that day when he and other staff officers filed down the narrow center hall of the McClean house–one of those old-fashioned Virginia double homes perched on a knoll, he observed, with a large piazza that ran the full length of it–and turned to the left into a little parlor, bare save for a table and two or three chairs, Sharpe took a moment to sketch on a piece of paper where everyone stood or sat in the room. Grant and Lee sat at a table with their aides-de-camp beside them to take notes and reduce to writing terms of the surrender for the Army of Northern Virginia to the Army of the Potomac. Crowded in the opposite corner with Grant’s other aides, Sharpe craned his neck to see and hear what he said was “one of the most remarkable transactions of this nineteenth century.” Lee’s hair, he observed, “was white as driven snow. There was not a speck upon his coat; not a spot upon those gauntlets that he wore, which were as bright and fair as a lady’s glove.” Grant, by stark contrast, Sharpe believed, wore boots “nearly covered with mud; one button of his coat…had clearly gone astray.”

The two men struggled to make small talk–Grant apologizing for not wearing a sword as Lee did and asking what had become of the white horse the Rebel commander rode when they both served in Mexico. Lee responded with stiff bows, few words, and a “coldness of manner,” Sharpe recalled, that was “almost haughtiness.””
Lincolns Spies, page 394.

“After trying to swallow water and then whiskey from a glass, Booth attempted to speak but did so only in gasps and faint whispers. “Kill me,” he mumbled several times. He was paralyzed from the neck down. Conger put his ear close to Booth’s mouth to listen. “Tell mother I die for my country,” he heard the actor mutter. The two detectives could get him to say nothing of value.”
Lincolns Spies, page 410.

Author Douglas Waller

Douglas-Waller-Author-of-Lincolns-Spies-Author-Image-Credit-Steve-Wilson

Douglas Waller Author of Lincolns Spies. Image-credit: Steve Wilson

Douglas Waller lives in North Carolina and is an accomplished writer who has written best selling books including; Wild Bill Donovan: The Spymaster Who Created the OSS and Modern American Espionage, Disciples: The World War II Missions of the CIA Directors Who Fought for Wild Bill Donovan, and The Commandos: The Inside Story of America’s Secret Soldiers. Waller is a journalist who wrote about the CIA, Pentagon, State Department, White House, and Congress when he worked as a correspondent for the magazines Time and Newsweek.

Book Information

Lincoln's Spies - Their Secret War To Save A Nation

Lincoln’s Spies – Their Secret War To Save A Nation

Title: Lincoln’s Spies – Their Secret War To Save The Union
Author: Douglas Waller
Publisher: Simon & Schuster, August 6, 2019
Pages: 624
Book Dimensions: 6″ x 1.8″ x 9″
ISBN-13: 9781501126840
ISBN-10: 1501126849

Where to buy/order:

You can find Lincoln’s Spies at your local bookstore and online:
Simon & Schuster
Barnes & Noble
Books-A-Million
Indiebound.org

Editorial Reviews of Lincoln’s Spies

“[A] fast-paced, fact-rich account…Douglas Waller has most skillfully aimed a spotlight on this neglected aspect of the Union effort. Civil War military history can never again be read or told in quite the same way.” – The Wall Street Journal

“Douglas Waller’s fast-paced and deeply-researched narrative of Union intelligence operations in the Eastern theater of the Civil War cuts through the myths and fabrications that grew up around “Lincoln’s spies” and presents a professional, readable appraisal that emphasizes the positive contributions that Colonel George Sharpe and Richmond Unionist Elizabeth Van Lew made to ultimate Northern victory. This book is vital reading for anyone interested in the Civil War or in the origins of modern spycraft.”– James M. McPherson, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era and The War That Forged a Nation.

“In Lincoln’s Spies, at long last, we have an absolutely compelling and essential account to stand alongside those on Lincoln’s generals, Lincoln’s admirals, and Lincoln’s cabinet secretaries. Here is a pantheon of heroes and a rogues’ gallery, the patriotic and the subversive, the idealistic and the crooked. Douglas Waller brings more than a keen intelligence to the early craft of intelligence. He is like a spy into the past who has uncovered some of the most incredible and devious characters of the Civil War and revealed their plots, schemes and secret worlds.” – Sidney Blumenthal, author of The Political Life of Abraham Lincoln series.

