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Battleground
Adventures I The Storekeeper's
Son at Harper's Ferry1 IN 1859
Harper's
Ferry was one of the nicest towns in the United States. The government
had an
armory here, and there were fountains all along the streets, and
flowerbeds
with men tending 'em. No expense was spared to keep things tidy and
attractive.
The surrounding scenery was beautiful too, for at the lower end of the
town the
Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers met and went on through a gap in the Blue
Ridge
Mountains. The ground between the two rivers was rough and hilly, and most of the buildings huddled along the streams. Down near where the rivers joined was a bridge across the Potomac that served for both the highway and the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. A short distance from its town end was the depot and a hotel high up on the bank. The
railroad
continued close along the Potomac on a trestle, and back of the trestle
was a
long narrow strip of land that the armory buildings occupied. In the
armory
yard near the depot stood a small brick fire-engine house. The yard
gate was
close by, and across the street was the arsenal. Beyond that, right by
the
Shenandoah River, was a railroad that went down to Winchester. That
Shenandoah
Valley railroad was a very poor one with no ballasting. The ties were
laid on
top of the ground. Near their outer edges were fastened wooden four by
four
strips with flat iron rails spiked to 'em. The rails were a sort of
strap iron
two or three inches wide and hardly a half inch thick. The spikes would
work up
and the ends of the rails get loose, and the trains had to move very
cautiously.
They didn’t go more 'n eight or ten miles an hour, and you could run
and catch
the blame things anywhere. We boys used to worry the conductors by
hollerin' to
'em, "Change oxen!" There were
as many
as five thousand people here. Nearly fifteen hundred were employed by
the
government, and this was a busy prosperous place, but John Brown put a
curse on
it. The town went down from the time of his raid, and the war followed
soon
afterward and just tore up everything. Brown came
to the
vicinity with two of his sons early in July, 1859, and rented a farm in
a
secluded spot a few miles from the town over on the mountain north of
the
Potomac. They passed themselves off under the name of Smith and made a
bluff at
prospectin' for minerals. I was
eight years
old then. My father had a drygoods and grocery store here, and I've
seen him
and Brown talkin' together in the store. Father even furnished Brown a
team to
haul some of his supplies over to his log house. A good many boxes came
by
railroad for him, and he said they contained shovels, picks, and that
sort of
thing. Really they were full of weapons and ammunition. Those would
serve in
starting his enterprise, and then, by seizing the arsenal here, he
could put
guns into the hands of a very formidable force. He expected to recruit
an army
from the large slave population in the region, and he thought numerous
whites
would also flock to his aid. Brown's
entire
force, when he set forth on his raid on the evening of Sunday, October
16th,
consisted of twenty-two men. Six of them were members of his family or
connected with it by marriage, and five were colored men. Three of the
raiders
remained on the north side of the Potomac. The rest took possession of
the
armory and arsenal and gathered up several prominent slaveholders whom
they put
in the government fire-engine house with guards over 'em. You see it
was a part
of Brown's scheme to capture such men and only release 'em on condition
that
they set free their slaves. Every
working day
the armory bell rang twice each morning. There was a first bell which
was a
sort of warning to the men to get up and eat breakfast. It rang
somewhere about
half-past five, I reckon. There was a second bell along toward seven,
and then
the men were supposed to hustle into the armory and begin work. On
Monday of
the raid the old bell-ringer, Tommy Darr, came to the armory at the
usual time,
and the raiders made him a prisoner. So the bell didn’t ring. By and by
the
workmen stirred out to see what the trouble was, but Brown had fellers
at the
armory gates, and they picked the men up and held 'em with the other
prisoners.
Soon after
I got
out of bed I heard shots, and came out on our front porch. Our house
wasn’t
very far from the armory gates, and I could see something of what was
going on.
