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John Brown
http://www.ifpda.org/content/sites/default/files/imagecache/enlarged/artworks_by_dealer/82/Kieche l%20Fine%20Art_CURRY_john%20brown.jpg
http://www.cs.cornell.edu/nystrom/images/Antietam/fullsize/hf-john-brown_1.jpg
This is John Brown.
Was he a crazy religious man?
                          http://www.cs.cornell.edu/nystrom/images/Antietam/fullsize/hf-
                                                 john-brown_1.jpg
 Was he a freedom fighter?
This is John Brown.
       Was he a crazy religious man?
http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/images/943.jpg
          Was he a freedom fighter?
http://www.vintagepostcards.org/torrington-john-brown-abolition-slavery-black-americana-p-4593.html



He was born in this house in the the town of Torrington, Connecticut, in 1800.
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/congestion/state_information/images/us_map.gif
His father, Owen Brown, was a serious and very religious man.
Owen Brown was an abolitionist.
Owen and Ruth Brown had eight children.
Their family moved a lot.




                                                                http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/brown/timeline/index.html
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/congestion/state_information/images/us_map.gif




The family moved to Ohio.
John Brown’s father worked as a tanner.
Tanners make leather from animal skins.
John Brown learned to become a tanner from his father.
                                                     http://www.elpasoinfo.com/Merchant2/graphics/00000002/Cowhide_BlkWht-brindle2.jpg
When he was around 12 years old, Owen Brown sent his son John on a business
trip.
During the trip, young John Brown witnessed a master brutally beating a slave.
http://www.mostateparks.com/statecapcomplex/statemuseum/se_pics/beating.jpg




 For the rest of his life, he never
 forgot that experience.
When he was 16, John Brown moved back East to go to college in
Massachusetts.
He studied to become a minister.
                               http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/congestion/state_information/images/us_map.gif
John Brown became sick.
He also ran out of money.
He had to quit college and move back home.   http://www.clipartguide.com/_small/0808-0804-1112-1108.jpg
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/congestion/state_information/images/us_map.g
In 1820, John Brown married.
 He and Dianthe, his wife, moved to Pennsylvania.




John Brown and Dianthehad a big family.
He was a very strict and loving father.
John Brown bought a lot of land in Pennsylvania.
He opened a tannery and hired 15 men to work for him making leather.
He also earned money trading cattle and by working as a surveyor.
http://www.teachengineering.org/collection/cub_/lessons/cub_images/cub_navigation_lesson03_clipart2.jpg   http://nicubunu.ro/pictures/rpg/map.png




Surveyors measure land for maps.
They measure land so people can identify property boundaries.
http://rogallery.com/Lawrence_Jacob/Legend_of_John_Brown/Lawrence_Jacob-John_Brown-3




 The artist Jacob Lawrence painted this picture of JohnBrown surveying land.




For 12 years, John Brown engaged in land speculations and wool merchandising; all this to
make some money for his greater work which was the abolishment of slavery.
Jacob Lawrence (1917 – 2000) was an Atlantic City–born artist who lived in
Harlem.
In 1941, he painted a series of pictures about the life of John Brown.
http://www.kingfisherpress.com/images/Jacob%20Lawrence%20and%20Gwen%20Knight.jpg




Lawrence and his wife, the artist Gwendolynn Knight
John Brown and His Bible




Around the same time, in 1942, Pennsylvania artist Horace Pippin also created
a series of paintings about the life of John Brown.
http://store.encore-editions.com/gift/pippin.html
Pippin (1888 - 1946) was born near Philadelphia and studied at the
Pennsylvania Academy of Art on Broad Street.                http://www.museumsyndicate.com/artist.php?artist=213
John Brown had hard times.
His business skills were poor. He became broke.
Some of his children died.
In 1832, after their seventh child was born, Dianthe, died.
http://www.wvculture.org/HiStory/jbexhibit/bbsph03-0074.html
John Brown was bankrupt and responsible for seven children.

The next year, in 1833, he married a teenager, Mary Ann Daly.




