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Law in Popular Culture collection

THE CHRISTIANA RIOT

CHAPTER VI.

THE FIGHT.

The Challenge to Surrender and the Defiance--A Long Parley-The
     Prompt Response to a Call for Aid--The Firing Begins--Flight of
     Kline and his Deputies--Gorsuch is Killed and his Son Terribly
     Wounded.

    Padgett, guide and informer, led the Southern and Federal
forces to within about a quarter mile of the Parker house,
where they stopped at a little stream crossing the long lane,
ate some crackers and cheese and "fixed their ammunition."
It was then just about daybreak; it was a heavy, foggy
morning; and Padgett found it was his time to withdraw.
As the party drew near to the short lane which led into the
house and little garden-orchard around it they were seen by
Nelson Ford and Joshua Hammond, two of the Gorsuch slaves
who had evidently been picketed. They retreated to the
house; Gorsuch and Kline followed and the Marshal officially
announced their errand. Some inmate of the house answered
that the men called for were not there; and when Kline, as
he testified, went to go up the stairs, followed by the elder
Gorsuch, a five-pronged fish "gig" was thrown at him; next
came a flying axe. Neither missile hit him; he and Mr.
Gorsuch withdrew, and he says a shot was fired at them from
the house and he returned the fire. Then Kline made a feint
of sending off for a hundred men "to scare the negroes."
His bluff had that temporary effect and a parley ensued.
During this it was made manifest that a considerable number
of armed men were in Parker's house.
     Meantime, on their way, the officers had heard a bugle
blown; conjectures differed whether it was a signal from the
Parker house or a summons for the laborers on the railroad

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to go to work. The evidence an this point was not positive,
but the besieged soon sounded their horn from the upper
story. Parker is quoted as saying that Kline threatened to
burn the house, and he defied him to do it; that Mrs. Par-
ker sounded a horn which brought their allies; and the depu-
ties fired at her as she sounded it, without causing her to
desist; that Pinckney counselled surrender, but Parker was
for fight. Parker's own accounts show no lack of self-asser-
tion nor absence of self-confidence. That may or may not
enhance their credibility.
     Some early summons called a mixed mob together, for
while the brief events already described were occurring,
Castner Hanway, who lived a full mile away, rode up on a
bald-faced sorrel horse; Elijah Lewis came on foot in his
shirt sleeves and a straw hat; Zeke Thompson, the Indian
negro, arrived with a scythe in one hand and a revolver in
the other; Noah Buley rode in on a handsome gray horse and
carrying a gun; Harvey Scott was there, weaponless; and a
half score of others armed with guns, scythes and clubs, were
assembled--far more than the upstairs of that little cabin
could have held, even without the women. Other white
men came trooping along, who in Parker's imagination were
Gap gangsters enrolled by Kline as "special constables";
but there is no satisfactory proof that these were anybody
but residents of the vicinage attracted to the place by the
commotion.
     The excitement and confusion that subsequently ensued,
the quick succession of tragic events, the prompt retreat of
the officers and the almost immediate flight from the vicinity
of their guiltiest assailants, and the fact that none of them
remained or ever returned to tell the whole story, combine to
make it difficult even now to aver with certainty what next
actually happened. It is, however, reasonably sure that
Hanway and Lewis were called upon to interfere and aid in
executing the warrants and they declined to do so; but they

