![]() Marines storming the Engine House
(Harper's Weekly, Nov. 1859)
|
The Trial of John Brown: A Chronology |
| May 1800 |
John Brown is born in Torrington, Connecticut. |
| 1812 |
While in Michigan, John Brown lodges with a slave-owning
man. Brown's memory of seeing the man beat his slave with a
shovel inspires his hatred of slavery. |
| June 21, 1820 |
Brown marries Dianthe Lusk. His wife will bear five
children, but the birth of the last child causes her death in 1832. |
| August 31, 1831 |
Nat Turner leads a slave rebellion in Virginia that results
in the deaths of fifty-five white plantation residents and hundreds of
blacks. (Turner is captured and hanged with sixteen of his
cohorts two months later.) Turner's rebellion shocks the South
and influences Brown's planning for his later attack at Harper's Ferry. |
| June 14, 1833 | Brown weds the stable and stoical Mary Day, who is only sixteen at the time. Mary will give Brown thirteen more children. Only four of Mary's children will outlive her. |
| January 1836 |
Brown moves to central Ohio. Although beset with
economic difficulties, Brown establishes important connections in
Ohio's abolitionist network. His life's work begins to come into
focus as he becomes a stationmaster of the Underground Railroad and
gives speeches in support of repeal of state laws discriminating
against blacks. |
| Summer 1837 |
Brown is expelled from his church for escorting blacks to
pews reserved for white parishioners. |
| November 7, 1837
|
Anti-slavery minister and editor Elijah Lovejoy, who
editorialized against the lynching of a black, is killed when a mob of
angry whites storm his printing press in Alton, Illinois. The
murder of Lovejoy further radicalizes John Brown, and he vows during a
memorial service to end slavery. |
| Summer 1839 |
Brown begins to consider a plan to lead a slave revolt. |
| September 28,
1842 |
Brown is adjudged bankrupt by a federal court. He and
his family is left only with the bare essentials necessary to survive. |
| March 1846 |
John Brown and two of his sons move to Springfield,
Massachusetts, where he runs a wool distribution center. |
| November 1847 |
Black abolitionist leader Frederick Douglas visits the Brown
home, where Brown lays out his plan to lead a group of men on raids of
slave-holding southern plantations, followed by retreats into the
mountains. |
| Spring 1849 |
Brown moves to a farm in North Elba, N. Y., near Lake
Placid. North Elba is perhaps the first American community where
blacks and whites live together on generally equal terms. |
| 1849-1851 | Brown begins to focus on Harper's Ferry as the site of his attack, drawing sketches of log forts that he intended to build in the mountains surrounding the town. |
| 1854 |
The Kansas-Nebraska Act puts the decision of whether or not
to allow slavery in the new territories into the hands of the settlers
in those terrorities. |
| June 28, 1855 |
At a convention of Radical Political Abolitionists, including
Frederick Douglas, Gerrit Smith, and Lewis
Tappan, Brown held raise money for the Free State settlers of
Kansas. |
| October 7, 1855 |
John Brown and his party arrive in Brown's Station,
Kansas. A state of near anarchy exists in Kansas, after border
ruffians from Missouri perpetuate voter fraud and organize a bogus
legislature in Shawnee Mission that enacts draconian pro-slavery
laws. A competing Free State constitution is presented in Topeka
and ratified by settlers opposed to slavery. |
| January 24, 1856 |
President Franklin Pierce decalres the proslavery legislature
legitimate. |
| February 22, 1856 |
A Northern antislavery party, the Republican Party, is formed
in Pittsburgh, largely in response to news of fraud and violence of
proslavery forces in Kansas. |
| May 21, 1856 |
Proslavery forces storm the antislavery center of Lawrence,
Kansas, ransacking Free State printing presses and looting homes. |
| May 22, 1856 |
After delivering an antislavery speech on the floor of the
United States Senate, Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts is
severely beaten with a cane by proslavery Senator Preston Brooke of
South Carolina. |
| May 23, 1856 |
Enraged by news of the storming of Lawrence and the caning of
Senator Sumner, John Brown and six other radical abolitionists arm
themselves with guns and swords and leave Ottawa Creek, heading in the
direction of a proslavery settlement. |
| May 26, 1856 |
Brown directs the murder of five proslavery settlers in
Pottawatomie Creek, Kansas. The massacre causes southerners to
misread Brown's extremism as typical of the feelings of most northern
abolitionists, greatly affecting the course of subsequent events on the
national stage. |