           Mary Ann Daly Brown with two of their daughters.
  Mary Ann Brown had thirteen children.
  Altogether, John Brown had twenty children; eleven grew up to become adults.
                                                                        http://www.wvculture.org/HiStory/jbexhibit/bbsph02-0015.html
Brown and his family moved to Ohio in 1835.
In Pennsylvania and Ohio, John Brown worked on the Underground Railroad
helping slaves escape to freedom.                     http://mikeely.files.wordpress.com/2008/01/runaway-slaves-on-underground-railroad.jpg
Like many American abolitionists, John
Brown read this abolitionist newspaper,
The Liberator.
http://www.theliberatorfiles.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/Page_1_The_Liberator_No_17_April_23_1831.jpg

http://www.yale.edu/glc/images/garrison.jpg




                                  William Lloyd Garrison published
                                                     The Liberator.
In 1837, John Brown heard about the abolitionist, Elijah Lovejoy.
Elijah Lovejoy was a minister and a newspaper publisher.
He lived in Alton, Illinois.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Appletons%27_Lovejoy_Elijah_Parish.jpg
Lovejoy’s newspaper, the Alton Observer, printed stories supporting ending
slavery.
http://chestofbooks.com/reference/Wonder-Book-Of-Knowledge/The-Story-In-A-Newspaper.html
http://www.aperfectworld.org/clipart/nature/river.gif

S




Supporters of slavery did not like Lovejoy’s abolitionist newspaper.
They already destroyed three of his newspaper presses –angry mobs threw the
printing presses in the Mississippi River.
In 1837, after abolitionists helped Lovejoy get a fourth new printing press,
angry mobs burned the newspaper building.
Someone shot Elijah Lovejoy and killed him.
http://www.colby.edu/education/activism/images/quilt/lovejoy.jpg
                                 http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cUSWW/LB/gallery.html




In 1837, Abolitionists helped Lovejoy get a fourth new printing press.
Angry mobs burned the newspaper building.
Someone shot Elijah Lovejoy and killed him.
John Brown was angry about the murder of Elijah Lovejoy.


He chose to focus his life on one purpose: abolishing slavery.
“Here, before God, in the
presence of these witnesses,
from this time, I consecrate my
life to the destruction of
slavery!”




      He made a speech at Lovejoy’s
      funeral.



                http://ta-nehisicoates.theatlantic.com/John%20Brown.jpg
Brown wanted to do anything to help stop slavery.

In a letter to his brother, John Brown wrote that he and Mary wanted to
adopt an African American child and start a school for African American
children.

Brown invited African Americans to attend his church.
After some white church members became angry, he stopped going to
the church. (Some say the church kicked him out.)
                               http://www.kcpt.org/badblood/images/timeline/john-brown_lg.jpg




John Brown had a lot of troubles.
Several of children died from illness.
John Brown worked in the sheep business.
He became an expert on sheep and wool.
He and two of his sons moved to Massachusetts to start a wool
business.
http://www.colonialwilliamsburg.org/history/teaching/Rare_breeds/images/shearing_sheep.jpg

        http://www.mamaqilla.com/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderpictures/shrek-shorn.jpg


        http://www.medical-tools.com/shop/images/T/sheep-shear-double-bow-30cm.jpg

             http://independentstitch.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/yarn.jpg
Many farmers respected Brown as an expert in the wool business,
but he made bad decisions, lost a lot of money and had to end this work.
Brown heard Frederick Douglass, the escaped slave who made speeches about
abolition.
In 1847, he invited Douglass to his home for dinner. Douglass said this about John
Brown:
                                                                   "Though a white gentleman, he
                                                                     is in sympathy with the black
                                                                     man and as deeply interested
                                                                    in our cause…He thought that
                                                                   he had no better use for his life
                                                                   than to lay it down in the cause
                                                                              of the slave."




                   http://edison.rutgers.edu/latimer/freddug.htm
Brown heard about a rich abolitionist who helped free African American farmers
in New York state.

In 1848, Brown moved his family there to live with the community of African
Americans.
http://rogallery.com/Lawrence_Jacob/Legend_of_John_Brown/Lawrence_Jacob-John_Brown-6.html6.




John Brown formed an organization among the
colored people of the Adirondack woods to resist
the capture of any fugitive slave.
Why did African Americans
 need protection?


