Some believed that John Brown was a maniac more than a martyr, but history proves that he was more of a martyr. John Brown believed that all men should be considered equal and have the right to freedom. Beginning in his early childhood and all the way though his life, he had a passion to abolish slavery. Learning from a young age, that all men should have the right to freedom and equality, started a fire inside of John Brown. This was a burning passion to help free slaves and make the world a better place. John Brown was born in Torrington, Connecticut on the 9th of May in 1800. John Brown's parents were Owen and Ruth Brown. John had 6 siblings, and he was the 3rd oldest among the 6. Growing up Owen Brown taught his children of the Calvinists …show more content…
Calvinists in the early eighteenth century, started to believe that slavery would bring down the wrath of God, which is where John Brown's passion for anti-slavery began. In 1805, when John Brown was only 5, his family packed up their life and moved by oxcart t Northeast Ohio. On December 9th, 1808, John's Mother Ruth died during child birth. While the whole brown family was heartbroken, John took the loss especially hard. Not long after Ruth's death, Owen Brown got remarried to Sally Root, who was twenty years old. John never saw Sally as his mom, and never formed any kind of feelings toward her. Due to his Ruth's death, John grew up very bashful and timid around women, but at the age of twenty John married Dianthe Kusk. Dianthe, as John described her, " remarkably plain, but industrial and economical girl of excellent character." A year after John and Dianthe got married, they had their first son in which they named John Junior. John Brown and his wife had 3 children within the first 4 years of marriage. Within those 4 years, they also pioneered new land and settles in a section of northwestern Pennsylvania. In the northwestern territory, John
John Brown single-handedly created the sparks that led to the southern secession. John Brown was a religious man who believed in “an eye for an eye”. He was willing to use as much violence as necessary for his cause even if it was extreme. In 1864, John Brown lead a group of men to kill five pro-slavery men because of a rumor he heard about the murder of anti-slavery men. This tradesy is known as the Pottawatomie Massacre. Document B shows that Brown had “torn, hacked and disfigured” men at Pottawatomie. This brutal massacre proves that Brown’s actions were unheroic and ended up upsetting many men. When other pro-slavery men heard about his incident they were enraged. The murders of the men led to a series of violent events between the proslavery
However John Brown is someone who fought for what is right in his own mind without directions from other men. He was fully capable of knowing the surroundings around his world and was aware of how he was executing his action to fight for freedom for the slaves. However as he claimed that God came down and spoke to him to be the leader to free the slaves, John Brown took actions by his own choice and not by a superiority figure. He fought for colored choice by his own choice and not the choices of others. And in today's world the fight at Harper’s Ferry should not be counted as an act of terrorism but rather of act of free will to believe what is right for the country. John Brown is someone who fought for what is right in his mind. His mental state was not ill neither religious superiority controlled him to commit his actions. John Brown fighting for the freedom of colored men was his own choice and not the choices of other. He should be considered today as a true noble abolitionist who paved the way for equality for all and a hero to
John Brown was very similar to Nat Turner they both believed that they were chosen by god to lead slaves into freedom and if that required a fight then that was what they had to do. John Brown had a goal and that was to abolish slavery throughout the united states. The trouble in Kansas began when the Nebraska Act was signed by President Pierce, this act engaged that people make a determination on whether Kansas territory should be free or slave. In hopes that Kansas would become free of slaves, the opposing side which was named Border Ruffians invaded their territory and forced the pro-slavery election. After John heard about the fear of Kansas becoming a slave state and after also hearing that the Border Ruffians ransacked the town of Lawrence
John Brown thought that the way to overthrow slavery was through violence. John Brown also killed Pro slavery residents or to be more specific civilians that were pro slavery. He also justified his actions by saying it was the will of God, that he committed those murders according to Biography.com.
started. John Brown was an abolitionist, he wanted to overthrow the slavery system. They both
John Brown’s beliefs about slavery and activities to destroy it hardly represented the mainstream of northern society in the years leading up to the Civil War. This rather unique man, however, took a leading role in propelling the nation toward secession and conflict. Many events influenced Brown’s views on slavery from an early age. When he was older, his strong anti-slavery feelings had grown, and he became an extreme abolitionist. His raid on Harpers Ferry was one of the first monumental events leading up to the civil war.
