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THE CHRISTIANA RIOT

CHAPTER IV.

THE ESCAPE AND PURSUIT OF THE SLAVES.

The Gorsuch Homestead and Its Proprietor--An Old and Prominent
     Maryland Family--The Runaways Absent for Nearly Two Years
     Before They were Pursued--The Warrants and Attempted Exe-
     cution.

     In Baltimore County, Maryland, on the west side of the
York and Baltimore turnpike, south of Monkton, and north
of Glencoe, stations of the North Central Railroad, stand
today the farm buildings of the Gorsuch homestead, where
and as they stood in 1849 and for a long time before.
Their earlier owner, John Gorsuch, devised this estate to
his nephew, Edward, with several hundred acres of land
and a number of slaves. It was a provision of his will that
certain of them should be free when they reached a fixed
age. In 1849 one of them at least attained this condition.
Jarret Wallace had during the period of his bondage so
served his master and was so appreciated by him that after
he became free Mr. Gorsuch retained him in his employ as
his "market man" to sell his products in Baltimore. In
November, 1849, he was building Wallace a tenant house,
and John Wesley Knight (who now lives in York, aged 83)
and Joshua Pitt, carpenters, were working for him at the
time. He had also millwrights, boarding and sleeping there
and then they were building him a saw mill on Piney Creek,
which ran through his extensive farm. Four of his slaves
were Noah Buley and Joshua Hammond--whose time was
nearly up--and two younger, about twenty-one years old,
named Nelson Ford and George Hammond who had six or
seven years to serve. The man Ford was a rather delicate
young fellow, and Mr. Gorsuch spared him heavy work.

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He was the teamster of the place, but was always accom-
panied by help when he needed it. Buley is described as a
copper colored mulatto and of treacherous disposition.
     Mr. Gorsuch was a man of much prominence. He was a
Whig in politics, a class leader in the Methodist church, a
dignified and courtly gentleman in his manners, a just and
accurate man in his business dealings, a kind hearted master
and employer and a man of forceful and determined tempera-
ment. He was born April 17, 1795, and was, therefore,
in his fifty-fifth year when his slaves escaped and in his
fifty-seventh when he was killed. He was living with his
second wife, and had five children of his first wife, two
daughters and three sons, of whom the eldest, John S., was a
Methodist clergyman, then residing in Washington, D. C.
There is no portrait extant of the elder Gorsuch, but his son
Dickinson resembled him.
     In the fall of 1849 Mr. Gorsuch had his wheat stored in
the corn house, a building which stood between the house
and barn. The main barn fronts and adjoins the turnpike;
the mansion house is some distance back of the road, reached
by a shady lane and surrounded by lawn, orchards and out-
buildings. In accordance with his habit Mr. Gorsuch kept
careful account of his wheat in store and of the quantities
withdrawn from time to time, as he made his grain all into
flour at his own mill and retailed it in Baltimore. Having
missed considerable of his stock, he made inquiry of a
neighbor miller, Elias Matthews, who reported a lot of wheat
sold to him by one Abe Johnson, a ne'er-do-well free negro
living two miles north of Gorsuch's, who had no land to
raise wheat nor credit to buy it. Gorsuch got out a warrant
for his arrest, and it was put into the hands of Constable
Bond for execution. He was laggard and "Bill" Foster
who was something of a local terror to wrong-doers, was
entrusted with the job. But Johnson got over into Pennsyl-
vania, and Governor Johnston subsequently refused to honor
a requisition for his extradition.

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     While the carpenters were building the tenant house and
the millwrights were putting up the saw mill, in November,
1849, the negroes were cutting and tapping the corn, haul-
ing in the unshucked ears with ox-carts to the barn floor
where, by aid of lanterns, the whole household, mechanics
and slaves engaged nightly in husking bee merriment. Mean-
time news of Bill Foster's search for Abe Johnson were rife;
likewise suspicious that the colored "boys" had helped him
to raid the cornhouse and shared his spoils. One day they
exhibited unwanted unrest and clustered into whispering
groups; one expressed to the white workmen special anxiety
to know "if the Boss is going to husk corn tonight," and
another declared his purpose to set a rabbit trap, for it was
"going to be a very dark night."
     It was. There was no corn husking; and Knight, the car-
penter, was aroused early by the call of Dickinson Gorsuch
from down stairs that "the boys are all gone." They escaped
through a skylight in the back building and made their way
down a ladder and up the York turnpike. When the Gor-
suches next saw any of them it was in the flash and fire of
the Christiana Riot, in the early dawn of September 11,
1851, at Parker's cabin.
     During the interval, however, reports reached the Gor-
suches from time to time of their whereabouts; messages
came from the runaways soliciting food supplies and other
aid, which were sent upon assurances of their return. Mr.
Gorsuch had such confidence in his benevolence as their
master that he always believed if he could meet or communi-
cate directly with them he could get them back. They soon
found their way into the vicinity of Christiana where they
"worked around" and were known by various aliases; after
nearly two years sojourn thereabouts their ownership became
known to those who made gain of such information.
     The personal narrative of Peter Woods, survivor, leaves
little room for doubt as to their identity and their residence