After Congress passed a law
called the Fugitive Slave Act,
many slaves who escaped were
worried about being arrested and
sent back to their masters.

Free African Americans were
sometimes kidnapped, too, and
forced to become slaves.
The Brown family farm in New Elba, New York.
                              http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:House_at_John_Brown%27s_Farm.jpg




Brown hired free African Americans to work on the farm.
He invited an escaping slave to hide in his home.
http://lightandsilence.org/images/brown/JohnBrownBibleB.jpg
After the Gold Rush of 1849, many people moved to California.
In 1850,California changed from being a territory to a state – a free state that
did not support slavery.
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~MAP/TERRITORY/1850map.html
Many Americans moved west to buy cheap farm land.
http://historyforkids.utah.gov/fun_and_games/photos/images/picturestocolor/large/wagon_train_photo_large.jpg
Many Americans moved west to Kansas territory.
http://historyforkids.utah.gov/fun_and_games/photos/images/picturestocolor/large/wagon_train_photo_large.jpg
In the 1850s, Kansas was not yet a state.
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~MAP/TERRITORY/1850map.html




                                                         Kansas
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/african/images/reynomap.jpg




In 1854, Congress passed a law called the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
The law explained that new settlers could vote if they wanted freedom or slavery in their
state.
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/african/images/reynomap.jpg
Free Staters   Pro-Slavery
Pro-slavery supporters from Missouri went to Kansas to fight Free-
Staters.




  http://myloc.gov/Exhibitions/lincoln/vignettes/TeamofRivals/ExhibitObjects/NorthandSouth1861.aspx?Enlarge=true&ImageId=79561e1b-12fa-4c1b-8c1d-213d8b93907b%3acc77ee60-f1b1-4f37-a804-a5648e473b3a%3a17&PersistentId=1%3a79561e1b-12fa-4c1b-8c1d-213d8b93907b%3a5&ReturnUrl=%2fExhibitions%2flincoln%2fvignettes%2fTeamofRivals%2fExhibitObjects%2fNorthandSouth1861.aspx
http://ktwu.washburn.edu/journeys/releases/sj2004/images/1707bleeding.jpg




John Brown’s sons did not want Kansas to allow
slavery.
They needed protection from proslavery supporters.
http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/douglasslife/dougl276a.jpg




John Brown’s sons wrote letters to their father asking for help.
In 1855, he traveled west with money and weapons to support his sons.
He also thought he would use his surveying skills to draw boundaries around
the state of Kansas.
This time was called
“Bleeding Kansas.”




                       In 1856, inthe city of Lawrence, Kansas,
                       proslavery supporters burned abolitionist homes
                       and newspaper offices.
Proslavery Representative
                                                                                                 Preston Brooks
                                                                                                of South Carolina


                                                                                                                        Abolitionist Senator
                                                                                                                         Charles Sumner
                                                                                                                         of Massachusetts




http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/resources/graphic/xlarge/sumner_caning_xl.jpg



Supporters of slavery fought abolitionists in the Capitol building in
Washington, D.C.
http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/douglasslife/dougl276a.jpg




In Kansas, John Brown was angry about the fighting in Lawrence and the
beating of Senator Sumner in Congress.
He and a group of men decided to fight proslavery settlers.
http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork11.html


                                                 http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork11.html




                         John Brown took to guerilla warfare.
John Brown, his sons and their friends fought battles against pro-slavery
supporters. In May, 1856, five pro-slavery supporters were murdered in Kansas.
People blamed John Brown and his sons.
Frederic Brown died in one of the battles.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:John_Brown_statue.JPG




This statue of John Brown is in
Osawatomie, Kansas, where his
son was killed.
http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork12.html




                                                       Pro-slavery men captured two of John
                                                       Brown’s sons.
                                                       Brown and his men fought a battle in
                                                       Black Jack, Kansas, to free them.




John Brown‘s victory at Black Jack drove those pro-slavery to new fury,
 and those who were anti-slavery to new efforts.
A painting in the Kansas state capital building remembers John Brown
and the fight to make Kansas a free state. (It became a free state in
1861.)   http://www.kansastravel.org/05statecapitol2.JPG




                                          The Tragic Prelude, painted by John Steurt Curry
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/african/images/treemap.jpg
The Browns left Kansas and went East.