During the eighteenth century, the opposition to slavery prior to forming the United States became increasingly stronger between the Northern and Southern territories. Prior to the 1830s, antislavery societies began to emerge from every corner to challenge the slave system and to help combat slavery. During this time, people had different ideas about how to confront the issue of slavery in the system and how to establish a freedom of oppression. In the eighteenth century, antislavery political activists believed the slave system would able to be changed through peaceful political reforms, while others felt that real change could only be achieved by violence. A radical white abolitionist named John Brown became a historical figure whose beliefs motivated the violent abolitionist crusade.
Brown's attack on Harper's Ferry affected American culture more than can ever be understood. Tension between the North and South was building in the 1850's. Slavery among many other things was dividing the country into two sections. Brown was executed on December 2, 1859 for his murderous out-lash on society. Was his mind so twisted and demented that he would commit cold-blooded murder? The answer is no. John Brown was a man with a goal and a purpose. When he said that abolition could not be achieved without blood he was right. It is one of histories great ironies; John Brown's struggle preceded the Civil War by only 17 months. Thousands of people were killed in the Civil War, yet John Brown
John Brown’s beliefs about slavery and activities to destroy it hardly represented the mainstream of northern society in the years leading up to the Civil War. This rather unique man, however, has become central to an understanding and in some cases misunderstandings about the origins of the Civil War. The importance of Brown’s mission against slavery was colossal to accelerating the civil war between the North and the South. His raid on Harpers Ferry in1859 divided the United States like nothing else before, and could have been the main event leading to the Civil War.
Should John Brown be considered a hero? John Brown is considered to be a “terrorist” in south but to north he is a hero. John Brown is a “terrorist” because he carried out a small army to kill the slave owners and non-slave owners who agreed with slavery in the south, but is also considered to be a”hero” because he “killed” slavery. He was a radical abolitionist because he believed that violence was necessary to free the slave. His men killed four people while as ten of his men were killed including his two sons.
“Generations of biographers and mythmakers have tried to fit Brown into ready-made molds: hero or villain, martyr or monster, prophet or madman. Others have labeled him strange and not important...But the man and his mission can’t be so easily dismissed.”(Horowitz Par 4). John Brown’s drive and violent passion for the abolishment of slavery have been a very controversial topic in many historians thoughts. With his numerous bloody attempts to have equal rights to all slaves some may call him a terrorist. But his ambition for the end of slavery and his efforts to reach that goal has made many people think of him as a hero of this nation. John Brown should be remembered as a hero in United States history.
John Brown: Right or Wrong about Abolition While John Brown had the right idea about abolishing slavery, he killed people because of it. However, he believed that it was his God-given mission to free the slaves, and so he employed the help of his sons and other people sympathetic to his cause. Even though he might have had good intentions and ideas, he went about abolishing slavery the wrong way. John Brown was a radical abolitionist who believed in the violent overthrow of the slavery system. (History.com Staff) He was born in Torrington, Connecticut, on May 9, 1800, to Ruth Mills and Owen Brown.
William Wells Brown was an additional key person slave-born child in the early 1800's in Kentucky. Later, William moved to Missouri with his slave master and then sold to another plantation where he was abused. Mister Brown escaped from Cincinnati, after being sold the second time. After reaching freedom, William helped 69 slaves to freedom (Sawyer,
The word freedom fighter comes to mind when people here the name John Brown. Another word is terrorist. I will be persuading you to think that john brown is a freedom fighter, and not a terrorist.
During the 1850s, Douglas was in the fore front in abolishing slavery, which was threatening, to tear the country apart. In the beginning, Douglas felt that John Brown’s anti- slavery ideas and plans were suicidal and he refused to engage in a raid on Harper Ferry. Brown’s activities saw him captured and hanged, an act which