The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

THE CHRISTIANA RIOT

CHAPTER III.

CONDITIONS ALONG THE BORDER.

On  the Different Sides of Mason and Dixon Line--Conflicts of Ideas
     and of Citizenship--Lower Lancaster County a Gateway-Terror
     of the "Gap Gang"-The Underground Railway-Outrages by
     the Slave Catchers and Kidnappers.

     Formal legislation and statutory enactments could not
repress the instincts of humanity. Involuntary bondage of
men, women and children was not consistent with either the
spirit of free institutions or the instincts of a progressive
citizenship. As it was impossible to prevent reckless and
degenerate men from abusing the processes of the law by
kidnapping and other forms of crime against the colored
race; and as it was impossible for the most humane and
philanthropic elements of slaveholding citizenship to pre-
vent constantly recurring barbarities and horrors resulting
logically from the legal recognition of property and traffic
in human flesh and blood, so it was impossible to forbid
thousands of good men and women throughout the North--
in all other respects law-abiding people--to secretly aid
and even to publicly promote the escape of slaves fleeing
from slavery. Nor could those who thus kept their con-
science while they broke the law discriminate between the
worthy and the unworthy in slave or master. There was no
time in the quick trips between the stations of the Under-
ground Railway to ascertain with precision whether the
passenger was fleeing from just or unjust treatment, whether
he had the character of a criminal escaping deserved punish-
ment, or of a bondman aspiring to a condition of freedom;
nor to judge and determine the individual merits and the
legal rights of the owner. Behind lay Slavery--beyond
blazed the North Star of Freedom.

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     Lower Lancaster County was at the gateway of this path.
For a comparatively short distance--only about five miles
--the Mason and Dixon line forms its Southern boundary.
Only two of its townships are in contact with Maryland, Ful-
ton and Little Britain, and the last named barely touched
the edge of the Southland of Slavery. In its citizenship
Lancaster County represented all the principal elements
which enter into our composite commonwealth. The more
numerous and important strain of blood, occupying the wider
and richer upper domain, was composed very largely of the
so-called Pennsylvania German sect and church people, who
had little fellowship with the negro race, little interest in or
sympathy with its cause and very slight personal contact
with its members. In the lower townships the principal
elements were the so-called Scotch-Irish Presbyterian and the
Friends; between them there was considerable friction, if
not antagonism; they had for nearly a century represented
different views of society and government. Their variance
was very distinct in their respective early attitudes toward
"the Indian question."
     It has been made the subject of forcible contrast that the
prevailing Quaker settlement of Fulton and Western Dru-
more townships, took on the more placid aspect of the Cono-
wingo, whose smooth meadows and flowery banks character-
ized these localities; while the eastern end of Drumore, Cole-
rain and Little Britain had peculiarly the type illustrated by
the more turbulent flow and rugged hillsides of the Octoraro.
Both streams find their outlet in the Susquehanna, and at
very nearly the same sea level. But in the days of the Fugi-
tive Slave Law and of local defiance of it the North bound
bondsman generally made his way to the Chester Valley
by Pleasant Grove and Liberty Square, rather than by Kirk-
wood and Nine Points.
     Of the two "schools" the Hicksite branch of Friends
was not only the more numerous in the Lower End, but its

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members were the more aggressive in their hostility to
slavery. The Presbyterian works out his humanitarianism
rather more directly through the law than around or under
it; and, while in many households of this faith, colored ser-
vants and farm hands found trusted and long continued
employment, the general attitude of the Scotch-Irish to the
slavery question was different from that of the Quaker;
socially the blood of the negro was more offensive to the more
aggressive race.
     There were, of course, far more than enough exceptions to
"prove the rule." Rev. Lindley C. Rutter, long the beloved
pastor of Chestnut Level Presbyterian Church, was one of
the most fearless and outspoken of the local Abolitionists.
Likewise "Father" William Easton, of the Octoraro United
Presbyterian Church. In the neighborhood of Quarryville,
where the German and Scotch Irish elements seemed to
meet, intermixture. of colored and white blood was not in-
frequent; and, contrary to the general laws of miscegenation
and degeneration, many of the mulatto, quadroon and octo-
roon people sprung from these racial intermarriages were
very respectable, honest and industrious citizens.
     On the north side of the Mine Ridge,. that range running
westward from Gap across Lancaster County, during the
"fifties" there was a considerable amount of outlawry on
the part of an organized "gang," whose depredations now
took on the form of kidnapping and again the less illegal,
but by no means more popular, practice of aiding the recap-
ture and return--regularly or irregularly--of fugitive
slaves. If their raids and robberies were the terror of the
farmers, millers, butchers and storekeepers of the peaceful
Pequea Valley, on the south side of which their strongholds
then lay, their incursions into the homes and haunts of
colored laborers beyond the Octoraro hills were no less cause
for alarm among the free or fugitive colored people than
they were of intense resentment and indignation on the part