One man
had been
killed during the night. He was a free negro who bunked at the
Baltimore and
Ohio depot and took the luggage back and forth between that depot and
the one
of the Shenandoah Railroad. The second man the raiders killed was my
father. He
walked down Street from the store to the corner, and a feller who had
scooched
in behind the arsenal wall shot him. Father was a big powerful
raw-boned
Irishman, and he could have whipped all the men Brown had if they'd
been
unarmed. After he was shot he walked back up the hill pretty near home.
Then
his strength failed, and some of the townspeople brought him into the
house. He
died two hours later. The third
man shot
by the raiders was Farmer Turner. I seen a black feller do the
shootin'. He'd
got into what we called the stock-house where the government rifles
were
packed. Turner had brought his gun. He was on horseback, and he rode
down too
far. Jake Bagent was up the street in a silversmith's shop, and pretty
soon
after Turner was killed Jake saw the black feller at the arsenal
peeking around
the corner. So Jake poked his gun out of the door and whacked it into
him. Like
every one else, Jake had only an old gun that was made for hunting
rabbits and
other small game, but he had loaded it with a six-inch spike. The spike
hit the
negro in the neck. It made an awful wound, and he rolled right out into
the
road, and there he lay till evening. The
citizens were
now shooting all around, and nobody run out on the streets any more.
They
didn’t know what they were up against, for they didn’t know how many
raiders
there were or their object. Everybody had been livin' quiet and
peaceful, and
why men should come in here at midnight shooting people down was a
mystery. I
heard men talking about it, and they called it an insurrection. One of the
townsmen
who got mixed up in the affair was Daddy Molloy. He was a character — a
shiftless, but good-natured feller who was never sober when he could
get the
booze; and yet, when he first came here, you wouldn’t find a
nicer-lookin'
young man in a thousand miles. He claimed some girl went back on him.
After
that his head wasn’t right. Daddy wore
all
sorts of cast-off clothing. If a man three times his size was to say to
him:
"Here's an old coat of mine. Do you want it?" he was sure to accept
it. He did odd
jobs at
a boarding-house for his food and lodging. I s'pose the lady there kept
him
because she pitied him. Often you'd find him going around and cleaning
up the
bar-rooms for a drink. He'd do anything to get liquor. Sometimes, when
he saw a
stranger in town, he'd say to one of his friends, "I'll fall down and
commence chawin' on the stones, and you tell that man I'll get well
right off
if I have a good drink of whiskey." So Daddy
falls
down, and there he lies puffing away with the white foam coming from
his mouth.
The stranger looks on very much concerned and says to Daddy's friend:
"Do
you know that feller? What's the matter with him?" "Well,"
the friend says, "he has spells like that once in a while." "Ain't
there
anything can be done for him?" the stranger says. "Yes,"
the friend answers, "a drink of whiskey would fix him all right." "Go get
him a
pint," the stranger says. The
whiskey is put
in Daddy's hands, and he drinks it. "Ah!" he
says, "if I'd had that before I wouldn’t have had a fit." But
sometimes the
friend Daddy asked to help him in this little game went back on him,
and would
say to the stranger, "That's just Daddy Molloy, and he's playin'
off." Then old
Daddy
would get up and give the friend thunder. On the
morning that
the town learned something was wrong at the armory, Daddy went to
investigate,
and no sooner did he enter the gate than a man with a gun told him he
was
arrested. "What have
I
done that you should arrest me?" Daddy says. "Ask no
questions," the feller says. "You go right along into that engine
house." "But I
want to
know what the charge is against me," Daddy told him. "Bounce
him
in," the raider said, and he had one of his comrades shove Daddy into
the
engine house. Brown had
a good
bunch of other prisoners in there, and Daddy asked old Mr. Graham, who
was
sitting near the door, what he was there for. He didn’t get any
satisfaction.
Graham was a crusty old feller, and Daddy said afterward, "I thought he
was goin' to bite my head off." But most of the men were not so
close-mouthed. Some said: "There's goin' to be hell here. The citizens
will just set fire to this building and burn old Brown and all the rest
of
us." Daddy
looked around
to see if there was some chance to escape and concluded he might be
able to get
out through the cupola. There were two fire-engines in the building —
the kind
that had handles along each side for the men to take hold of and pump
the
water. Daddy climbed onto one of 'em and reached up to the edge of the
cupola.