                                        http://www.cleveland.com/nation/index.ssf/2009/06/john_browns_violent_antiracist.html
During this time, John Brown wrote the following in a letter:




                   http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4h2954b.html
John Brown decided that fighting was the only solution to end slavery.
 He made plans to start a war.             http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork13.html   http://rogallery.com/Lawrence_Jacob/Leg end_of_ John_Brown/Lawrence_Jacob -John_Brown-1 3.html




John Brown, after long meditation, planned to fortify himself somewhere in the mountains of Virginia
or Tennessee and there make raids on the surrounding plantations, freeing slaves.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4h2954b.html




For two years, Brown
traveled and made
speeches.
In the summer of 1859, Brown met with Frederick Douglas in southern Pennsylvania.
Brown tried very hard to convince Douglas to become involved in his plan.
When he thought the police were looking for him in 1858, Brown hid in Frederick
Douglass’s home in Rochester, New York.
In 1858, he traveled to Canada to get
                                                    support for the war.


                                                    While he was in Canada, he wrote a
                                                    Constitution for a new, abolitionist
                                                    government with freedom for all people.




John Brown made many trips to Canada organizing for his assault on Harpers Ferry.
http://blog.bearstrong.net/max256/uploaded_images/Santa-Fe-Trail---1940---Raymond-Massey-as-John-Brown-702526.jpg




    A scene from the movie The Santa Fe Trail.
How do you think this movie portrays John Brown?
http://www.suite101.com/view_image.cfm/
Brown met Harriet Tubman in Canada.
He respected her and called her “General Tubman.”
She agreed to help him fight the war.




                                         <a href="http://www.nubiangraphics.com"><imgsrc="http://i233.photobucket.com/albums/ee270/NubianGraphics1
He continued to make
speeches about his plan to
fight for freedom.


Rich abolitionists gave John
Brown money.




                http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:John_brown_abo.jpg
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/secretsiximages.html




Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe Thomas Wentworth Higginson                                                                                               Theodore Parker




   Franklin SanbornGerrit SmithGeorge Luther Stearns
          http://www.wpclipart.com/money/money_bag_green.png
Why did John Brown need money to stop slavery?
http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/photo/gallery/090421/GAL-09Apr21-1916/media/PHO-09Apr21-158900.jpg
http://www.civilwar.si.edu/slavery_brown8.html




  This is a pike.
http://blog.cleveland.com/nationworld_impact/2009/06/large_John-Brown-pike-Dennis-Frye-052009.jpg
http://www.kshs.org/cool3/graphics/pikelg.jpg




With some of the money, John Brown paid for 1,000
pikes in 1858.




 He also bought 200 rifles.
http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/image.php?rec=484&img=132




 His plan:                                1. Go to Harpers Ferry, Virginia, where the army had a lot of
weapons.
                                          2. Cut off train and telegraph communication.
                                          3. Capture weapons from the army’s rifle factories and the armory.*
                                          4. Get support from Virginia slaves to fight slavery.
                                                                          *armory: storage place for
After starting the battle in Virginia, Brown expected many slaves would escape
to join the fight for freedom.




        http://education.ucdavis.edu/NEW/STC/lesson/socstud/railroad/images/jbrown.jpg
http://www.civilwar.si.edu/slavery_brown4.html




                  Painting of John Brown
            by Ole Peter Hansen Balling (1823–
              1906)
Oil on canvas, circa 1873
There was gossip about John Brown’s plans, so he returned to Kansas.
He joined a group that went into Missouri and freed twelve slaves.
He lead the slaves on a 1,000 mile journey to freedom in Canada.




In spite of a price on his head, John Brown liberated 12 Negroes from Missouri plantations.
http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork16.html
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/congestion/state_information/images/us_map.g




In the summer 1859, John Brown went to Virginia to begin the war.
s
John Brown decided to start the war in the town of Harpers Ferry,
Virginia.                    http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/map1.gif
http://www.cleveland.com/nation/index.ssf/2009/06/harpers_ferry_park_offers_free.html
Why did Brown choose to start the war in Harpers Ferry?
Reason #1: Since the 1700s, the US army had rifle factories in Harpers
Ferry.
He wanted to capture the weapons to support his army.