“Waller’s narrative moves chronologically, alternating between each of the four subjects and recounting their exploits in detail. This is a long but cracking good tale.”– Publishers Weekly

“A detailed, chronological look at the work of a handful of spies in President Abraham Lincoln’s network and the extent to which they helped defeat the Confederacy… A meticulous chronicle of all facets of Lincoln’s war effort.” – Kirkus Reviews

 

Bleeding Kansas, John Brown, and the Pottawatomie Creek Massacre

What Was Bleeding Kansas?

Would The Kansas Territory Join The Union As A Slave Or Free State?

Reynolds Political Map of the United States (1856) Showing Kansas in White

Reynolds Political Map of the United States (1856) Showing Kansas in White

Slavery was the burning issue in the Kansas Territory during the 1850s. As the United States grew west toward the Pacific Ocean the South wanted newly admitted states to have slavery, while the North wanted new states to be free. The North wanted slavery to remain in the South or for it to end in the United States.

The Kansas-Nebraska Act drafted by Senator Stephen A. Douglas passed in the United States Congress on May 30, 1854. This act created the territories of Kansas and Nebraska, ended the 36°30´latitude boundary line created by the Missouri Compromise of 1820 used to divide slave from free territory, and let the people in the territories of Kansas and Nebraska determine by popular sovereignty (by vote) whether or not they would enter the Union as a free or slave state. Under the Missouri Compromise the Kansas Territory would have become a free state. Now there was a sea-change as the Kansas-Nebraska Act made it possible for Kansas to enter the Union as a slave state.

Anti-slavery support within Nebraska was strong enough to make certain that popular sovereignty would bring Nebraska into the Union as a free state. This was not so in Kansas, where the Kansas-Nebraska Act resulted in a violent free-for-all guerrilla war between pro-slavery and anti-slavery supporters. Besides votes, guns, knives, fire, terror, murder, lawlessness, and broadswords would also influence the decision of Kansas entering the Union as a free or slave state.

A violent territorial guerrilla civil war began in the Kansas Territory as both pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers flooded into Kansas so their votes would decide Kansas’ fate. Kansas becoming either a slave or a free state was important because its status would tip the balance of power between the slave and free states in the United States Senate. Although there were slaves in the Kansas Territory, it was made up primarily of small farmers who did not own slaves and who had no great desire to see slavery come to Kansas.

Hundreds of armed Missouri pro-slavery supporters (Border Ruffians) crossed the border into the Kansas Territory in late March 1855 to illegally vote for slavery. They stuffed ballot boxes with fictitious votes for Kansas pro-slavery representatives. The result of this shady election was that the territorial legislature became pro-slavery and it enacted pro-slavery laws. One such law made it a capital offense for anyone to even have abolitionist literature in their possession. Anti-slavery supporters (Jayhawkers) soon responded by forming their own anti-slavery government to oppose the pro-slavery government. From Washington, D.C., there came no help for the anti-slavery cause as President Franklin Pierce’s administration did not recognize the Kansas Territory’s anti-slavery government as legitimate.

Anti-slavery supporters from the North came to the Kansas Territory to gain the voting advantage. Violence soon followed as the pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions clashed. Stores were robbed, homes and barns burned, people beaten, people shot, people killed, and towns terrorized in the Kansas Territory. Horace Greeley of the New York Tribune newspaper wrote about, “Bleeding Kansas” or “Bloody Kansas” and this became a name for the conflict.

Into this boiling cauldron of trouble came a man of Ohio who believed he was an instrument of God. This man was an abolitionist, but he was not a pacifist. He was a man of action who hated slavery and would kill for his beliefs. He believed he was to do God’s work and break the jaw bones of pro-slavers. John Brown would add to the blood of Bleeding Kansas.

Who Was John Brown?

Learn Civil War History Podcast – Episode One: John Brown Quotes

John Brown

John Brown

Much has been written and said about John Brown. John Brown is a complex character. I don’t think anyone has completely figured him out. I suppose in regard to John Brown, it’s always up to the individual studying about him to draw his or her own conclusions as to what his character was like. Some will see him as a martyr, a man willing to go to the gallows in his effort to bring freedom to the slaves, a religious fanatic, an abolitionist, a Bible-waver with a strong faith in God. Others will see him as nothing but a crazed madman, one willing to shed other’s blood, a cold-blooded killer. A weapon-waver willing to harm others to advance his beliefs.

“Old John Brown…agreed with us thinking slavery wrong. That cannot excuse violence, bloodshed, and treason. It could avail him nothing that he might think himself right.”

