The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

THE CHRISTIANA RIOT

CHAPTER XI.

THE LATER TRIALS.

Legal Proceedings in Lancaster County--Prisoners Remanded to Local
   Jurisdiction--President Fillmore's Message--Attorney General
   Brent's Report--Final Disposition of the Cases in the Lancaster
   County Court--"Sam" Williams Tried in Philadelphia and
   Acquitted.

     There was, however, a very considerable political and
legal aftermath to the proceedings at Philadelphia. The
intimation of so eminent an authority as a justice of the
Supreme Court of the United States to the effect that some
official duty devolved upon the Lancaster County authorities
could not be ignored. Accordingly District Attorney John
L. Thompson, who was in his day one of the leaders of the
Lancaster County Bar, framed bills of indictment to the
January Sessions 1852 against many of those who had been
arraigned for treason in Philadelphia. On Wednesday,
December 31, Marshal Roberts brought to the Lancaster
County prison from Philadelphia the following persons:
Alson Pernsley, Lewis Gales, Lewis Clarkson, Charles Hun-
ter, Nelson Carter, Thomas Butler, Henry Green, Collister
Wilson and George Williams, --all these were on the same
evening discharged by the District Attorney, as he deemed
the evidence insufficient to warrant their detention.
     On the same evening George Williams was arrested as a
fugitive slave and taken to Penningtonville, where he took
advantage of the sleepiness of his captors and walked off, and
"straight was seen no more," to the great chagrin of Henry
H. Kline, the officer who made the arrest, and of the owner
of the slave, who was asleep on the floor.
     Saturday, January 3, 1852, Marshal Roberts brought to

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Lancaster as prisoners John Morgan, Jacob Moore, Ezekiel
Thompson, Isaiah Clarkson, John Williams, John Jackson,
Benjamin Johnson, George Read, Daniel Causeberry, Ben-
jamin Pendergrass, William Williams, John Holliday, Wil-
liam Brown, Elijah Clark, William Brown, Jr., and Henry
Sims, as prisoners, and five colored persons as witnesses. The
witnesses were discharged on their recognizance to appear at
Court to testify.
     Public and political interest in the Riot and the Trials
was not allowed to flag from inattention to the issues they
involved by those high in authority. From "the seats of
the mighty" deliverances were heard against what was in-
terpreted in some quarters as successful offensive resistance
to law. In his early message to Congress in December, 1851,
President Fillmore had these paragraphs, relating to the
events at Christiana.
     "It is deeply to be regretted that in several instances
officers of the Government, in attempting to execute the law
for the return of fugitives from labor, have been openly re-
sisted and their efforts frustrated and defeated by lawless and
violent mobs: that in one case such resistance resulted in the
death of an estimable citizen, and in others serious injury
ensued to those officers and to individuals who were using
their endeavors to sustain the laws. Prosecutions have been
instituted against the alleged offenders so far as they could
be identified, and are still pending. I have regarded it as my
duty in these cases to give all aid legally in my power to the
enforcement of the laws, and I shall continue to do so wher-
ever and whenever their execution may be resisted."
     "Some objections have been urged against the details of
the act for the return of fugitives from labor, but it is worthy
of remark that the main opposition is aimed against the
Constitution itself, and proceeds from persons and classes of
persons many of whom declare their wish to see that Consti-
tution overturned. They avow their hostility to any law

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which shall give full and practical effect to this requirement
of the Constitution. Fortunately the number of these per-
sons is comparatively small, and is believed to be daily dimin-
ishing; but the issue which they present is one which
involves the supremacy and even the existence of the
Constitution.''
     At an anti-slavery meeting, in Philadelphia, held on De-
cember 18, 1851, Joshua R. Giddings and Lucretia Mott were
speakers. The large audience grew tumultuously enthusi-
astic over the presentation on the platform of Castner Han-
way and Elijah Lewis.
     After the trial William H. Seward sent the following
Christmas greeting to District Attorney Ashmead, whose
son, Henry G. Ashmead, historian of Delaware County and
resident of Chester, cherishes the manuscript; Mr. Seward
was then in his first term as United States Senator, but had
already distinguished himself as an anti-slavery leader

