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THE CHRISTIANA RIOT

CHAPTER VII.

THE "PURSUIT" AND ARRESTS.

Federal and State Authorities in Conflict--"Rough Riding" the
   Valley--Numerous and Indiscriminate Arrests--Hearings in Lan-
   caster and Committals to Philadelphia.

     Whatever anybody was doing in the way of vindicating
whatever law or laws had been violated, the perpetrators of
the killing were being allowed to escape. There were no
daily newspapers in Lancaster then and the Philadelphia
journals of Friday, September 12th, had very meagre ac-
counts of the affair. But meantime the Federal officials in
Philadelphia and the Commonwealth authorities in Lancaster
County "got busy." Constable William Proudfoot, of Sads-
bury, acted under the direction of  Squire Pownall and Dis-
trict Attorney John L. Thompson. In Philadelphia John
M. Ashmead was United States Attorney, and Anthony E.
Roberts was Marshal. When District Attorney Thompson
made his second visit to the scene on Saturday following the
riot, accompanied by a "strong party of armed men," he
found there the United States Marshal, District Attorney and
Commissioner "with a strong force of U. S. Marines and a
detachment of the Philadelphia police." A controversy arose
between the local District Attorney Thompson and the United
States Attorney Ashmead as to whether the prisoners should
be held for murder in Lancaster County, or for treason
against the United States. Commissioner Ingraham sus-
tained the latter charge. The difficulty was adjusted by an
agreement that each party should make its own arrests.
Some forty-five United States Marines who went to Chris-
tiana, were in command of Lieutenants Watson and Jones.
United States Marshal A. E. Roberts had a civil posse of

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CASTNER HANWAY

CASTNER HANWAY
TRIED FOR TREASON AND ACQUITTED


fifty.  There were county constables and deputies sheriff on
the scene. With these three detachments landed in a little
country village and scouring the surrounding farms, of whose
inhabitants half the many blacks had fled the State and the
other half were in hiding, arid the whites mostly suspected of
sypathy with the fugitives, a local reign of terror ensued;
"the valley" was in a state worse than subjection to martial
law.  The tendency of a "little brief authority" is toward
abuse of it; and the class of persons easily secured for the
service then required of temporary officers of the law was
not such as to insure delicacy of treatment or tender con-
sideration for the objects against whom their summary proc-
esses were directed. Whites and blacks, bond and free, were
rather roughly handled; few households in the region searched
were safe from rude intrusion; many suffered terrifying
scenes and sounds.
     Peter Woods, sole surviving sufferer and prisoner of the
occasion, was working for Joseph Scarlet when he and his
employer were arrested. He tells his story thus to the author
of this history:
     "The day the fight happened I was up very early. We
were to have `a kissing party' that night for Henry Roberts;
and as I wanted to get off early I asked my boss, Joe Scarlet,
if he would plough if I got up ahead and spread the manure.
I started at it at two o'clock. The morning was foggy and dull.
About daylight Elijah Lewis's son came running to me while
I was getting my work done, and said the kidnappers were
here. They came to Ellis Irvin's farm, and then to Milt
Cooper's which is known as the Leaman farm. The morn-
ing of the riot I got there about seven or eight o'clock. I
met some of them coming out of the lane, arid others were on
from the house. I met Hanway on a bald-faced sorrel
horse coming down the long lane, and his party with him.
The other party, the marshal and his people, took to the
sprouts, licking out for all they could, and then took the

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Noble road. There were about sixty of our fellows chasing
them. The strange party got away. I got hurt by being
kicked by a blind colt on the hip. The shooting was all
over. Gorsuch had been killed before I got there. The
Gorsuch party was riding away, as fast as they could. I
guess I am the last man living of our party.
     "When Scarlet was arrested they were rough in arresting
him. They took him by the throat, and pointed bayonets
at him all around him. I said to myself if you arrest a white
man like that, I wonder what you will do to a black boy?
The arrests were made a day or two after the riot. I was
plowing or working the ground, and when I saw the officers
come to make the arrests, I quickly got unhitched and went
towards Bushong's, and soon there was six of us together
and we went to Dr. Dingee's graveyard and hid. We heard a
racket of horses coming and then we jumped into the grave-
yard. This was two days after the riot. We hung around
Rakestraw's too; and he said we could have something to
eat, but we couldn't stay around there. Then they got us.
They asked George Boone and James Noble who we are.
The man with the mace, the marshal I guess, said `I got a
warrant for Peter Woods.' They pointed me out and then
he struck me and then they tried to throw me. They ar-
rested me and took me up a flight of stairs, and then they tied
me. Then they started away with me and tried to get me
over a fence. They had me tied around my legs and around
my breast, and they put me in a buggy and took me to
Christiana. From there they took me to Lancaster, and put
me first in the old jail and then in the new prison."
     The accuracy of Woods' narrative is attested by the his-
torical record that at that very time the new Lancaster County
prison was just ready for occupancy. The first prisoners
were transferred to it on the day immediately following the
riot--September 12, 1851.
     Woods' further story of what occurred at Christiana has