…Abraham Lincoln

On May 9, 1800, Owen and Ruth Brown welcomed their son John into the world. The Brown family lived in Torrington, Connecticut where Owen made his living as a tanner and a shoemaker. Faith played a major role in the lives of the Browns. The Browns were Congregationalists, members of a Protestant church where each congregation is managed by self-governing its own affairs democratically and independently. Congregationalist believe in the Bible and Jesus, but each member of the church has the “full liberty of conscience in interpreting the Gospel” as defined in the church’s “The Art and Practice of the Congregational Way.” Owen and Ruth’s baby son John, would grow to become a bold man who would act on his interpretation of the Gospel with violence.

Ohio became a state on March 1, 1803. Owen Brown moved his family from Connecticut to Hudson, Ohio in June 1805 where Owen made a living for his family as a tanner. Hudson was a small town in the raw and tough frontier-land of the Connecticut Western Reserve of Northeast Ohio. Hudson was settled by David Hudson from Goshen, Connecticut in 1799. The Brown’s first year in Hudson was difficult. The family lived in a cold and drafty log cabin their first winter and survived by eating wild game and food borrowed from neighbors. The Browns cleared land the following spring and planted corn, but the seedlings were mostly lost to frost and wild animals. John Brown’s mother Ruth died three years later during childbirth. Father Owen remarried the next year, he made money now working as a tanner and by providing beef to General William Hull during the War of 1812.

Young John Brown would grow up in Hudson, Ohio and his life there would be one of sadness and loss. John worked at his father’s Hudson tannery and his school attendance was sparse. He was in Massachusetts and Connecticut for short times, but ended up returning to Hudson to open his own tannery with a half-brother. John Brown and Dianthe Lusk were married on June 21, 1820. John and Dianthe would have seven children together but two of their children died in childhood. Brown took Dianthe to Pennsylvania where she died giving birth to their seventh child in 1832. John Brown married Mary Ann Day in 1833 and they had thirteen children. Only six of Brown’s children with Mary Ann would live to adulthood.

Hudson was a town with strong abolitionist and anti-slavery leanings. Hudson was a town on the Ohio frontier where the National Antislavery Society had influence and followers. John Brown became a young man in Hudson with definite political, religious, and moral convictions. Brown was a supporter of John Quincy Adams. Adams favored the neo-Federalist American system, was a Calvinist, and was opposed to slavery. John Brown felt that slavery was a “a great sin against God” and it was his Christian duty to help runaway slaves escape to freedom in Canada. John Brown let it be known that he would welcome and protect runaways who made their way to his Ohio home. It’s known that Brown helped at least one runaway gain his freedom.

A pro-slavery mob murdered newspaperman and anti-slavery supporter Elijah Lovejoy on November 7, 1837, in Alton, Illinois. At Hudson’s Congregational Church a prayer meeting was held to recognize Lovejoy’s martyrdom. John Brown sat on a back pew of the church quietly listening during the prayer meeting. As the prayer meeting came to a close, Brown stood up, raised his right hand, and made a vow to fight against slavery declaring, “Here, before God, in the presence of these witnesses, from this time, I consecrate my life to the destruction of slavery.” John Brown lived up to his vow to consecrate his life to the destruction of slavery. Brown would hang on December 2, 1859, for his Harpers Ferry Raid, a poorly devised plan by Brown to take over a Federal arsenal, arm slaves, and set them free.

In August 1855 abolitionist John Brown was traveling from North Elba, New York back to Hudson where his father Owen was waiting his arrival. John Brown was on his long way to Osawatomie, Kansas and Hudson was only a side-stop. In Kansas, Brown would join with other family members who were living there and hoping to make a new prosperous life off the rich Kansas land.

Father Owen was now eighty-four-years-old and although his mind was sharp and clear, his health was poor and failing. Owen became concerned about his son during John’s visit to Hudson. Owen wrote to a daughter in Osawatomie saying of John, “He has something of a warlike spiret [sic], I think as much as necessary for defence I will hope nothing more.” Old man Owen Brown was correct with his apprehension concerning his son John’s “warlike” intentions in Kansas.

While visiting Ohio, John Brown obtained money and weapons to take to Kansas. Brown indeed had a warlike spirit and the weapons he obtained in Ohio would be used in Kansas for more than mere defence. John said goodbye to his aged father and departed the Northeast Ohio small town of Hudson, a hotbed of abolition itself with Owen actively involved in the cause. Owen gave his eldest son forty dollars, John badly needed the money. This would not be the last time Owen would give his son money, but it was the last time the father and son would meet in person.