He was very strong in his arms, and he said to himself, "Where I can
reach
I can pull myself up." And up he went. Some cross
timbers
gave him a resting-place, and after peeking all around he crawled out
on the
slate roof, slid down to the grass behind the building, and scrambled
over the
wall around the armory grounds. In the upper stories of the near houses
were
men on the watch, and they began firing, for Daddy was dressed so rough
they
thought he was one of Brown's men. "You ought to have heard those balls
spattering against the brick wall," he said afterward. Yes,
everybody was
shooting at old Daddy, and he ran up the street making for the
boarding-house
where he was the porter; "and if I hadn’t run zigzag they'd have got
me," he declared. He used to
show an
old gray coat that had ten or twelve bullet holes in it, and he claimed
those
were made during that flight, but I think he may have punched some of
'em
himself. Daddy
wasn’t born
to be killed. Every train on the railroads here hit and knocked him
over at one
time or another; and all the bones in his body had been broken. Once a
projecting iron on a car ketched him under the jaw and dragged him
across the
bridge, and yet he survived. At last, however, he got the smallpox, and
he went
off all alone to an old canal boat and died there; but he'd have got
well if he
'd been tended to and given any nourishment. A number
of the
raiders were killed that Monday while trying to escape by wading across
the
Shenandoah. Others
were killed
in the town, or captured, and the few that were left retreated to the
engine
house. Several companies of militia had come from neighboring places to
put
down the insurrection, and if it hadn’t been that Brown had his
prisoners in
the engine house with him they'd have blown the whole thing up. Toward
evening,
after they had the raiders penned up, I went out a little bit. Down at
the
corner the body of the darky still lay in the road, and old Mrs.
Stephenson's
sow was just diving into the big hole in his neck. The hogs ran loose
here
then. They were the Harper's Ferry street scavengers. The doctors used
to argue
that it was better to let 'em run out because by picking up the refuse
that
might otherwise be neglected they kept down sickness. It's only of late
years
that we've made the owners keep 'em up. We'd vote on the question once
in a
while at town-meeting — hog in and hog out — same as now we vote wet or
dry,
whiskey or no whiskey. People would get so hot on the subject that we
had
several knockdowns on account of it. But in the end the hogs lost. The
families
that didn’t keep hogs had come to be in the majority — that's about the
amount
of it. Well, no
decided
push was made to end the insurrection until a company of United States
Marines
came from Washington under the command of Colonel Robert E. Lee. They
arrived
early Tuesday morning, and while they were getting ready for business
some of
the militia decided to be doin' something. One of 'em by the name of
Murphy had
a few drinks on, and he said he'd go and storm that engine house. So he
went
into the armory yard with a couple of his comrades follerin' along
behind and
tellin' him he'd better look out. He hadn’t gone far when a bullet
touched him
in the jaw. That settled Murphy. He'd got stung, and he retreated. Then the
marines
tackled the job, and they soon got possession of the engine house, and
took
Brown and his men prisoners. They put 'em on board a train that carried
'em to
the jail in Charlestown a few miles south of here. After the marines
had disposed
of their prisoners they got on a train themselves, and back they went
to
Washington. Of the
twenty-two
raiders ten were killed, five escaped, and seven were captured, tried
and hung.
Five of the townspeople were killed and eight wounded. _________________ 1 This and the other
footnotes at the
beginning of the chapters give a brief account of the circumstances of
each
interview and afford a glimpse of the narrators as I met them and
listened to
their recollections. The "storekeeper's son" told his story as he sat
smoking in the office of a Harper's Ferry hotel. He was a fleshy man of
hardly
more than middle age who apparently had a habit of loitering there for
contemplation and to read the newspaper and discuss with friends the
affairs of
the town and the world. |