                               http://www.historyofwar.org/Maps/century_1_115_harpers_ferry.gif
Reason #2: Brown believed his army could hide easily in the mountains
surrounding Harpers Ferry.
   http://www.kansasmemory.org/item/208759/page/1
In June, 1859, John Brown rented this farm owned by the Kennedy family
near Harpers Ferry.
He told his neighbors that his name was Isaac Smith.
He used the farm as the meeting place to begin the war.




                                http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jb
The Kennedy farmhouse today.
http://johnbrown.org/images/housebefore33.jpg




                                                http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jb
http://jaredfrederick.blogspot.com/2009/10/150-years-later.html
http://teacherlink.org/content/social/elementary/jb/jbrown1.gif
Brown asked his wife, Mary Ann, to come to Virginia, but she refused to
leave their home in New Elba, New York.




                              http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/family1.gif
John Brown’s son, Oliver, and his wife, Martha came to the farm.
They hoped the neighbors would believe they were an ordinary family.




                                                                   Brown’s daughter, Annie, came
                                                                               also.




                 http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/obwife.gif
http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork18.html




                                                                                   One of Brown’s men sent rifles and
                                                                                   pikes to the farm in boxes labeled
                                                                                   “Hardware” and “Bibles.”




July 3, 1859, John Brown stocked an old barn with guns and ammunitions.
He was ready to strike his first blow at slavery.
―When I washed dishes, I stood at the
end of the table where I could see out of
the window and open door if any one
approached the house.‖




                       Annie Brown and Martha watched out for nosey
                                       neighbors.
During July and August, men secretly arrived.
They stayed inside all day.
They came out to practice at night when no one could see them.




                                 http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jb
Smithsonian




In August, 1859, Brown met with Frederick
Douglas in southern Pennsylvania.
Brown tried very hard to convince Douglas
to join his plan to start a war.
―I at once opposed the measure.
 It would be an attack upon the
federal government and array the
whole country against us.
All his descriptions of the place
convinced me that he was going into
a perfect steel trap, and that once in
he would never get out alive.‖




                                    In the summer of 1859, Brown met with
                                    Frederick Douglas in southern
                                    Pennsylvania.
                                    Brown tried very hard to convince Douglas
                                    to become involved in his plan.
                                                             suicide.
                                    Douglass refused to participate.
                                    He said Brown’s plan was
Harriet Tubman was sick and unable to help.




                                              <a href="http://www.nubiangraphics.com"><imgsrc="http://i233.photobucket.com/albums/ee270/NubianGraphics1
Brown expected a lot men to join his war.
Only 21 men came to the farmhouse.
Twenty-one men joined John Brown's army in Harpers Ferry.
The men were African American and white,
              rich and poor,
              born free and born in slavery,
              college students and
              three of John Brown’s sons.
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/brownsarmy.html




John H. Kagi    Watson Brown                    Oliver Brown                                                         Owen Brown          Aaron Stevens




Shields Green       Dangerfield Newby               Lewis Leary                                                      Osborne Anderson   John Copeland
Edwin Coppoc          Barclay Coppoc   Francis J. Merriam   Charles Tidd




http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/jbrownjr.gif
Owen Brown   Oliver Brown   Watson Brown




http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/jbrownjr.gif
Shields Green   Dangerfield Newby      John Copeland, Jr.




Osborne Perry        Lewis Sheridan Leary       http://www.johnbrown.org/provisionalarmy.htm
The men discussed the plan.

