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THE CHRISTIANA RIOT

CHAPTER VIII.

THE POLITICAL AFTERMATH.

Partisans Quick to Make Capital out of the Occurrence--The Demo-
   crats Aggressive--The "Silver Grays" Apologetic, and the "Woolly
   Heads" on the Defensive--Effect of the Christians Incident on the
   October Elections.

     Thaddeus Stevens in September, 1851, was serving his
second term as Representative of the Lancaster County dis-
trict. As an anatganist of Southern ideas relating to
slavery, he "strode down the aisles" of the House with a good
deal more erectness of bearing than Ingersoll in his famous
nominating speech ascribed to the "Plumed Knight" from
Maine; and he struck the shield of his adversaries with a
much louder ring than was given out at the impact of Mr.
Blaine's lance. To his individual and official view--law or
no law, constitution or no constitution--slavery was "a
violation of the rights of man as a man"--freedom was the
law of nature. Like Mirabeau, "he swallowed all formulas."
But he was a lawyer, as well as a politician and moralist, and
while he announced his "unchangeable hostility to slavery
in every form in every place," he also avowed his "deter-
mination to stand by all the compromises of the constitution
and carry them into faithful effect"--much as he disliked
some of them, they were not "now open for consideration,"
nor would he disturb them. This again was practically an
admission of the abstract legal right of the master to re-
claim the fugitive.
     Mr. Stevens was first elected to Congress in 1848, when
Gen. Zachariah Taylor was elected President, and when he
died (July 9, 1850), and Fillmore, Vice President and a
Northern Whig, succeeded him, Stevens had been elected to
a second term, which lasted until March 4, 1853.

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     In those "good old days" a Congressman had some in-
fluence in the matter of Federal appointments. The United
States Marshal, who executed warrants and picked jurors in
Eastern Pennsylvania, was Stevens' personal and political
friend, Anthony E. Roberts. Mr. Roberts, who was a native
of Chester County, was then 48 years of age and long a promi-
nent citizen of New Holland. He had been sheriff of Lan-
caster County elected in 1839 as an avowed anti-Masonic
candidate, favored by Stevens. He was with him an active
anti-Mason and was a candidate for Congress in 1843, but
was beaten by Jeremiah Brown. President Taylor ap-
pointed him Marshal in 1849, and he filled the office until
the incoming of Pierces administration.
      The Intelligencer and Journal, then edited by George
Sanderson, was the regular organ of the Democratic party
in Lancaster County. It was a weekly publication, and at
that time a vigorous and exciting campaign for the State
election in October was in progress. Col. William Bigler of
Clearfield County was the Democratic nominee for Governor;
General Seth Clover of Clarion County for Canal Commis-
sioner, and for Judges of the Supreme Court the first ticket
presented by the Democratic party under the new elective sys-
tem bore the illustrious names of Jeremiah S. Black, Somer-
set; James Campbell, Philadelphia; Ellis Lewis, Lancaster;
John B. Gibson, Cumberland, and Walter H. Lowrie,
Allegheny.
     The Whig County organ was the Lancaster Examiner and
Herald, published and edited by Edward C. Darlington, who
was a conspicious leader of what was then known as the
"Silver Gray" faction of his party--being opposed by the
more aggressive anti-slavery men, of whom Thaddeus Stevens
was the leader, and whose followers were derisively styled
"Woolly Heads." The candidates of the Whig party on
the State ticket were: for Governor, William F. Johnston,
Armstrong County (a candidate for re-election) ; for Canal

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Commissioner, John Strohm, of Lancaster County, and for
Judges of the Supreme Court, Richard Coulter, Westmore-
land; Joshua W. Comly, Montour; George Chambers,
Franklin; William M. Meredith, Philadelphia, and William
Jessup, Susquehanna.
     The fact that the entire Supreme Court membership, then
numbering five, was to be elected, greatly increased popular
interest in the result. Pennsylvania was an October State.
The Darlington faction of the Whig party was in the ascend-
ancy and Darlington himself was on the ticket for Senator.
Moses Pownall, of Sadsbury Township, was one of the Whig
candidates for the Assembly. The regular Democratic Coun-
ty ticket had not yet been nominated, but the opponents of
Mr. Buchanan, who were stigmatized as disorganizers and
"Frazer Ponies," had named a County ticket.
     The first local publications of the tragic occurrences in the
Chester Valley appeared respectively in the Intelligencer of
September 16 and the Examiner of September 17, and their
local reports of the affair are illustrative not only of the lag-
gard journalistic enterprise of that day, but of the intense
partisanship which characterized newspaper management,
colored the reports of news occurrences and generally per-
vaded all journalistic work. The Intelligencer's account of
the affair was printed under a Columbia correspondent's
"Particulars of the Horrible Negro Riot and Murder," and
the editoral additions to this report commented on the dis-
graceful conduct of the "Abolition Whig Governor, absent-
ing himself from the seat of government" on an electioneer-
ing tour, while riots and bloodshed prevailed throughout the
Commonwealth, and citizens of an adjoining State were
"murdered in our midst." All these outrages, it charged,
could be traced to the Executive of the Commonwealth--
Governor Johnston was then serving his first regular term--
"roaming about in quest of votes, instead of being at his
post to enforce the utmost rigor of the law against the white
and black murderers."