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of the white friends, employers and protectors of the blacks.
     While then one trail of the Underground Railroad ran by
Columbia and Bird-in-Hand, whereon friendly hands passed
the fugitive from Stephen Smith to Daniel Gibbons; and a
branch led from Joseph Taylor's, at Ashville to Pennington-
ville and Christians, another had a continuous line of sta-
tions from the Gilberts and Bushongs around May, in Bart,
or later Eden township, out "the valley" to and past the
scene of what was to be the deepest tragedy which ever
thrilled this little community.
     Popular feeling was not wholly unprepared for it. The
conflagration was not a sudden outbreak. Combustibles had
been accumulating. Local incidents, such as escapes, man
hunts, kidnappings and other like events had occurred to an
extent sufficient to excite popular interest; and by rumor
they had been exaggerated enough to further inflame it;
numerous persons supposed or known to be ex-slaves resided
and worked in the neighborhood and were the subjects of a
qualified popular protection. There had been outrages on
one side and some reprisals on the other.
     In 1850 it was alleged that an innocent and free colored
hired man named Henry Williams had been seized without
right or legal process and sold into perpetual slavery South.
William Dorset had been taken from his wife and three
children and lodged in the jail at Lancaster. A gang of
three, who tried to take a maid servant from Moses Whit-
son's across the line in Chester County, were forcibly re-
sisted by a lot of colored men under the lead of Ben. Whipper.
The girl was rescued and her captors terribly, if not fatally,
beaten on the Gap hill. A negro known as " Tom-up-in-the-
barn," living near Gap, was said to have been captured
one morning on his way to thresh at Caleb Brinton's, and
never got back. The barn of Lindley Coates, in Sadsbury
township, was burned in 1850 by miscreants angered at his
denunciation of slave catchers and kidnappers.

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HOME OF THE GORSUCHES

"RETREAT FARM".  HOME OF THE GORSUCHES


     It was also related that an industrious negro fence-maker
had been violently carried off from his home on John Mc-
Gowen's place in the valley, near Mars Hill, between Chris-
tiana and Quarryville. The narrator of this (Forbes' "True
Story") does not tell whether the man was free or a fugitive
slave; and to his outraged neighbors this distinction made
little difference.
     The incident of most note occurring in the immediate
neighborhood, the influence of which lasted longest, the feel-
ing about which was most acute, and which figured largely
in the "Treason Trials" was what was stigmatized as "the
outtrage at Chamberlain's." Its scene was on the "Buck hill,"
in the northwestern part of Sadsbury township, on what is
now known as the "Todd place," west of the back road from
Gap to Christiana and in what was a sort of middle ground
between the operations of the "Gap gang" and the refuge
'territory of the fugitives. Here in March 1851 a posse,
claimed to be led by a rather notorious member of the "Gap
ggang," entered the Chamberlain house, severely beat a col-
ored man named John Williams employed there, who made
desperate resistance, terrified the members of the family,
and carried off their bleeding victim in a wagon. It seems
he was an escaped slave; but his captors exhibited no offi-
cial warrant of arrest nor made any claim of authority
except to declare they were acting for his master. It was
believed he died from their ill treatment of him.
     And there were reprisals.! William Parker--of whom
this narrative will have more to say--admitted years
afterwards that he had helped to beat, fatally he believed,
the captors of a colored girl; that he had tried to kill Allen
Williams on suspicion that he had betrayed Henry; that
he recaptured a kidnapped man on the West Chester road,
after shooting at his captors and being himself shot in the
ankle; and that he and his associates went to the home of
a decoy negro, burned it down and watched to shoot him

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with smooth-bore rifles "heavily charged" if the flames drove
him into the open.
     The leading people of this neighborhood were not only
anti-slavery in sentiment, but they resented what seemed to
be lawless invasion of their peaceful community; they were
not afforded means of verifying the authenticity of the claims
made for escaped slaves; the local people engaged in the
business of aiding in slave hunting and slave nabbing were
generally disreputable and sometimes themselves outlaws
and criminals; farmers and mechanics were disturbed in
their domestic service by the frequency with which attacks
were made upon their many and useful colored employees
and by the apprehensions to which they were all constantly
exposed. Withal a sense of protection was felt in the fact
that the most powerful leader of the bar of Lancaster County,
and its representative in Congress Thaddeus Stevens, was
outspoken in his denunciation of the Fugitive Slave Law.
Political discussion and sentiment in this immediate locality,
far more than in any other part of Lancaster County, was
focusing upon open defiance of and even physical resistance
to the enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Law. As early as
October 11, 1850, at a public meeting in Georgetown, Bart
Township, four miles from the later scene of the riot--
William L. Rakestraw presiding and Elwood Cooper Sec-
retary--a committee consisting of Thomas Whitson, Elwood
Cooper, Cyrus Manahan, Elwood Griest and Joseph Mc-
Clelland, reported and published vigorous resolutions de-
nouncing the fugitive slave bill, and declaring that they
would "harbor, clothe, feed and aid the escape of fugitive
slaves in opposition to the law."
     This was the state of popular feeling and these were the
social and political conditions prevailing in lower Lancaster
County, when the Gorsuch party set out from Maryland to
retake their escaped slaves by due and orderly processes of
law--from which mission the elder Gorsuch returned a

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GORSUCH CORN HOUSE

THE GORSUCH CORN HOUSE


mangled corpse and his son with a shot-riddled body; in the
attempt to execute which the officers of the law were put to
flight; out of which grew the arrest of two score men and
the indictment of more persons for treason than were ever
before or since tried for that crime in the United States;
the acrimonious relations of two neighboring common-
wealths for years; the open exultation of many persons over
the killing and wounding of citizens engaged in a lawful
undertaking, and the chagrin of many other orderly and law-
abiding people that the law of the land had been violated
in bloodshed and its officers successfully resisted.

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