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John Brown Martyr

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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

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