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MAMMY KELLY

"AFTER THE WAR"
"MAMMY KELLY" WITH THE YOUNGEST GREAT GRANDCHILD 
OF EDWARD GORSUCH


     Further down the same column the editor rejoiced that
Hanway and Lewis and nine negro accessories had been ar-
'rested and were in prison awaiting trial for murder. Dis-
trict Attorney John L. Thompson and Alderman J. Frank-
lin Reigart were warmly praised for "ferreting out and
`grresting the guilty ones," while the deposition of Deputy
:Marshal H. H. Kline was presented as a most satisfactory
account of the "whole transaction."
     The Examiner promptly declared it to be a "dreadful
tragedy" and "one of the most horrid murders ever perpe-
trated in this County or State." Manifestly with one eye
upon the political consequences to the State and local Whig
ticket, and the other toward the Abolition faction of the
Whig party, to which Editor Darlington was opposed, his
newspaper frankly admitted that an awful responsibility
rested somewhere, and the Examiner believed it to be "our
duty to speak loudly and distinctly to those individuals who
evidently have urged the blacks to this horrid measure."  It
deprecated all attempts "to make political capital out of the
Sadsbury treason and murder by connecting Governor Johns-
ton's name with that melancholy affair. Intelligent readers
will regard such efforts with feelings of disgust and contempt."
But for the white persons under arrest. and charged with
murder and treason, it had no condonation. "Their passions
had been inflamed by Abolition harangues and incendiary
speeches franked by members of Congress until they had
come to look upon treason to the laws of their country as a
moral duty, and upon murder as not a crime." It declared
that this was especially perceptible and prevailing in Sads-
bury and the eastern end of Bart; it recalled with special
disapprobation the public meeting held at Georgetown, when
the Griest resolutions were passed.

     Much indignation was expressed by his political opponents
that Governor Jahnston, passing through Christiana on his

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way from Harrisburg to Philadelphia, on a campaign tour,
the morning of the affair, did not get off his train at Christi-
ana where lay the dead body of the Marylander, slain on
Pennsylvania soil; though many other passengers did so and
the train stopped almost at the place where the inquest was
to be held.
     Democratic campaign meetings held throughout the County
were quick to turn their sails to catch the currents of popu-
lar opinion and at an assemblage in Columbia, on September
13th, N. B. Wolfe, M.D., later a famous citizen of Cincin-
nati, Ohio, principal speaker, denounced "the horrid murder
of Gorsuch " "by a band of desperate negroes excited and
influenced by murderous Abolitionists whose reeking hands
are still smoking with the warm life's blood of a fellow
citizen."
     A committee of conspicuous Democrats in Philadelphia,
including Hon. John Cadwalader, James Page, John W.
Forney, A. L. Roumfort, Charles Ingersoll, Joseph Swift
and others, in an "open letter," loudly demanded of the
Governor that he act for the: vindication of the Common-
wealth and called a public indignation meeting of citizens
in Independence Square. The Governor responded with a
rather tart letter and offered $1,000 reward for the arrest of
the murderers.
     The Intelligencer continued to comment on the tragedy
as "the legitimate fruit of the policies pursued by Governor
Johnston and Thaddeus Stevens." In[sic] criticized Johnston
very severely for having passed Christiana without institut-
ing any "measures to bring the murderers to justice" before
proceeding on his way; for making political speeches "in-
stead of seeing that the perpetrators of treason against the
government and the most bloody murder ever committed in
this State were brought to justice." Governor Johnston was
at Ephrata and New Holland on the following Saturday,
he came to Lancaster on Saturday night, left at midnight

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for Philadelphia, and arrived there about five o'clock A. M.
     Meantime: Rev. J. S. Gorsuch, son of Edward Gorsuch and
brother of Dickinson, wrote to the Baltimore Sun, an account
of the tragedy, which was copied into the Intelligencer and
other Northern papers as an accurate statement.
     Subsequently he published an open letter to Governor
Johnston, arraigning him for a lack of official promptness
which resulted in the slaves and murderers of his father
escaping. He recalled that Johnston had refused to honor
a requisition from the Governor of Maryland for the: free
negro, Abe Johnson, who had received the stolen wheat, and
he declares that that same Johnson whose return was refused
by the Governor, was present at the riot. He proceeded to
contrast Johnston's tardiness with "the decision, energy and
promptness of the Lancaster County officers," who, he said,
"had to collect a posse of men from iron works and diggings
on the railroad " to enforce the processes of the law.
     The newspapers report that Alderman Reigart was "re-
ceiving much commendation in the Southern press for the
ability and firmness with which he discharged his duties as
the committing magistrate." In the Baltimore Sun of Oc-
tober 8, Rev. J. S. Gorsuch had another open letter, this time
to Attorney General Franklin. Gorsuch had undertaken to
criticise Governor Johnston without in any way condemning
his Attorney General. Mr. Franklin had vindicated his chief,
by declaring that he had done his full duty, and as his legal
adviser the Attorney General accepted all the responsibility
for the Governor's conduct.
     The general tendency of the agitation undoubtedly was to
depress the campaign prospects of the Whigs. Even Phila-
delphia was extremely conservative and desperately anxious
to not lose the trade of the South. Bigler carried the State,
receiving 186,499 votes to 118,034 for Johnston. More than
that slender majority could be accounted for by the Christi-
ana riot. In Lancaster County the vote on Governor was