                              http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/map1.gif
1. Go to Harpers Ferry, Virginia, where the army had thousands of
weapons.
2. Cut off train and telegraph communication.
                3. Capture weapons from the army’s rifle factory.
                4. Get support from Virginia slaves.
                                        http://www.historyofwar.org/Maps/century_1_115_harpers_ferry.gif
1. Go to Harpers Ferry, Virginia, where the army had thousands of
weapons.
             2. Cut off train and telegraph communication.
3. Capture weapons from the army’s rifle factory.
             4. Get support from Virginia slaves.
                                      http://www.historyofwar.org/Maps/century_1_115_harpers_ferry.gif
1. Go to Harpers Ferry, Virginia, where the army had thousands of
weapons.
             2. Cut off train and telegraph communication.
             3. Capture weapons from the army’s rifle factories.
4. Get support from Virginia slaves.  http://www.historyofwar.org/Maps/century_1_115_harpers_ferry.gif
1. Go to Harpers Ferry, Virginia, where the army had thousands of
weapons.
           2. Cut off train and telegraph communication.
           3. Capture weapons from the army’s rifle factories.
           4. Get support from Virginia slaves to fight slavery.
                                     http://www.historyofwar.org/Maps/century_1_115_harpers_ferry.gif
http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/hfcolor.gif




A View of Harpers Ferry
A View of Harpers Ferry




  http://www.kansasmemory.org/item/208759/page/1
A View of Harpers Ferry




Harper's Ferry, at the time of John Brown's raidA newspaper illustration of Harper's Ferry, at the time of John Brown's raid.Date: 1859
http://www.sonofthesouth.net/leefoundation/civil-war/1861/may/harpers-ferry-virginia.jpg




                    A View of Harpers Ferry
A View of Harpers Ferry Today
http://www.vacation2usa.com/i2_Harpers_Ferry_seen_from_Maryland_side_of_Potomac_River_s.jpg
http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork19.html




On Sunday, October 16, 1859, John Brown with a company of 21 men, white and black, marched on Harpers Ferry.

    http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork19.html
http://www.drawger.com/johnhendrix/?section=articles&article_id=7770



At first, the plan to raid Harpers Ferry worked perfectly.
They successfully cut the telegraph wires and easily captured the armory.




                                  http://www.historyofwar.org/Maps/century_1_115_harpers_ferry.gif
At midnight, the raiders kidnapped some slave owners and freed their
slaves.
One of the hostages was Lewis Washington, a great-grand-nephew of
President George Washington.
http://www.wvculture.org/history/jbexhibit/bbsph05-0068.html
Problems began when a train entered town around 1:00 A.M.


Hayward Shepherd, a free African American man train station worker,
warned the passengers about the raiders.


Brown’s men shouted at Shepherd to stop, but he did not.
Brown’s men shot Shepherd.

The first man killed by John Brown’s group was a free African American.




                http://www.jsfmusic.com/Uncle_Tom/Image20.gif
After five hours, Brown allowed the train to leave.




                 http://www.jsfmusic.com/Uncle_Tom/Image20.gif
The train arrived in Baltimore. Early Monday morning, the conductor
sent his supervisor a telegram:



Monocacy, 7.05 A. M., October 17, 1859.

Express train bound east, under my charge, was stopped this morning at
Harper's Ferry by armed abolitionists.

They have possession of the bridge and the arms and armory of the
United States.

Myself and Baggage Master have been fired at, and Hayward, the
colored porter, is wounded very severely, being shot through the body, the
ball entering the body below the left shoulder blade and coming out
under the left side.
There was no place for John Brown and his men to escape
 Around 3:00 PM, Monday afternoon, the raiders were forced to hide
 in the Engine House, a small building.




People in Harpers Ferry found out about the raid.
Around 7:00 A.M., farmers, shopkeepers and the militia got together.
They began shooting the raiders.
By 10:00 A.M, they surrounded John Brown and his men.
http://www.historyofwar.org/Maps/century_1_115_harpers_ferry.gif
http://z.about.com/d/afroamhistory/1/0/x/2/johnbrown4.jpg
The Engine
  House




http://photos.igougo.com/images/p67853-Harpers_Ferry-John_Browns_Fort.jpg
Both sides shot each other.
There was shooting all day.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/curriculum/socialstd/MH/Brown_Raid.JPG
http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork20.html




John Brown held Harpers Ferry for 12 hours. His defeat was a few hours off.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4h1545b.html




http://rwor.org/i/180/JohnBrown3.jpg
Oliver Brown was wounded. He begged his father to kill him and end his suffering.
Brown said, "If you must die, die like a man." A few minutes later he was dead.




           http://docsouth.unc.edu/neh/pendleton/pendl146.jpg
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4h1538b.html
Mary E. Mauzy lived in Harpers Ferry.
She wrote this letter to her daughter in England that Monday.