WASHINGTON December 25, 1857 

My Dear Sir,
     I thank you for the kind remembrance manifested by you sending me
a copy of your opening Argument on the late Trial for Treason. While
I cannot but rejoice in the result of that trial as a new assurance of the
security of Popular Liberty, I am not unable to appreciate the ability
with which you have maintained the untenable position which the Govern-
ment was made to assume. The argument is highly logical and eloquent,
and I cannot better manifest my good wishes for you and for the Country
than by expressing a hope that it may be the good fortune of the cause
of truth and justice hereafter to enlist you on their side.
I am, my dear Sir, 
Very respectfully & truly 
Your friend,  
WILLIAM H. SEWARD.
John W. Ashmore, Esq.,
   District Attorney of the United States
     Philadelphia

     In his message to the General Assembly of Maryland at the
following January Session, Governor Lowe referred at length

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to the Gorsuch tragedy. Despite the assurances of the Federal
administration through Secretary of State Daniel Webster,
that all the energies of the law would be exerted to bring
the offenders to justice, Maryland had felt constrained to
actively participate in the prosecution. "The blood of a
Marylander," he declared, "cried out from the earth; whilst
the Genius of the Union called aloud for a vindication of
outraged laws." Otherwise "the flame of excitement would
spread from the hills of Maryland to the savannahs of the
extreme South, until every southern State would unite in
one common feeling of horror and indignation." Senator
Cooper had been retained by him; and despite the high ability
and signal service of both him and Maryland's Attorney Gen-
eral, there had been a gross miscarriage of justice. With a
fervor of rhetoric that was more common then in State papers
than it is now, he declared: "Shall domestic feuds destroy
our power, when the eyes of all nations are turned to the
star of our empire, as the harbinger of their deliverance?
Shall Kossuth blast Hungary with the breath of our discord ?
Shall O'Brien, in his lonely exile, see the hope of Ireland
pass down the horizon, with the western sun? May so in-
calculable a calamity be spared to the nations of the earth.
And yet, when American blood is made to flow upon
American soil, as a grateful libation to American fanaticism;
when whole communities stand listlessly by, and a prosti-
tuted press and venal politicians are found, in the open day,
to glory in the human sacrifice; when the Law proclaims
its own weakness from the Bench, and Treason stalks un-
punished, through the halls of justice; the Nations can judge
of the probable remoteness of that calamity."
     The official report of his Attorney General justified the
Governor in becoming somewhat heated over the outcome at
Philadelphia. Mr. Brent had suffered not only some per-
sonal irritation over his position there, but a keen profes-
sional disappointment in his failure to convict. The blame

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for this he distributed very generally among the people of the
North who sympathized with resistance to the Fugitive Slave
Law; the partisan character of the jury panel; the partiality
of the daily press reports; the sympathy of the spectators;
the treachery of the prison officials; the bribery of Scott, the
government's witnesses ; and egregious errors of law com-
mitted by Judge Grier. Even the amiable Marshal did not
escape criticism, as evinced by this paragraph:
     "I brought to the attention of the court, the fact stated
in the `Pennsylvania Freeman,' that the Marshal (Mr.
Roberts) had actually dined with the prisoners, or some of
them, during the trial, on Thanksgiving day, and when I was
about to read the article from the paper I was stopped by his
Honor, Judge Grier, who in behalf of the Marshal, denied the
truth of the statement that he had so dined; but unfortunately
for the Judge's interposition, the Marshal immediately after-
wards made his own explanation, and admitted that he had
not only assisted at the dinner, `but had set down and par-
taken sparingly' of the Thanksgiving dinner, with the white
prisoners. I cannot but consider such conduct as highly un-
becoming that officer from whom, next to the Judge, we had
a right to expect impartiality and a due regard for decorum."
     It is only fair to all concerned to say that the Attorney
General's indignation was not taken very seriously. Attorney
Jackson's history of the case corrects some of his exaggera-
tions, and especially points out that all of Mr. Brent's col-
leagues exculpated Marshal Roberts from any misconduct.
Judge Kane's own son was known to have extended various
kindnesses and courtesies to the prisoners.
     Mr. Brent's complaint on this score seems almost ridiculous
when one reads the full particulars of the affair, as published
in the Philadelphia Freeman of December 4, 1851. That
newspaper says:
     "It affords us great pleasure to state, that the Christiana
prisoners were not wholly forgotten on Thursday last in the