John Brown was an abolitionist who believed violence was justified to free the slaves. Brown was heading to Bleeding Kansas to spill more blood on Kansas soil.

“I have only a short time to live, only one death to die, and I will die fighting for this cause. There will be no peace in this land until slavery is done for.“

… John Brown, Kansas Territory, 1856.

The Sack of Lawrence, Kansas – A Step Toward A Civil War

Lawrence, Kansas was a small anti-slavery town founded in the fall of 1854 near the Missouri border. The town grew and by spring of 1856 Lawrence could boast of 1,500 residents. On May 21, 1856, over 800 Missouri “Border Ruffians” and other newly arrived pro-slavery supporters surrounded Lawrence and plundered the town as citizens fled for safety. The Border Ruffians were flying various flags of pro-slavery sentiment, one such was a red flag with the words “Southern Rights.”

The pro-slavery men first tried to destroy the Free State Hotel in Lawrence with cannon fire from “Old Sacramento,” a cannon taken by pro-slavery forces from the Liberty Arsenal in 1855, but the cannon failed to achieve the desired result so they set the hotel on fire. The office of the Lawrence newspaper Herald of Freedom was destroyed by the pro-slavers, the newspaper printing press smashed, and the printing type thrown into a river. The pro-slavery invaders blocked and guarded the roads to Lawrence and then looted the town, helping themselves to the possessions of the citizens. Only one death occurred during the Sack of Lawrence. A pro-slavery man was killed when part of the Free State Hotel collapsed on him. Kansas would remain a hotbed of pro-slavery and anti-slavery violence and disorder right up until the start of the Civil War.

What Was John Brown’s Pottawatomie Creek Massacre?

John Brown, 1859

John Brown, 1859

John Brown’s Kansas settlement, home, and headquarters were located nearby to Lawrence at what was known as Brown’s Station. At Brown’s Station Captain John Brown (as he was now referred to, the rank not being an official military designation) had some of his sons, other men, and weapons, all ready to advance the cause of Kansas becoming a free state by using violence.

Captain John Brown was on his way to Lawrence to help defend it from the Border Ruffians when news of the town’s sacking reached him. When he learned the town was taken by the Border Ruffians without any resistance from its citizens, Brown angrily exclaimed, “Had no one put up a fight?” Later, as Brown’s band of men were camped, Brown was talking with others about pro-slavery settlers at nearby Dutch Henry’s Crossing. It was overheard as Brown spoke, “Now something must be done, something must be done now.”

John Brown would lead eight men armed with the rifles, revolvers, and ominous, medieval-looking short, heavy broadswords, that Brown had brought with him from Ohio. Before leaving for Dutch Henry’s Crossing they took time to sharpen the blades of the broadswords. Son Owen Brown (named for his Hudson, Ohio grandfather) was a member of the eight-man party heading for Dutch Henry’s Crossing. Young Owen later explained, “There was a signal understood, when my father was to raise a sword–then we were to begin.”

James P. Doyle, William Doyle, and Drury Doyle

The Doyles were in bed on the night of May 24, 1856. There was a sound from the yard and then a knock at their cabin door. The Doyles were poor and illiterate folks from Tennessee who lived on a tributary of Pottawatomie Creek named Mosquito Creek. They were pro-slavery, but owned no slaves. Father James went to the cabin’s door and a voice from outside asked him for directions to a neighbor’s home. James begins to open the door but men armed with pistols and swords barge in. The intruders announce they are taking James and three of his sons as prisoners.

Wife and mother Mahala begs the rough men with eastern and northern-like accents not to take her youngest son, sixteen-year-old John. The men allow John to stay with his mother. They ask where they could find Allen Wilkinson’s home, the Wilkinsons lived about a half mile away from the Doyles. Captain John Brown and his men take James and the two oldest sons outside. Soon there is a gun shot. Mahala would later say, “My husband and two boys, my sons, did not come back.”

Master Simon Legree and slave Uncle Tom, a scene from Uncle Tom's Cabin.

Master Simon Legree and slave Uncle Tom, a scene from Uncle Tom’s Cabin.

