The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

THE CHRISTIANA RIOT

CHAPTER IX.

BEFORE THE TRIAL.

Popular Discussion Precedes the Arraignment--Legal Questions Raised
   by Eminent Lawyers--Judge Bane takes High Ground Against
   Treason--The Selection of the Jury--A Representative Panel.

     Pending the arraignment of the prisoners in the United
States Court for treason, the affair was made the subject of
extended popular discussion. Fiery Southern journals and
orators reflected the views that had been early expressed by
Governor Lowe to President Fillmore, for his own State of
Maryland, that if slave owners could not without incurring
the risk of death pursue their property North and reclaim it,
Secession and Disunion were inevitable. (quite as fierce and
fiery champions of Abolitionism retorted with equal fervor
and contempt for a league with iniquity and a covenant with
slavery, and for a "flaunting lie" that flung the banner of
freedom over a human race in chains. The great mass of
conservative citizens stood for both law and liberty; and
heard with sympathetic ears Webster's great and eloquent
pleas for "Liberty and Union--one and inseparable."
     Joshua R. Giddings, in a speech at Worcester, in the early
part of November, before the trial, publicly rejoiced in the
killing of Gorsuch and that the fugitives "stood up manfully
in defense of their God-given rights and shot down the
miscreants, who had come with the desperate purpose of
taking them again to the land of slavery."
     It is a notable coincidence that just at this time the
National Era, an Abolition paper in Washington, D. C.,
edited by Gamaliel Bailey, was beginning to publish as a
weekly serial the first and copyrighted edition of "Uncle
Tom's Cabin." Neither the authoress nor the general reading

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public then appreciated the power and interest of the work,
nor until it appeared later in book form.
     The rashness of the Gorsuches in incurring danger and
inviting death by venturing into an unfriendly country for
an unpopular cause, was cited in mitigation of the indict-
ment against a whole community for lawlessness. The
blunders of the Deputy Marshal in giving his official errand
the aspect of a warlike incursion was urged as a reasonable
explanation for what was charged as popular indifference in
the locality toward a dark crime.
     Withal lawyers and laymen found subject for protracted
discussion in the vexed question as to whether it was "trea-
son" ; and what degree of opposition or what extent of resist-
ance to law constituted this high crime of such infrequent
occurrence.
     The cases of the Whiskey Insurrectionists in western Penn-
sylvania, and Aaron Burr's trial at Richmond, Virginia, had
almost faded from popular memory. But there were those
in eastern Pennsylvania who recalled some of the echoes of
the Fries treason case; and its analogies with the impending
trial of nearly forty Lancaster County people were curiously
scanned by legal pundits on the Court House benches and by
local sages on the country store boxes.
     The case of United States vs. John Fries arose out of the
opposition of the Pennsylvania Germans in Bucks, North-
ampton and Berks Counties to the collection of a direct
Federal tax known as "The House Tax." Assessors had to
measure houses to levy the tax. Hostile public meetings were
held at which John Fries threatened and encouraged armed
resistance to the tax. Armed and with martial music he and
his followers, paraded the public highways, intimidating
tax officials, denouncing Congress and the government as
"damned rogues," etc. Fries had two trials, in both of
which he was found guilty of treason and sentenced to be
hanged. He was subsequently pardoned by President John

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THADDEUS STEVENS

THADDEUS STEVENS
IN THE DAYS OF HIS CONGRESSIONAL LEADERSHIP


Adams. He was originally tried and convicted before Judges
Ireell and Peters, in 1799 ; and his case is reported in 3
Datlas (Fed. Court Rep.), 515.
     As early as November 18, 1850, Hon. John K. Kane,
United States District Judge at Philadelphia, had charged
the Grand Jury at some length--and not without consider-
able personal feeling in relation to the State of Pennsylvania
statutes--on the subject of the Fugitive Slave Law. Judge
Kane had been District Attorney and he was Attorney Gen-
ial of Pennsylvania under Governor Shunk from Jan. 21,
1845, to June 23, 1846. His appointment as Attorney Gen-
eral was offensive to Mr. Buchanan.
     Notwithstanding the Supreme Court of the United States
in the Prigg case had intimated that legislation of this char-
acter was for the Federal Government and not for the State,
Judge Kane severely reprehended the Pennsylvania Act of
184l, which repealed the Acts of 1826 and 1827, delegating
to State authorities the right to issue warrants for fugitives;
he declared the new Fugitive Slave Law of Congress to be
little different from the Pennsylvania statute of 1826, and
he depicted the results of the Pennsylvania law in these
rather lurid terms: "Fanatics of civil discord have, mean-
while, exulted in the fresh powers of harm with which this
state of things invested them; and the country has been
convulsed in its length and breadth, as if about to be rent
asunder, and tossed in fragments, by the outbursting of a
volcano."
     He went on to say that the new Federal law must be
obeyed, and the penalties for violating it were to be enforced
without fear, favor or affection. He referred to his district
as a community which had suffered in reputation and repose
"from crimes of excitement, turbulence and force," and in-
veighed against disobedience to a statute, obstructing officers
of the law and deeds of violent resistance against them.
     The language of this charge, and his well-known views on