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neither advised nor inspired any violence; nor does it appear
that they arrived on the scene by any pre-arrangement or
otherwise than from hearing that an attempt was being
made by some one to take negroes from the Parker house.
     Parker says Dickinson Gorsuch opened the next stage of
the battle by firing at him in resentment of a supposed insult
to his father, and that he knocked the pistol out of Young
Gorsuch's hand before "fighting commenced in earnest," and
the outside negroes then shot both Gorsuches. Deputy Kline,
who made himself somewhat ridiculous on the witness stand,
remembered most vividly how he himself went "over the
fence and out" through the cornfield and did not very clearly
account for the fatal renewal of hostilities. Joshua Gorsuch
testified, that as Edward Gorsuch started to the house in
answer to Kline's call to him to come on and get his prop-
erty, his uncle was murderously assaulted with clubs and he
fired a revolver to save his kinsman, but his cap burst and
the weapon did not go off ; he was severely beaten and ran for
his life, the infuriated crowd pursuing him; a thick felt hat
saved his life and be rode off from the battlefield behind some
one on a horse, supposing Edward and Dickinson Gorsuch
were already killed; his retreat ended only at York; but it
was months before he recovered from his wounds.
     Whoever else ran or stayed, the Gorsuches, father and son,
stood their ground and took the enemy's fire. Dickinson
warned the elder that they would be overpowered; but when
the parent declined to retreat the son stayed by him until he
was himself clubbed and shot down, as he went to the rescue
of his assaulted father. Eighty shot penetrated Dickinson's
arms, thigh and body--and many of them stayed there; so
that when he died in 1882--thirty-one years after he was
shot--his body prepared for burial was "pitted like a
sponge" with the marks of the "Christiana Riot." When
he was supposed to be dying Dickinson Gorsuch was taken
into the shade of a big oak tree, about fifty yards from where
the small lane then entered the "long lane."

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WILLIAM PARKER'S HOME

THE OLD RIOT HOUSE.  WILLIAM PARKER'S HOME.
THE PLACE WHERE THE BATTLE WAS FOUGHT.


     Dr. Pearce was hit with a missile from an upper window;
Nathan Nelson knew and recognized Buley, one of the run-
aways, and while, at the outset, only fifteen or twenty negroes
were lined in the lane with guns, scythes, clubs and corn
cutters, Nelson saw from seventy-five to a hundred before the
smoke of battle had entirely cleared. Sam Hopkins and his
historic corn cutter were among the later arrivals.
     One of the dramatic features of the engagement was the
appearance on the field of old Isaiah Clarkson. He sum-
moned fifteen or twenty infuriated and raging negroes into
the cornfield and "called them to order" three times before
he could quiet them, and withhold them from violence.
Meantime old Clarkson had seen the body of Edward Gor-
such lying alone where he fell dead, clubbed, cut and pierced
with gun shots, his son desperately wounded; his kinsmen
beaten and driven off; the United States deputies marshal
in full retreat--infuriated women, forgetful of all humane
instincts, revenging on a humane Christian gentleman's life-
less body the wrongs their race had suffered from masters
of altogether different mould, rushed from the house and
with corn cutters and scythe blades hacked the bleeding and
lifeless body as it lay in the garden walk. At the first hear-
ing Scott, the witness who afterwards swore differently on
the trial testified that he lived with John Kerr and had
stayed at Parker's out of doors in the road all that night,
having been persuaded to go there by John Morgan and
Henry Simms, who were armed; that he saw them both
shoot and Henry Simms shot Gorsuch; that John Morgan
cut him in the head with a corn cutter after he fell. Dr.
Pearce stated under oath that he saw Noah Buhly running
past Gorsuch, but he could not say that Buhly did the shoot-
ing. At the time Edward Gorsuch was shot he was standing
still calling his nephew Joshua and had no weapon in his
hand.
     It will never be known whose shot or how many killed

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Edward Gorsuch. More than one weapon was directed at
him and doubtless several were guilty of his blood. It was
not long until a consciousness of this fell upon the mob and
they scattered as rapidly as they had assembled. If the
Federal deputies had dispersed in fear and flight and the
local authorities were slow to move, neither were the
guilty laggard in flight. By nightfall every man inmate of
Parker's house and every runaway from Baltimore County
were on their way to Canada. Hay mows and straw stacks
weltered above the throbbing presence of trembling fugitives;
and all the local agencies of rapid news and transportation
which were at command of the anti-slavery people were set
in motion to get and keep the accused in advance of the war-
rants. Somebody tarried long enough on the Parker premises
to despoil Gorsuch's body of $300 or $400 in money, which
was on his person when he fell and which was missing at the
coroner's inquest. According to Tamsy Brown it was taken
from his body by a black man, who divided it among the
colored women and Abe Johnson. On a blank leaf of the
Padgett letter, heretofore printed, were found some memo-
randa made by Mr. Gorsuch himself of the railroad sched-
ules and names of persons in the neighborhood of the scene
of the affray, with whom it was supposed colored men resided,
together with the following:

Robert M. Lee
John Agen Henry H. Cline
Depatised
Marshal Kline
Lawyer Lee
and Benit
Commissioner
Ingraham
O. Riley's Telegraph
avoid Halzel
Councelman
Cpt. Shutt
J. R. Henson.