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all the marks of verity:  "There at Christiana was [David]
Paul Brown and Thad. Stevens and Mr. Black. They had
quarters in `Old Harry's' store. We did not know who they
were counsel for, and we thought they were threatening us,
and trying to make us give away ourselves. Thad. Stevens
or some one said to me: `Who do you live with ?' They
had just brought me down from the Harry garret, and Fred
Zercher was there. Mr. Brown then asked me again how I
got up there into that garret, who put me there? I made
up my mind not to talk, and Brown said, `If you don't tell
we will send you to jail.' Then a mutiny broke out there.
George Boone and Proudfoot and others got in it. George
commenced striking and I got knocked over. Boone was
taking my part."
     Arrests were numerous and somewhat indiscriminate and
the charges varied, some relating to State and others to
Federal laws, and many of them involving capital crimes and
death penalties. All of them called for appearances and
preliminary hearings before J. Franklin Reigart, Esq., an
alderman of Lancaster City. He was a cousin of the late
Emanuel C. Reigart, Esq., and mingled the pursuits of let-
ters and law. His handsome picture in lithograph is the
frontispiece of his somewhat bizarre biography of Robert
Fulton, now something of a curio, once the ornament of
many centre tables in Lancaster County:
     Alderman Reigart was kept busy for some time issuing
warrants and having hearings that attracted great attention,
numerous and distinguished lawyers and ever increasing
popular interest. Among those taken into custody were
Elijah Lewis, storekeeper at Cooperville ; Joseph Scarlet,
farmer and dealer; Castner Hanway, miller at the "Red
Mill"; James Jackson, farmer; Samuel Kendig, all white;
and a large number of colored men and women, among them,
William Brown and William Brown, 2d, Ezekiel Thompson,
Daniel Caulsberro, Emanuel Smith, John Dobbins, Lewis

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James Christman, Elijah Clark, Benjamin Pendegress,
Jonathan Black, Samuel Hanson, Mifflin Flanders, Wilson
Jones, Francis Hawkins, Benjamin Thompson, John Halli-
day, Elizabeth Mosey, John Morgan, boy, Joseph Benn,
John Norton, Lewis Smith, George Washington, Harvey
Scott, Susan Clark, Tamsy Brown, Eliza Parker, Hannah
Pinckney, Robert Johnston, Miller Thompson, Isaiah Clark-
son and Jonathan Black. The officers claimed to have cap-
tured on the persons or premises of some of them heavily
charged guns, dirks and clubs.
     The examination of the persons charged before Alderman
Reigart for complicity in the affair began in the old Lancas-
ter County Court House, in Centre Square, on Tuesday, Sep-
tember 23, at 11 o'clock A.M. The appearances at this hear-
ing for the prosecution were Attorney General R. T. Brent, of
Maryland, John M. Ashmead, United States Attorney, Dis-
trict Attorney John L. Thompson, Colonel William B. Ford-
ney and Attorney General Thomas E. Franklin. For the de-
fense, Thaddeus Stevens, George Ford, O. J. Dickey and
George M. Kline appeared.
     The testimony of Dr. Pearce, Milton Knott and Deputy
Marshal Kline was relied upon to make out a prima facie
case. It was at this hearing George Washington Harvey
Scott, a colored man (who subsequently changed his testi-
mony in Philadelphia, and swore he was not even at Par-
ker's), testified that he saw Henry Simms shoot Edward Gor-
such, and that John Morgan afterwards cut him on the head
with a corn cutter. Lewis Cooper testified that John Long,
colored, was on his premises the evening before the occur-
rence "giving notice." He was with Henry Reynolds.
Long was described as a dark mulatto, five and one-half feet
high, and of slender make. The District Attorney argued that
the offense was treason, and asked that the persons be com-
mitted to answer at the Circuit Court of the United States.
Mr. Stevens made the opening speech before the Alderman,

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claiming that the defendant prisoners, especially Lewis and
Hanway, had not been identified as criminals or offenders;
he dwelt upon the local kidnappings that had occurred in the
night time, and charged William Bear and Perry Marsh
with participation in these offenses; he produced many wit-
nesses to the affair and to prove an alibi for some of the
colored men, especially John Morgan, and nothing worse
than inaction by Hanway and Lewis.
     The women were all discharged; and some of the men.
The names of those who were remanded to Philadelphia to
await trial in the Federal Courts for treason, together with
some others subsequently held, and some indicted in their
absence and never apprehended, will be found in the report
of the trial later in this history. James Jackson, father of
William Jackson, now of Christiana was so well known to
Marshal Roberts that he was released "on parole," though
subsequently indicted for treason. Mrs. Parker and Mrs.
Pinckney left the vicinity and made their way to their hus-
bands in Canada.

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