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distribution of the good things pertaining to Thanksgiving.
Thomas L. Kane, Esq. (son of the Judge), sent to the prison
for their use six superior turkeys, two of them extra size,
together with a pound cake, weighing 16 pounds. The tur-
keys were cooked with appropriate fixings, by order of Mr.
Freed, the Superintendent, in the prison kitchen, by a female
prisoner detached for the purpose. The dinner for the white
prisoners, Messrs. Hanway, Lewis and Scarlet, was served in
appropriate style in the room of Mr. Morrison, one of the
keepers. The U. S. Marshal, A. E. Roberts, Esq., several of
the keepers and Mr. Hawes, one of the prison officers, dined
with the prisoners as their guests. Mayor Gilpin coming in,
accepted an invitation to test the quality of the pound cake,
Mrs. Martha Hanway who has the honor to be the wife of the
`traitor' of that name, and who has spent most of her time
with her husband since his incarceration, served each of the
27 colored `traitors' with a plate of turkey, potatoes, pound
cake, &c., and the supply not being exhausted, all the prisoners
on the same corridor were similarly supplied.
     "Who will stand best with posterity--the father who prosti-
tutes his powers as a judge to procure the conviction of peace-
able citizens as traitors for refusing to aid in the capture of
fugitive slaves, or the son who ministered to the wants of those
citizens while incarcerated in a loathsome prison? Need we
answer the question?"
     The Maryland witnesses do not appear to have had as
cheery a Thanksgiving as the prisoners. Dickinson Gorsuch's
diary had this entry

     "THURSDAY, Nov. 27. "Thanksgiving Day. This has been a great
holiday here; there was no court today. We went to Mr. Ashmead's
office and stayed awhile. John Bacon went home after the clothes I wore
when I was shot."

     During their imprisonment the colored people and their
families were largely supported by outside friends and
sympathizers; and many an item such as this, recorded in the

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cash book of B. L. Wood (father of Mrs. David W. Jackson),
is set down to the credit of sympathetic friends:

10th mo. 8, 1851. Dr. 1 pair of pants and 1 shirt given to Elijah Clark
     in Moyamensing; also sent his wife qr. middlings.

     In another respect the official complaints of Maryland's
Governor and Attorney General against Pennsylvania justice
call for correction at even this late day. Both aver that "the
murder" of Kennedy, a slave owner, at Carlisle, killed in
resistance of the fugitive slave law, went utterly unpunished.
The facts are that in that offense the rioters and rescuers
were led by John Clellans and he and thirty-six others were
indicted. Besides Clellans twelve of the accused were con-
victed of riot and of riotously rescuing fugitive slaves from
the lawful custody of their owners. Judge Hepburn sen-
tenced them to solitary confinement at labor in the Eastern
Penitentiary far three years. Charles Gibbons represented
them on an appeal to the Supreme Court; and Deputy At-
torney General (District Attorney) Bonham for the Com-
monwealth, argued before that tribunal that Pennsylvania
followed the law of England, which upon conviction for riot
authorized fine, imprisonment and the pillory, and therefore
sentence to the penitentiary was lawful. Justice Burnside
delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court, declared "it
was an aggravated case of riot"; but that as Pennsylvania
had adopted the English common law, the imprisonment must
be in the county jail, and the final judgment of the court was
that as the prisoners had been confined in the Eastern Peni-
tentiary about three-fourths of a year, "we deem this as
severe a punishment as if they had been confined in the county
jail, where they legitimately should have been sent, for two
years." (Clellans vs. Com. 8 Barr. 223.)
     Meantime the friends of Hanway, Lewis and others, in-
censed at the continued prosecutions in Lancaster county,
assumed the aggressive.