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     The significance of these entries will be recognized. No
weapons were found on the body. This of course does not
prove that Mr. Gorsuch was unarmed, as he easily might
have lost or have been despoiled of his arms. Fred Douglass
boasted that Gorsuch's pistol had been presented to him. His
family believe, and from his habits of life and temperament
it may be presumed, the elder Gorsuch was unarmed. He
depended mainly on the force of the law's warrant and, per-
haps too confidently, on the nerve of the Federal deputies
marshal.
      Dickinson Gorsuch was soon removed to friendly shelter
and tender ministrations under the hospitable roof of Levi
Pownall's homestead. There he learned to know that the
Quaker families of the valley, while they were considerate
of the slave, could be no less kind to the master in distress.
The daily entries of his diary attest his gratitude and appre-
ciation, and these he substantially manifested throughout
his lifetime. His contemporaneous portrait herein pub-
lished was taken from a daguerreotype sent to the Pownall
family. Dr. Asher Pusey Patterson, who attended him, was
then practicing at Smyrna. He was of the Lower End fami-
lies whose names he bore. Dr. John L. Atlee, Sr., of Lan-
caster, was called into consultation.
     During Dickinson Gorsuch's stay in the Pownall house-
hold he was visited in his convalescence by many of his Balti-
more County friends and relatives. Among them were his
brother John S.; his uncle Talbott Gorsuch; his sister
Mary (afterwards Mrs. Morrison) ; his cousin George and
others. It was ten days before he could eat and nearly three
weeks before he could sit up. By October 1 he could take a
short drive and was entertained next day at Ambrose Pow-
nall's. When he returned home in charge of some of his
family on October 4, Dr. Patterson accompanied them as far
as Columbia. During his recovery he had no more popular
visitor than his friend Alex. Morrison, who subsequently

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married his sister. Morrison is described by the older inhabi-
tants as one who "made friends everywhere." He kept up
his acquaintance with people about Christiana until his death
and visited there as late as 1903. He rejoiced in the establish-
ment of good relations between those who had been on opposite
sides of the conflict of 1851. Dickinson Gorsuch was 56 years
old when he died, August 2, 1882.
     Exactly when and how Parker, Pinckney and the fugitive
slaves got away from the neighborhood is difficult to tell with
absolute certainty; but a surviving neighbor throws light on
their movements immediately after the affray. George
Steele, now living in Chester County (who subsequently
married Elizabeth, daughter of Levi W. Pownall), was mak-
ing charcoal iron at the Sadsbury forges in 1851. He lived
near by the Parker place and recalls the events with great
distinctness. He met some negroes coming from the scene
exultant over its results and he warned them of their serious
danger. He says Parker first came to Pownall's to arrange
for Dickinson Gorsuch's removal there, but another neighbor
was already on the way with the wounded man. Both Parker
and Pownall remained hidden all day; the news of young
Gorsuch's serious condition brought many visitors to the
Pownall house; later in the evening Parker and Pinckney
themselves called and for the first time seemed to realize their
position. Some of the women members of the household
warned them; and, while Mrs. Pownall was nursing the
wounded man to life, she was sparing of her pantry supplies
to fill a "pillow case" with food for the fugitives; and her
husband, under whose roof Gorsuch was receiving every kind
attention, loaned of his clothing to their disguise--all being
carried to them by George Pownall, then a boy, who was
directed to find them at a certain apple tree on the farther
side of the orchard.
     At the "Riot House " the Pownalls found both Pinckney's
and Parker's loaded guns; and they prudently burned a lot of