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the legal and political aspects of the question, did not afford a
very encouraging outlook for those who were to be tried be-
fore him or in his court. These very natural apprehensions
were increased, when his charge to the grand jury followed on
September 29, 1851. He briefly reviewed the reported facts
of the Christiana affair, and though he avowed entire free-
dom from any impressions of the guilt or innocence of the
accused, he pointed to the charges made against them as suffi-
cient to establish the crime of treason if they were duly
proved. He also pointed out that as the offence of treason
was not triable in his Court, and though the grand jury then
empannelled could not take cognizance of the indictments,
his learned brother of the Supreme Court, the Hon. Robert
C. Grier, who presided in this circuit, would sit on the trial
of the cause. Justice Grier was a Pennsylvanian, appointed
by President Tyler in 1844, to succeed Henry R. Baldwin,
deceased.
     The result of the submission to the Grand Inquest for
the United States inquiring for the Eastern District of Penn-
sylvania to the August Term, 1851, was that they found true
bills for treason against the following persons, which indict-
ments were, on October 6, 1851, remitted from the District
Court to the Circuit Court:
1. Castner Hanway. 20. Collister Wilson.
2. Joseph Scarlet. 21. John Jackson.
3. Elijah Lewis. 22. William Brown.
4. James Jackson. 23. Isaiah Clarkson.
5. George Williams. 24. Henry Simms.
6. Jacob Moore. 25. Charles Hunter.
7. George Reed. 26. Lewis Gates.
8. Benjamin Johnson. 27. Peter Woods.
9. Daniel Caulsberry. 28. Lewis Clarkson.
10. Alson Pernsley. 29. Nelson Carter.
11. William Brown, 2nd. 30. William Parker.
12. Henry Green. 31. John Berry.

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13. Elijah Clark. 32. William Berry.
14. John Holliday. 33. Samuel Williams.
15. William Williams. 34. Josh Hammond.
16.Benjamin Pindergast 35. Henry Curtis.
17. John Morgan. 36. Washington Williams
18. Ezekiel Thompson. 37. William Thomas
19. Thomas Butler. 38. Nelson Ford.
     The District Attorney then moved for a venire to issue
to the marshal, who was. commanded to return 108 jurors, of
whom 12 were to be summoned and returned from Lan-
caster County, where the offenses charged were perpetrated.
     The selection of jurors for this trial, under all the condi-
tions we have tried to sketch impartially, was a delicate and
difficult task for Marshal Roberts--in view of his well-
known political opinions and of his personal and partisan
affiliations with Thaddeus Stevens, chief counsel for the de-
fense from start to finish. The character and associations of
the members of the panel may be gathered to some extent
even now from the attitude assumed toward them by counsel
on either side. In a subsequent chapter will be briefly epito-
mized the disposition made of those whose names were called.
Keeping it in mind, the author, from a large historical ac-
quaintance with the leading men of that period in the coun-
ties of the State from which this panel was chosen, does not
hesitate to say that it was high above the average in intelli-
gence and all other requisites for important jury service;
that it was eminently representative and an altogether fit and
fair enrollment. This opinion is not only now justified, but
it is fairly demanded by reason of the criticism Attorney
General Brent made in his report to Maryland's Governor
upon the disadvantage to which the prosecution was sub-
jected in the personnel of the venire.
     During their stay in Moyamensing the prisoners suffered
for a time from lack of heat and ventilation until conditions
were remedied. Same of them were confined in the Debtors'

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Apartments. Witnesses deemed necessary to hold were de-
tained by the Government under pay of $1.25 per day to
them. Peter Woods relates that Ezekiel Thompson and
Henry Simms engaged so frequently in loud prayer that out-
siders were attracted to the prison walls to listen to them
from the adjoining sidewalks. By November 15th it tran-
spired that two witnesses, Peter Washington and John Clark,
detained in the Debtors' Apartments, had escaped. David
Paul Brown said one of them was important for his client
Joseph Scarlet, while the United States was insistent that it
needed them also. Mr. Brent finds cause for suspicion and
complaint in the allegation that they got out without breaking
a lock through inside treachery, of which he "cheerfully"
acquits Marshal Roberts; but neither throughout nor after
the trial does Mr. Brent present himself as an altogether
cheerful person.

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