At dawn the following morning Mahala and son John cautiously go outside their cabin. About two hundred yards away down the road John finds the bodies of his father and two brothers. All of the bodies have gruesome wounds. Twenty-two-year-old brother William lies dead with his head sliced open, his jaw and side slashed. John’s twenty-year-old brother Drury is found lying nearby. Drury’s body has fingers missing, his arms are sliced off, there is a hole in his chest, and his head is cut open. Father James has been shot in the head and stabbed in the chest. Anti-slavery and abolitionist John Brown and his men have spilled their blood and taken their lives.

James Hanway was an anti-slavery man who lived in Shermansville, a small place in Franklin County, Kansas. Hanway wrote an account what John Brown and his men did at Pottawatomie Creek, His account includes, “old man Doyal was shot through the head & stabed through the heart & his 2 boys where disherated cut about the hands – the younger boy’s hands were mangled as if he had held up his hands to defend himself from the blows of the saber.”

Allen Wilkinson

That night at Allen and Louisa Jane Wilkinson’s cabin she was ill with the measles. It was after midnight and their two children were in bed. Allen was a notable citizen of Pottawatomie Creek. Both Allen and his wife could read and write and he was a member of Kansas’ pro-slavery legislature. The Wilkinson cabin doubled as a post office. Like their neighbors the Doyles, the Wilkinsons were from Tennessee and did not own any slaves.

Louisa Jane heard their dog barking outside and woke her sleeping husband. Allen told her it was nothing to worry about. Soon the dog is barking again, but this time with greater anger and alarm. Now footsteps are heard coming from outside. A knock at the door and Allen inquires who is there. A man’s voice replies, “I want you to tell me the way to Dutch Henry’s.” From inside the cabin Allen begins to give directions, but the man outside interrupts him and demands, “Come and show us.” The unseen man asks Wilkinson if he is against Kansas becoming a free state and Allen says that he is. Now Allen is told by the man outside the cabin door, “You are our prisoner.”

The cabin door bursts open and four men rush in. Allen Wilkinson’s gun is taken and he is told to get dressed. An old man seems to be in charge of the intruders and Louisa Jane implores him to leave her husband, that she is sick and has two small children. The old man asks if she has neighbors and Louisa Jane says she does but is too sick to go for them. “It matters not,” is the old man’s reply and her husband Allen is taken away into the night.

The next day people come to the Wilkinson cabin looking for their mail. They find Louisa Jane cowering in fear and crying. She was too terrified to go outside and look for her husband. Allen’s body is located about a hundred and fifty yards from the Wilkinson cabin. His body is in brush near the creek, his throat is sliced open and there are gashes on his head and side.

James Hanway wrote of Allen Wilkinson’s death, “Wilkinson – the latter received 6 wounds each one would have proved fatal,” and “One was flung in the Creek down the bank. (Wilkinson) he was post master.” Captain John Brown and his men with broadswords have added Allen Wilkinson to their victims of slaughter list that night along Pottawatomie Creek. So far, with the Doyles and Wilkinson, the death total is four. One more would make it five.

And Old Brown
Old Osawatomie Brown,
May trouble you more than ever, when you’ve
nailed his coffin down!

…From the book “A Voice From Harpers Ferry” by Osborne Perry Anderson.

William Sherman

Henry and William Sherman were German immigrants, two pro-slavery brothers with a reputation for drunkenness and being menacing toward those who were anti-slavery. Henry had a store and tavern along a ford of Pottawatomie Creek and the area was known as Dutch Henry’s Crossing. Pro-slavery men liked to gather there. Captain John Brown and his men with broadswords came to visit at Dutch Henry’s Crossing that night of slaughter along Pottawatomie Creek. By chance, Henry Sherman was away that night trying to find cattle which had wandered off. Straying cattle were a stroke of luck that would save Henry’s life.

Family of African American Slaves On Smith's Plantation In Beaufort, South Carolina.

Family of South Carolina African American Slaves.

At Dutch Henry’s Crossing was a one-room cabin belonging to an employee of Henry Sherman’s named James Harris. In the cabin were Harris, his wife and child, and two men who were spending the night. These men had come hoping to buy a cow. Henry’s brother William was in the cabin too.

In the dark hours of early morning Captain John Brown and his broadsword men force their way into the Sherman cabin. They take James Harris and the two cow buyers outside for questioning. Having passed the questioning satisfactorily enough to spare their lives, the three are taken back inside the cabin. William Sherman is next to be taken outside. Some of Brown’s men are left to guard the cabin.