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Democrat, 6,226, Whig, 11,064. What might have happened
had Mr. Stevens been a candidate for Congress cannot now be
calculated. He had been re-elected in 1850, receiving 9,565
votes, to 5,464 for Shaeffer. In 1852 he was not a candidate.
The late Hon. Isaac E. Hiester was nominated by the "Silver
Gray Whigs," and received 8,840 votes, to 6,456 for Sample,
the candidate of the Democratic opposition. In 1854 Stevens
was not a candidate, but revenged himself on Hiester by
running Anthony E. Roberts, the same who had been U. S.
marshal during the Christiana riots. There was a three-
cornered fight during that year. Pollock, Whig candidate
for Governor, had the support of the Know Nothings, and
defeated Bigler by 37,000 majority. Lefevre was the third
candidate for Congress in Lancaster County, and divided
both the Roberts and Hiester vote, with the result that
Roberts received 6,561, Hiester 5,371 and Lefevre 4,266.
By this time the new Republican party was organized; the
Silver Gray Whigs went out of the fight; Roberts, Whig, and
Hiester, Opposition, were again the candidates, and, although
Buchanan carried Lancaster County by a plurality of over
2,000 above Fremont and more than 4,000 above Fillmore,
Roberts was elected to Congress, receiving 10,001 votes to
Hiester's 8,320. In 1858 Stevens again became a candidate
for the 36th Congress, and was elected over James M. Hop-
kins, by the following vote: Stevens, 9,513; Hopkins, 6,341.
The latter had been one of the jury in "the treason trial,;
and had some support from Stevens' Whig opponents.
Stevens, however, got some Democratic aid. Thenceforth the
power of Darlington and "the Silver Grays" was broken;
Republicanism was in the local ascendancy with Stevens as
its leader; he never lost his control until his death--his last
nomination being conferred upon him by popular vote when
his body was encoffined, the ballots having been printed be-
fore he died.

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     If the effect of the agitation elected Bigler, it strengthened
the Buchanan wing of the Democratic party, whose choice
the Governor-elect was. If it was not able to control the
National convention of 1852, it succeeded in defeating Cass,
who was Buchanan's chief rival, and thus was helped the
nomination of the Lancaster County candidate for Presi-
dency in 1856. Though Bigler was defeated for a second
Gubernatorial term, he was elected United States Senator in
1855. The election of four Democratic Supreme Court
Judges in Pennsylvania in 1851 was one of the results of the
Christiana riot. James Campbell, alone of the Democratic
nominees was defeated. He was a Catholic and the Know
Nothing opposition to him centred upon Coulter, and elected
him; he had been on the bench 1846-7. Campbell became
Postmaster General under Pierce.
     Meantime the dead body of Edward Gorsuch was taken by
rail to Columbia, and via York on the Northern Central
Railroad, to Monkton, where a throng of mourning neigh-
bors met it and great local excitement prevailed. There being
no convenient hearse and the distance too long for pall-
bearers, it was carried by the four-horse team of Eliphalet
Parsons to Mr. Gorsuch's home. There, after a brief service
by Rev. Vinton, it was committed to a family burying ground,
where the body has rested undisturbed for sixty years. This
private graveyard on the Gorsuch farm is located on an
eminence in the midst of a fine orchard of apple trees, and
overlooking the wide expanse of country to the southwest
and traversed by Piney Run, a tributary to the Gunpowder.
The graveyard is about twenty-five by thirty-five feet, sur-
rounded by a massive stone wall, without any gate or en-
trance. The former opening to it was walled up by direc-
tion of and with a legacy left for that purpose by a son
Thomas. There remain three low gravestones, of uniform
pattern, the central one of which has the initials "E. G."
The occupants of the other two graves are unknown, and

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there is nothing to indicate who they were. Rev. John S.
Gorsuch, son of Edward and who was very conspicuous in
the agitation over his killing, was formerly buried in this
graveyard, but his remains have been removed therefrom.
He died at 32 of typhoid fever the March after his father, and
while attending a M.E. conference. The little graveyard
is overgrown with myrtle. Human hands have not desecrated
it in any way, but there is evidence that the gnawing teeth of
rodent vandals have been at work on the graves

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GRAVE OF EDWARD GORSUCH

THE GRAVE OF EDWARD GORSUCH

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