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around Christiana. He says: "They lived here among us
adjoining me. One lived with Joseph Pownall. His name
was John Beard. He was a little brown-skinned fellow--a
pleasant chap. The other three were known to us as Thomas
Wilson, Alexander Scott and Edward Thompson; Scott
was a tall yellow-colored fellow, with straight hair. The
colored fellows met at Parker's nearly every Sunday. A good
many got their washing done there. He had an apple-butter
party about the time of the riot. We knew that these new
colored fellows were escaped slaves. They were about the
Riot House and in our neighborhood a couple of years before
the riot. We colored fellows were all sworn in to keep secret
what we knew and when these fellows came there they were
sworn in too. Scott told how they four happened to run
away. He said he brought them with him in a big wagon
to Baltimore, or he said he had come with a big load of grain
for his master. He put them on the cars at Baltimore, then
sent his master's team back and took the next train too, and
that way they come up among the Quakers in this country
which they knew was a good point on the underground rail-
way. The people who owned these slaves or some of them
sent men up into this country some time before. One man
came to me one day while I was cradling wheat and said,
`You are a little man to cradle wheat, I am trying to find
three or four big colored men to cut wheat for me. Can you
tell me if there are any here that I can get?' I knew what
he was after, that he was looking for escaped negroes, and I
did not give him much satisfaction." The "John Beard"
whom Woods knew was Gorsuch's boy Nelson Ford--so he
told Cyrus Brinton.
     From Penningtonville (now Atglen, near Christiana),
August 29, 1851, there was mailed to "Mr. Edward Gor-
such, Hereford P. O., Balt. Co., M. D.," a letter which was
found upon and taken from his body after he was killed; the
following is a copy:

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LANCASTER, Co. 28 August 1851.     
Respected friend, I have the required
Information of four men that is within
Two miles of each other. now the best
Way is for you to come as A hunter
Disguised about two days ahead of your son and let him come
     By way of Philadelphia and get the deputy marshal John
     Nagle I think is his name. tell him the situation
And be can get force of the right kind it will take
About twelve so that they can divide and take them
All within half an hour. now if you can come on the 2d or 3d
     of September come on & I will
Meet you at the gap when you get their
Inquire for Benjamin Clay's tavern let
Your son and the marshal get out
Kinyer's* hotel now if you cannot come
At the time spoken of write very soon
And let me know when you can
I wish you to come as soon as you possibly can
Very respectfully thy friend          
WILLIAM M. P.       
(In pencil)       WM M PADGETT.     

* Kinzey's.


    About the same time there had come into Gorsuch's locality
a man (whose name is not known), purporting to be from
lower Lancaster County, who claimed to be able to locate
a number of slaves escaped from Baltimore County, among
them one of Dr. Pearce, who had escaped the same night as
Gorsuch's. Dr. Pearce was a son of the elder Gorsuch's mar-
ried sister Belinda.
     Acting upon these reports and under the authority of the
new Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, Edward Gorsuch, his son,
Dickinson, his nephew, Dr. Thomas Pearce, Nicholas Hutch-
ings and Nathan Nelson, neighbors and friends, came to
Pennsylvania to recover the slaves. Under date of Septem-
ber 9, 1851, the owner procured from Edward D. Ingraham,
United States Commissioner at Philadelphia, four warrants
directed to Henry H. Kline, Deputy United States Marshal,
to apprehend the fugitives. About the attempt and failure

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to execute those warrants, or any of them, circle the Chris-
tiana Riot and the Treason Trials of 1851.
     According to Dickinson Gorsuch's diary his father left
for Philadelphia "on the express train," Monday, Septem-
ber 8, 1851, and the others followed next day. The war-
rants had meantime issued and the Maryland party met at
Parkesburg on Wednesday, September 10. By arrangement
Constables John Agan and "Sheriff's Officer" Thompson
Tully of Philadelphia had come on to Parkesburg; Deputy
Marshal Kline went separately by rail to West Chester, took
a vehicle to Gallagherville, and started thence for Penning-
tonville [now Atglen]. His wagon broke down; he and his
man Gallagher hired another vehicle and reached Pennington-
ville about midnight ; his delay caused the party to discon-
nect. Agan and Tully and the Gorsuches stayed at Parkes-
burg. Meantime a light young colored man, named Samuel
Williams, of Seventh Street, below Lombard, Philadelphia,
recognized Kline at Penningtonville ; he likely scented his
real errand, and when Kline represented that he was after
two horse thieves, Williams told him they had left. When
Kline started for Gap he was followed by some one whom he
suspected to be Williams, and Williams no doubt sounded
a general alarm as to Kline's errand. He had been dis-
patched for that purpose from Philadelphia, where a Vigilant
Committee was on the lookout to protect fugitives. It was
also told by John Criley on information from Henry Murr,
blacksmith, that Joseph Scarlet, from a business trip to
Philadelphia early in the week, had brought like tidings
into the neighborhood.
     Kline and his associate slept at Houston's hotel, Gap, on
Wednesday night and returned early next morning to Parkes-
burg, where they found Agan and Tully; the Gorsuch people
had gone over to Sadsbury on the old Philadelphia turn-
pike and Kline rejoined them: Gorsuch went to Parkes-
burg to detain the Philadelphia officers, and Kline went to

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Downingtown and thence to Gallagherville, where the entire
searching party met, except Tully and Agan, who returned
finally to Philadelphia. About eleven o'clock at night the
party went from Gallagherville to Downingtown, took the
cars there after midnight, came through to Gap, where they
got off the train and went down the railroad track. About
2 A.M. they met Padgett (his name was not mentioned at
the trial). Presumably they joined him and left the rail-
road at the grade crossing of a public road to Smyrna,
formerly known as the "Brown House," which stood at the
northeast corner of the intersection. Padgett was a farm
hand at Murray's, the stone house at the top of the hill,
between Gap and Christiana on the Brown farm. The Mur-
rays had lived in Baltimore County, Md. There their local
guide led them, likely by or at least toward Smyrna and
through cornfields to the Valley Road, where the "long lane"
led southward through Levi Pownall's farm to the Noble
Road, across the Valley and near to Pownall's tenant house
on the southern slope, where William Parker and his brother-
in-law Pinckney lived.

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