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Browsing named entities in James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown. You can also browse the collection for Nebraska (Nebraska, United States) or search for Nebraska (Nebraska, United States) in all documents.
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James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, chapter 1.13 (search)
Chapter 3: Southern rights to all.
The siege of Lawrence raised, the ruffians, on returning homeward, on the 15th of December, 1855, destroyed the Free State ballot box at Leavenworth; and, on the 20th, threw the press and types of the Territorial Register, the political organ of the author of the Kansas-Nebraska act, into the muddy streets of the little town, and the still muddier bed of the Missouri River.
The leaders of the riot did the writer of this volume the honor to say that the outrage was occasioned by an offensive paragraph emanating from his pen, and expressed themselves exceedingly solicitous to see him dangling in the air — for daring freely to exercise the rights of a free press!
This was my first public honor; a good beginning, I hoped, for a friend of the slave; and one which, ever since, I have striven to deserve.
The election, thus riotously interrupted by the ruffians at Leavenworth, was held under the auspices of a voluntary political organization; and t
Chapter 9: battle of Ossawatomie.
Captain Brown, after the fourth of July, returned to Lawrence.
Early in the month of August, General Lane entered Kansas by the way of Nebraska Territory.
The confidence that the fighting men felt in his military ability, made his return an event of historical importance.
Several revolting atrocities — the mutilation of Major Hoyt, for example, the scalping of Mr. Hopps, and a dastardly outrage on a Northern lady
On the following morning, a young lady of Bloomington was dragged from her home by a party of merciless wretches, and carried a mile or two into the country, when her tongue was pulled as far as possible from her mouth, and tied with a cord.
Her arms were then securely pinioned, and, despite her violent and convulsive struggles — But let the reader imagine, if possible, the savage brutality that followed.
She had been guilty of the terrible offence of speaking adversely of the institution of slavery.
Gilson's Geary in Kansas, p. 9
Chapter 11: return to the East.
As soon as the Missourians retreated from Franklin, John Brown, with four sons, left Lawrence for the East, by the way of Nebraska Territory.
When at Topeka he found a fugitive slave, whom, covering up .1 his wagon, he carried along with him.
He was sick, and travelled slowly.
Northern squatters, at this time, were constantly leaving the Territory in large numbers.
In coming down with a train of emigrants, in October, I met two or three hundred of these voluntary exiles — all of them having terrible stories of Southern cruelty to tell.
Not contented with having closed the Missouri River against Northern emigration, the South, through the Government, determined, also, to arrest the emigration from the Free States by the Nebraska route.
It was intended to stop and disarm my train; but a few forced marches defeated that design.
It was known that another large party was coming in after me: this train several companies of cavalry and artiller