John Brown was once an abolitionist who believed that slaves should have freedom and after the trial of Dred Scott a once freed slave in his hometown who was unfortunately classified as a slave after traveling to a state that still had slaves he decided to matter into his own hands. John gathered about eighteen individuals which included slaves that set out on a journey to fight against anyone who was against anti-slavery but his main focus was to attack the slave owners. Unfortunately his plan was quickly interrupted when Colonel Robert E. Lee and a group of troopers captured John Brown. John Brown’s army rapidly dwindled when six were captured, some were murdered and the others ran away cowardly in fear that they would be captured and harmed.
John Brown, an abolistionist who previously murdered five proslavery men in 1856, seized a federal arsenal in Harper's Ferry, Virginia. His plan was to start a slave uprising, however it failed and he was caught, he was hanged for treason. Document 7 states that both sides, North and South, were both basically surprised; however some Northerners "began to call Brown a martyr for the sacred cause of freedom." Southerners were outraged that such a man would do this, and mobs would even assault people who held or were suspected of holding antislavery opinions. It also scared Southerners (especially those who held slaves) because they were afraid of slave uprisings. This was one step to the Union
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
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
“Col. Robert E. Lee's Report Concerning the Attack at Harper's Ferry” Civil War Trust http://www.civilwar.org/education/history/john-brown-150/lee-report-concerning-the-attack.html. Accessed 10 March 2017
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
When John Brown made an army out of his followers, he planned to get more abolitionists together to fight against slavery and for the people’s rights. “On the evening of October 16, 1859 John Brown, a staunch abolitionist, and a group of his supporters left their farmhouse hide-out en route to Harpers Ferry, […] Brown had hopes that the local slave population would join the raid and through the raid’s success weapons would be supplied to slaves and freedom fighters throughout the country; this was not to be”. Although his raid was 26 hours, John Brown’s objective was to capture the slaves and to get the weapons for their defense; he captured the slaves and tried to free them so he was morally right although getting in to the arsenal without permission was legally wrong. Some
He was an abolitionist, and in other words, someone who strongly supported the end of slavery. This violent rebellion not being quite enough for slavery despising Brown, the “radical abolitionist” (B) organized a raid on the Harpers Ferry arsenal in October 1859. Moreover, one of his goals was to free the slaves in Virginia, because at the time, Harpers Ferry was part of Virginia, a slave state, not West Virginia like it is today. As well, most importantly, Brown desired for his revolt to spread throughout the entire state. Brown instigated his bigger plans by first capturing the arsenal and then seizing its weapons to arm his followers. It was the evening of October 6, 1859 and Brown had assembled merely 21 men, a few of them his sons, all willing to die to put a bullet through slavery. According to Civil War Trust however, Brown’s raid was, “doomed from the start.” Foolishly, Brown did not possess the necessary ammunition for the weapons in the arsenal. Even worse, the slaves he attempted to recruit never attended. Soon enough, the Virginia and Maryland militia besieged the arsenal, leaving Brown and his men hopelessly and defenselessly trapped. Ninety marines prevailed by Confederate Colonel Robert E. Lee were commissioned by President Buchanan to culminate Brown’s insurrection. On Lee’s command, his soldiers attacked the arsenal and freed Brown’s prisoners he held there, one of them
Why would John Brown be considered a revolutionary if he did so many bad things to try to end slavery? John Brown was an abolitionist during the 1800’s. The reason why John Brown became an abolitionist was because when he was younger he witnessed a slave get harshly beaten and John did not like it. Brown also did not like the idea of people owning slaves. John Brown thought that if he could kill the slave owners, and free the slaves, that he could end slav-ery. John Brown died after he and a group of seventeen whites and five blacks attacked Harper’s Ferry, on October 16, 1859. John Brown was trying to get weapons for the slaves to fight with. General Lee’s troops fought back and ended up killing two of John Brown’s sons. Brown was hanged December 2, 1859.
John Brown was an abolitionist who attempted to free slaves. He had a strong hatred for slavery. Many abolitionists moved to Kansas since the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 which gave states the right to decide if they would allow slavery. They wanted to make Kansas a non-slave state. In 1855 Brown and his family moved to Osawatomie Kansas, he bought land and had a farm. In 1856 the town of Lawrence which was near where they lived was fiercely attacked and burned by men who were proslavery. Only a few short days later John Brown led his men he gathered up to Pottawatomie Creek, where they killed five proslavery settlers. On October 16. 1859, Brown along with sixteen white men and five black men led a raid on the U.S. arsenal at Harper’s Ferry
John brown was against slavery and a mad man. Thus making him travel to Kansas with his sons to fight for his cause, but well we was there a group of proslavery men had attacked and admonished the town of Lawrence. This event deepened his abhor towards the south; this resulted in Brown and his sons destroying cabins and drawing weapons at people in Potta creek. These 2 events led to the summer of 1859 being in complete guerilla warfare. On October 16 of the same year Brown, his sons , and 20 men marched down to Harper Ferry, West Virginia. That night Brown and his men had held 60 citizens captive in hopes of a slavery revolution outbreak but local slaves. When non came forward Brown and his “army” where shot at. In the end it impacted the country
John Brown was both, a hero and a terrorist. While he did manage to kill a lot of people he did have good intentions for it. John Brown, who is a leading abolitionist, did have the hope of helping to end slavery. He somehow managed to kill just a few people. Everyone messes up every once in a while, right?
John Brown, recalled by some as a martyr for his anti-slavery stance, is also recalled by others as a madman. His legendary raid on Harper’s Ferry will live forever in history books, but what fueled the madness? In 1812, was his mind so deeply traumatized when he witnessed the brutal crime of a young black boy beaten with a shovel that he could never move past it? Did that single event shape his life and play, over and over, in his mind like a never-ending film? No matter what you believe, the undisputed fact is that he was one of America’s first domestic terrorists.
John Brown was one of the causes to the civil war. The south didn’t like John Brown because he was against slavery. He also helped the slaves by trying to lead a revolt by giving them weapons. He was later hanged and there were two different views on John Brown. Some say that John Brown was a hero but others say he was a criminal, but I think John Brown was a hero and here are my reasons.
In this book/novel there were many heroes because it wasn’t just one person, yes Adam Brown was the mane person and the main hero, but he wasn’t the only hero. God was a hero, his wife was, his parents, and his friends all were heros. Fearless was full of heroes everyone in the military are heroes, but to just narrow it down and pick one it was Adam.
In John Brown’s Raid on Harpers Ferry by Jonathan Earle, Earle explains the life and events that led to John Brown committing the acts that he did. John Brown was a radical abolitionist who from a young age had the loathing for slavery instilled in his mind. John being the God-fearing man that he was, believed the crimes he carried out were apart of Gods will and purpose for him. Many knew John Brown as a freedom fighter, but to most, he was a terrorist. John fought for the freedom of slaves but went about it all the wrong ways. He perpetrated many crimes that led to him being known as the terrorist that he was. While his reason for action is easy to sympathize with, his way of making a difference was wrong. Although it can be argued that John was strictly a freedom fighter who made bad choices, John Brown ultimately chose to fight violence with violence making him just as guilty as the slaveholders he fought so passionately against. These actions eventually resulted in his death.