  To Eugenia Burton, Enfield, England
  October 17, 1859
  Monday afternoon
  4 o'clock
  Oh my dear friend such a day as this. Heaven forbid that I should ever witness
  such another.
        Last night a band of ruffians took possession of the town, took the keys of the
  armory and made Captive a great many of our Citizens. I cannot write the
  particulars for I am too Nervous. For such a sight as I have just beheld. Our men
  chased them in the river just below here and I saw them shot down like dogs. I saw
  one poor wrech [sic] rise above the water and some one strike him with a club he
  sank again and in a moment they dragged him out a Corpse. I do not know yet
  how many are shot but I shall never forget the sight. They just marched two
  wreches [sic] their Arms bound fast up to the jail. My dear husband shouldered his
  rifle and went to join our men May god protect him. Even while I write I hear the
  guns in the distance I heard they were fighting down the street.
  I cannot write any more I must wait and see what the end will be.
                                                               —M.E. Mauzy
citation?




The U.S. Marines arrived in Harpers Ferry late at night
on Monday, October 17.
They surrounded Brown and his men.
They ordered John Brown to surrender, but he
refused.
http://smith.mn/massey/santafe.jpg




                                     I prefer to die here.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f1/John_brown_interior_engine_house.jpg
John Brown’s Day of Reckoning
John Brown and many of his followers waited in a fire engine house for reinforcement by a
swarm of ‗bees‘ –slaves from surrounding area. But only a handful showed up.
On Tuesday morning, October 18, at 7:00 AM, the marines broke down the
doors of the engine house.




                                      citation?
http://www.loudounhistory.org/graphics/history-photos/john-brown-raid.jpg
http://www.britannica.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/john-brown-raid.jpg




The marines captured Brown and the men in three minutes.
http://beallairestate.info/kidnapped.html


A modern artist recreates the capture of John Brown by Lieutenant Israel Greene.
http://www.kansasmemory.org/item/208757/page/1



Bringing the prisoners out of the engine house at Harper's Ferry
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/brownsarmy.html




 John H. Kagi      Watson Brown                        Oliver Brown                                                   Owen Brown        Aaron Stevens




Shields Green     Dangerfield Newby               Lewis Leary                                                      Osborne Anderson   John Copeland

                killed in the raid         captured and executed                                                     escaped
These men escaped:


      Brown's son Owen,




                 Charles P. Tidd,        Barclay Coppoc, Francis J. Merriam,   and free African American
                             Osborne P. Anderson.
http://www.kansasmemory.org/item/208817
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/brownsarmy.html




These men were captured, tried in court and
hanged:




                                                                                                               John Brown



Shields Green     Edwin Coppock                                     John Copeland
Frederick Douglass was afraid that the police would think he was involved in
the Harpers Ferry attack.
He immediately left for Canada. In November, he sailed from Canada to
England.




            http://americanpicturelinks.com/Slavery.htm
Burying dead insurgents after Harpers Ferry Insurrection.
    A sketch of the dead Harpers Ferry insurgents being buried.
    Frank Leslie‘s Illustrated Newspaper, 1859




http://www.
Governor Wise, of Virginia and District Attorney Ould Examining the Wounded Prisoners in the Presence
of the Officers, the Reporter of the N.Y. Herald and Our Special Artist [Albert Berghaus]
                              Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, 29 October 1859




                ttp://www.vahistorical.org/johnbrown/raid_govwise.htm
Brown and the survivors went to jail and waited for their days in court.
After Brown's raid in Harper's
                                                 Ferry, the state of Virginia
                                                 imprisoned him in Charlestown.

                                                 This is the lock and key from the
                                                 door to his cell.

                                                 After his capture, he was restrained
                                                 with shackles and this collar and
                                                 handcuffs.