A short time passes and then a pistol shot comes from outside. The cabin guards leave, but first helping themselves to weapons, a horse and a saddle. Those remaining inside the Harris cabin spend the night in fear. When the sun comes up James Harris goes looking for William Sherman. He finds Sherman’s body lying in Pottawatomie Creek. Harris later testifies, “Sherman’s skull was split open in two places and some of his brains was washed out by the water,” and that, “A large hole was cut in his breast, and his left hand was cut off except a little piece on one side.”

Now there were five dead along Pottawatomie Creek in Kansas. All butchered by Captain John Brown and his men with broadswords. John Brown would not be brave enough to claim responsibility for the killings.

Brown’s son Jason had not been a member of his father’s Pottawatomie Creek broadsword gang. When Jason met up with his father he inquired:

“Did you have anything to do with the killing of those men on the Pottawatomie?”

“I did not do it, but I approved of it.”

“I think it was an uncalled for, wicked act.”

“God is my judge, we were justified under the circumstances.”

John Brown believed he was doing God’s work when five pro-slavery men along Pottawatomie Creek were hacked to death by broadswords. In the time that followed, John Brown would seldom speak of the Pottawatomie Massacre. He was reluctant to talk of what happened and of his part in the killings. If he did talk, then his explanation would be foggy and without clear admittance of his actions and guilt. He would say that he did not shed blood but was the leader. Does that wash him clean of guilt?

John Brown’s son Salmon was a member of the broadsword gang and he said, “Father never had anything to do with the killing but he run the whole business.” Salmon would also say, “The work was so hot, & so absorbing, that I did not at the time know where each actor was, exactly, or exactly what each man was doing.”

When Salmon Brown was an older man he told an interviewer and researcher that he had lied when he said his father had no active part in the killings of the Pottawatomie Massacre. He said his father had shot Allen Doyle in the head after he’d been killed by broadswords. In an odd explanation, Salmon said that the shot fired by John Brown into the dead Allen Doyle’s head was meant as a signal shot to the murdering party to gather and return to camp. Why would the signal shot be fired into a dead man’s head and not into the air or ground?

James Townsley drove a wagon for John Brown and his men the night of the Pottawatomie Massacre. Years later Townsley said John Brown killed Allen Doyle with a pistol shot. He claimed that Brown’s sons Frederick, Owen, Salmon, and Oliver killed William and Drury Doyle with broadswords. Another member of the Pottawatomie Massacre party was Thomas Weiner.

“Talk, is a national institution, but it does not help the slave.”

… John Brown.

And Old Brown
Old Osawatomie Brown,
May trouble you more than ever, when you’ve
nailed his coffin down!

…Anderson’s “A Voice From Harpers Ferry.” Earlier in his abolitionist career, John Brown was in Osawatomie, Kansas and there he murdered five pro-slavery men with help from four of his sons. This was Brown’s response to the pro-slave raid made on Lawrence, Kansas in 1856.

Did Kansas Become A Slave Or A Free State?

The Tragic Prelude by John Steuart Curry.

The Tragic Prelude by John Steuart Curry.

Bleeding Kansas was like a rehearsal for the Civil War. It was a place where anti-slavery and pro-slavery forces violently fought against each other civil war-like to decide whether or not a land would be free or slave. Kansas entered the Union as a free state on January 29, 1861.

Kansas In The Civil War

William Clarke Quantrill

William Clarke Quantrill

During the Civil War approximately 20,000 men from Kansas fought for the Union in nineteen infantry regiments and four artillery batteries. Union Kansas troops fought at Wilson’s Creek, Vicksburg, Chickamauga, Franklin, and Nashville. Approximately 1,000 Kansas men fought for the Confederacy and were known for guerrilla warfare, lawlessness, and bushwhacking. Famous Kansas bushwhackers include, William Clarke Quantrill, William T. “Bloody Bill” Anderson, and Jesse James. On the pro-Union guerrilla side, Kansas Red Legs and Jayhawkers made their raids on pro-slavery people, farms, and towns.

In August 1863 William Clarke Quantrill and approximately 400 pro-slavery men from Missouri staged a deadly and notorious guerrilla raid on Lawrence, Kansas. Quantrill and his raiders had a list of men to kill. When the Lawrence Massacre was over, 150-plus Kansas anti-slavery men or boys lay dead. The Civil War Battle of Mine Creek (or the Battle of the Osage) took place on October 25, 1864. It was a Union victory.

“The meteor of the war.”

…Author Herman Melville speaking of John Brown.

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Thirteenth Amendment Abolishes Slavery
John Brown Quotes
1850 Fugitive Slave Law
Slavery
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