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COL. ALEXANDER MORRISON

A SOUTHERN VISITOR
COL. ALEXANDER MORRISON, FRIEND AND KINSMAN OF THE GORSUCHES, 
WHO KEPT UP FRIENDLY RELATIONS WITH THE POWNALL FAMILY


found there, which would have incriminated some of
neighbors in violation of the Fugitive Slave Law.
The Pownalls later received anonymous information that
Parker had reached Canada. Gorsuch himself is said to have
expressed kindly feeling for Parker, which bears out the
theory that Parker tried to stem the riot after it attained a
deadly stage.
     Even they who were guiltless of their neighbor's blood were
not unmindful of the responsibility imposed upon their com-
munity by the violent killing of Gorsuch and the escape of
his slayers. His dead body was taken to Christiana and lay
at Fred Zercher's hotel, where Harrar's store now is and
nearly opposite the Commemoration Monument. There a
coroner's inquest was held before noon. The main facts of
the riot were related by Kline, "Harvey" Scott (who later
recanted), and others. John Bodley and Jake Woods testi-
fied that Elijah Lewis passed them in the early morning,
when they were working at James Cooper's, and that Lewis
said "William Parker's house was surrounded by kidnappers
and it was no time to take out potatoes."
     The coroner's jury, summoned by Joseph D. Pownall, Esq.,
consisted of George Whitson, John Rowland, E. Os-
borne Dare, Hiram Kinnard, Samuel Miller, Lewis Cooper,
George Firth, William Knott, John Hillis, William H.
Millhouse, Joseph Richwine and Miller Knott. Their find-
ing was:
     "That on the morning of the 11th inst., the neighborhood
was thrown into an excitement by the above deceased, and
some five or six persons in company with him, making an
attack upon a family of colored persons, living in said Town-
ship, near the Brick Mill, about 4 o'clock in the morning,
for the purpose of arresting some fugitive slaves as they
alleged, many of the colored people of the neighborhood col-
lected, and there was considerable firing of guns and other
fire-arms by both parties, upon the arrival of some of the

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neighbors at the place, after the riot had subsided, found the
above deceased, lying upon his back or right side dead. Upon
a post mortem examination upon the body of the said de-
ceased, made by Drs. Patterson and Martin, in our presence,
we believe he came to his death by gun shot wounds that he
received in the above mentioned riot, caused by some person
or persons to us unknown."
     Dr. John Martin and Dr. A. P. Patterson reported offi-
cially that Gorsuch came to his death by a gunshot wound
made by slug or heavy shot, occupying the upper part of the
right breast, and that there was an incision found near the
frontal bone, produced by a light sharp instrument, and a
fracture of the left humerus by some blunt weapon.
     It must be conceded, even at this distance in time, the
jury's thermometer of popular indignation at the crime
scarcely registered above the mark of "cold neutrality."
     Scharf's history of Baltimore County states that on Sep-
tember 13th and 15th meetings of citizens of Baltimore
County were held to take action in the premises. Wm. H.
Freeman, John Wethered, Samuel Worthington, Wm. Mat-
thews, Wm. Taggart, John B. Pearce, Samuel H. Taggart,
Wm. Fell Johnson, Wm. H. Hoffman, Edward S. Myers,
John Merryman, and Henry Carroll were appointed a com-
mittee to collect all the facts in the case and transmit them to
Governor Lowe, in order that he might lay them before the
President of the United States. Another committee, con-
sisting of John B. Holmes, Levi K. Bowen, Dr. Nicholas
Hutchins, J. M. McComas, and E. Parsons, was appointed to
confer with the gentlemen who had accompanied Mr. Gor-
such into Pennsylvania. A meeting at Slader's tavern, on
September 15th, passed resolutions calling upon the people
of each district of the county to elect delegates to meet at
Cockeysville on October 4th for the purpose of forming a
county association, and recommending the formation of dis-
trict associations " for the protection of the people in their

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slave and other property." An indignation meeting of six
thousand persons was held at Monument Square, Baltimore
City, on September 15th, at which Hon. John H. T. Jerome
presided, and addresses were made by Z. Collins Lee, Cole-
man Yellott, Francis Gallagher, Samuel H. Taggart, and
Col. George W. Hughes.

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