                                                 This noose was used to execute
                                                 Brown on December 2, 1859.
                                                 photograph by Michael Keller




http://www.wvculture.org/museum/civilwar2.html
http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/prison.gif
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/brownwounded.jpg




Brown, a wounded prisoner
   (Harper‘s Magazine)
The Trial of John Brown

                          http://www.famsf.org/fam/education/publications/guide-american/slide-15.html
http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/learning_history/brown/trial.jpg




The Trial of John Brown, at Charlestown, Virginia, for Treason and Murder.
                        Sketched by Porte Crayon (David Strother)
          A stricken John Brown is depicted in the center of the courtroom. 1859.
                          Historic Photo Collection, Harpers Ferry National Historic Park.
http://www.family-images.com/wv/WV%20CHARLES%20TOWN%20JOHN%20BROWN%20ARRAIGNED.jpg
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/browntoprison.jpg



Brown carried from court to prison.
http://www.legendsofamerica.com/photos-oldwest/JohnBrown1859-500.jpg
http://teacherlink.org/content/social/elementary/jb/jbrown1.gif




     John Brown made speeches in court
     and wrote a lot of letters while he was
     in jail.

     Americans all over the country read
     about him in the newspaper.
On December, 1859, the trial concluded.
John Brown was declared guilty and sentenced to death by hanging.
Mary came to visit her husband the day before his execution.
They spent four hours together.




                              http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/jbrown/family1.gif
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/lastmoments.jpg




The Last Moments of John Brown,
      by Thomas Hovenden
http://z.about.com/d/afroamhistory/1/0/0/3/johnbrown7.jpg
ttp://www.nps.gov/history/museum/exhibit
John Brown Going to His Hanging

      http://www.sai.msu.su/cjackson/p/pippin1.jpg




           http://www.museumsyndicate.com/item.php?item=5242
John Brown's Day of Reckoning
At the gallows, Brown told a guard, "Don't keep me waiting...Be quick."
http://www.johnbrowncominghome.com/images/johnbrown14.jpg
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_cIdKb8fftY0/STAz_W0mL3I/AAAAAAAAB7o/6JeRgozzKTY/s400/cap014.jpg
http://www.arts.wa.gov/public-art/legend-of-john-brown/Artwork22.html




                                                                        John Brown was found ―Guilty of treason and
                                                                        murder in the 1st degree‖ and was hanged in
                                                                        Charles Town, Virginia on December 2, 1859.
The Hanging of John Brown
The French artist and writer, Victor Hugo, drew this picture in 1860.
Europeans were disappointed that Americans chose to execute a man whose
goal was to free slaves.                                   http://www.vahistorical.org/johnbrown/after_hanging.htm
“I could live for the slave,
                                              but he could die for him.”




http://americanpicturelinks.com/Slavery.htm
http://z.about.com/d/afroamhistory/1/0/y/2/johnbrown5.jp   g
John Brown’s grave in North Elba, New York




     http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/browngravecolor.jpg
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/johnbrown/brownsarmy.html




John Copeland was hanged on December 16.
Before his execution, he said this:




     I am dying for freedom.
     I could not die for a better cause.
     I had rather die than be a slave.




                                                                                               John Copeland
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/4a/BrownMemorial1911.png
http://www.nybooks.com/galleries/david-levine-illustrator/1970/dec/03/john-brown/
http://www.youngheroesofhistory.com/images/JBB.JPG
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/John-Browns-Raid-on-Harpers-Ferry/Jason-Glaser/e/9780736862066
http://www.intpubnyc.com/Images/JohnBrownCover.gif
http://www.gilderlehrman.org/collection/online/johnbrown/detail3.html
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d5/John-brown-song-cs-hall-1861-librofcongress.gif
http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2009/12/01/opinion/02opedimg.html
"Marching On" — the Fifty-fifth Massachusetts Colored Regiment
Singing John Brown's March in the Streets of Charleston,
February 21, 1865
http://www.vahistorical.org/johnbrown/after_marchingon.htm
John Brown Test:


Write an essay with three paragraphs.

t Write a paragraph about John Brown's life. (5 sentences)
tWrite about the war Brown started. (4 sentences)
t Was John Brown a crazy terrorist? Was he a freedom fighter? Choose one opinion.
Support your answer with reasons. (5 sentences)


                      Email your essay: acohen@philasd.org
                      Due Monday, March 25, 2013.
Fin

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