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     They procured the indictment to the January Sessions,
1852, No. 38, in Lancaster County, of Deputy Marshal
Henry H. Kline, for perjury. It was laid in this indictment
that he had sworn falsely at the hearing before Alderman
Reigart, wherein he averred that he had shown his warrant
to Hanway, asked him and Lewis to spare his men, that they
defied the warrant and encouraged the rioters and in various
other particulars. Upon this bill of indictment appeared the
names of a large number of witnesses, and Kline was held
in $1,000 bail before Charles G. Freeman, alderman of Phila-
delphia, to answer at the Lancaster Court.
     It appears from the subsequent history of the case that all
parties involved were by this time willing to have "somebody
help them to let go"; and accordingly at the January Ses-
sions, Joseph McClure, of Bart township, being foreman of
the jury, this bill against Kline far perjury, being No. 38,
was ignored, and also the following, indictments all to the
same sessions and for Riot: No. 57, William Brown; No. 58,
Wm. Williams; No. 59, Henry Green; No. 60, William
Brown, Jr.; No. 61, Benjamin Johnson; No. 63, Daniel
Caulsberry; No. 64, George Wells; No. 65, George Williams;
No. 66, Alson Pernsley; No. 67, Lewis Gales; No. 68,
Lewis Clarkson; No. 69, Chas. Hunter; No. 70, Nelson
Carter; No. 71, Jacob Woods, a brother of Peter Woods; No.
72, Peter Woods; No. 73, Israel Clarkson; No. 74, John
Williams; No. 75, John Jackson; No. 76, Castner Hanway;
No. 77, Elijah Lewis; No. 78, John Morgan; No. 81, Ben-
jamin Pendergrass; No. 82, John Halliday; No. 83, Thomas
Butler; No. 84, Elijah Clark; No. 85, Collister Wilson.
     With this termination of the cases in the local courts all
prosecutions were finally ended except that of Samuel Wil-
liams, in the United States District Court at Philadelphia.
He was there charged with interfering with the execution of
warrants for the arrest of Noah Buley and Joshua Ham-
mond, runaway slaves. His case was first called for trial on

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January 5, and continued until January 12. Mr. Ashmead
and Messrs. Ludlow appeared for the prosecution, and R. P.
Kane, W. S. Pierce and David Paul Brown for the defense.
The following jury was empanelled to try his case; the last
name on the list will be recognized as that of an estimable
citizen of Lancaster County
     Pratt Roberts, Chester County; Thomas Vaughan, Phila-
delphia; Henry McMahen, Philadelphia; Patrick McBride,
Philadelphia; Michael Keenan, Philadelphia; Fredk. Boley,
Sr., Philadelphia; Joseph Dawden, Chester County; Samuel
Culp, Germantown; Minshall Painter, Delaware County;
Joseph Thornton, Philadelphia; Francis Parker, Cheater
County; Peter McConomy, Lancaster.
     Kline was the principal witness on this trial, and his testi-
mony was practically a repetition of what he had sworn to in
the Hanway case. The trial judge fell ill during the progress
of the case and it was continued the third time and resumed
on February 2, argued to the jury on February 3, and, on
February 4, a verdict of "not guilty" was rendered.
     This closes the record of all judicial proceedings arising
out of the Christiana Riot.

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