| September 1856 |
Brown leaves Kansas for the East, the month after his badly
outnumbered men won a battle against proslavery forces at Osawatomie,
Kansas. Brown is henceforth often referred to as "Osawatomie
Brown." |
| January-March
1857 |
In Boston, Brown is introduced to important abolitionists who will provide financial and moral support for his antislavery activities. This group becomes known as the "Secret Six." Brown collects arms and hires Hugh Forbes, an experienced English military tactician, to be the drillmaster for the forces he is mustering for his planned attack at Harper's Ferry and elsewhere. |
| August 7, 1857 |
Brown arrives in Tabor, Iowa, where he and Forbes, for a
period of weeks, refine the plans for an assault on slavery. He travels
later to Kansas, where he finds the situation moving
towards peaceful resolution, as antislavery voters become a substantial
majority in the territory. |
| November 1857 |
Brown seeks recruits in Kansas for what by now is a clearly
emerging plan to lead an attack on the federal arsenel in Harper's
Ferry, Virginia. |
| February 1858 | Concerned about possible arrest for his activities, Brown hides out for three weeks in the Rochester, New York home of his friend, Frederick Douglas. |
| April 1858 |
Brown proposes a new
(rather utopian) constitution, based on complete equality of the
races, at a convention in Chatham, Ontario. The convention elects Brown
commander-in-chief, John Kagi as Secretary of War, and Richard Realf as
Secretary of State. |
| June 1858 |
Brown, with Forbes now leaking information to key congressmen
about Brown's plans to attack slaveholders, travels to Kansas. |
| December 1858 |
Brown and his followers invade Missouri and appropriate
property and liberate slaves from two farms. Brown begins leading
the slaves on an 82-day one-thousand-mile journey to freedom in Canada. |
| Spring 1859 |
Brown travels through the northeast raising money and
increasing support for his cause. |
| June 1859 |
Brown leaves his home in North Elba for the last time. |
| July 3, 1859 |
Brown and three of his soldiers arrive in Harper's Ferry,
Virginia to scout out the federal arsenal for his planned attack. |
| July 1859 |
Brown rents a Maryland farmhouse near Harper's Ferry from Dr.
Booth Kennedy. He and various of his forces will stay at the Kennedy farm until their attack. |
| August 16, 1859 |
Brown meets secretly with Frederick Douglas at a rock quarry
in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, where Brown unsuccessfully tries to
convince Douglas to join him at Harper's Ferry. |
| October 16, 1859 |
Brown leads 21 men on an attack on the armory at Harper's
Ferry. They meet little early resistance and capture the
armory. Hostages are rounded up from nearby farms. In an
effort to prevent news of the attack from reaching Washington, the
baggage master of an eastbound train is shot, but then the train is
allowed to proceed. |
| October 17, 1859 |
With the arrival of the Baltimore & Ohio train in
Washington, news of the attack at Harper's Ferry reaches
officials. Local citizens begin to fire on the arsenal,
effectively pinning down Brown and his men. The bridge is seized
cutting off Brown's escape route, and he is forced to move with his
hostages into the engine house, a small brick building in the
armory. |
| October 18, 1859 |
U. S. marines, under the command of Lt. Col. Robert E. Lee,
surround the engine house. Brown refuses to surrender and the
marines storm the building. Brown and six of his men are
captured. Ten of his men (including two of his sons) are
killed. Brown is questioned for three hours. |
| October 27, 1859 |
After being declared fit for trial by a doctor, John Brown
faces the first day of trial for murder, conspiracy, and treason in
Charlestown. |
| October 31, 1859 |
The defense concludes its case, having argued that Brown
killed no one and he owed no duty of loyalty to Virginia, and thus
could not be guilty of treason against the state. |
| November 2, 1859 |
After 45 minutes of deliberation, the jury finds Brown guilty
of conspiracy, murder, and treason. Brown in sentenced to be
hanged in public on December 2. |
| December 1, 1859 |
After declining rescue attempts, Brown has a last meal with
his wife. |
| December 2, 1859 |
Brown writes a final letter to his wife. Around 11:00
he is led through a crowd of 2,000 spectators and soldiers to the
scaffold. He is pronounced dead at 11:50 AM. His body is
later taken to North Elba for burial at
the family farm. |
| April 12, 1861 |
Confederate forces fire on Fort Sumter and the Civil War
begins. |
| December 6, 1865 |
The Thirteenth
Amendment to the Constitution, abolishing slavery, is ratified. |