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Prelude to the Civil War; Four states mark the 150th anniversary of John Brown’s raid
johnbrownraid.org ^ | March/April 2009 | Theresa Gawlas Medoff

Posted on 03/21/2009 7:02:03 AM PDT by Liz

A series of reenactments, dramatic productions, family activities and special tours are scheduled this year as Civil War sites in West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania commemorate the 150th anniversary of abolitionist John Brown’s October 1859 raid on the arsenal at Harpers Ferry. Although the raid itself failed, it succeeded in exacerbating the divide between North and South, pushing the nation closer to civil war.

“Before the raid, negotiations and a compromise between North and South might have been possible; however, after the attack—and Brown’s trial and hanging—emotions ran so high that armed conflict became inevitable,” says Tom Riford of the Hagerstown-Washington County Convention and Visitors Bureau.

At the time, Brown was denounced on both sides of the Mason–Dixon Line as a terrorist and an enemy of the Union, but others just as passionately revered him as a martyr. Brown inspires those same polarized opinions among today’s visitors to Harpers Ferry National Historical Park (nps.gov/hafe), says Todd Bolton, events committee chair for the John Brown Sesquicentennial Quad-State Committee (johnbrownraid.org). “Our job at Harpers Ferry is to present the facts and the history, and let people decide for themselves,” he says.

There will be plenty of opportunities this year to learn about Brown, beginning on April 18 with the first Signature Event of the sesquicentennial: “Prelude to History: The Wedding of Virginia Kennedy” at Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. The day’s attractions include a dramatic monologue about the raid told from the perspective of the wife of raider John Cook. Visitors can also enjoy period music, youth activities and tours of the Lower Town at Harpers Ferry, which has been preserved as it appeared during the Civil War era.

The town of Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, lies at the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers, bordering Maryland and Virginia. The 3,500-acre National Park extends into all three states. Brown had his northern headquarters in Pennsylvania, the fourth member of the quad-state committee. On May 22, the John Brown House in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, will be rededicated and reopened after a major renovation.

The Kennedy Farmhouse in Samples Manor, Maryland, staging place for the raid, will host a rare open house with tours and demonstrations July 12. Frederick County, Maryland, attracts the spotlight August 8–9 for its Militia and Fire Company Days, with displays of antique fire-fighting equipment. Other events happen throughout the summer and fall, including regular ranger-guided tours of Brown-related sites in the National Park and surrounding areas.

The centerpiece of the sesquicentennial observation takes place in the Harpers Ferry area October 16–18, 150 years to the day after the raid and subsequent siege. Following a twilight reenactment Friday of Brown’s six-mile march to Harpers Ferry, the commemoration continues on Saturday and Sunday with a full slate of music, living history, family activities and ranger-guided programs.

Because of the significance of the raid, the John Brown Sesquicentennial is regarded as a prelude to the Civil War Sesquicentennial, which the nation will observe from 2011 to 2015.

—Theresa Gawlas Medoff

Learn more about the Civil War and the nation’s sesquicentennial plans at cwar.nps.gov/civilwar/abcivwarSesqInit.htm. The information in this story was accurate when it was published in the March/April 2009 issue of AAA World, but dates, times and prices may have changed since then. We suggest you verify such details directly with the listed establishments before making travel plans.

Email: info@johnbrownraid.org


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: Maryland; US: Pennsylvania; US: Virginia; US: West Virginia
KEYWORDS: americanhistory; anniversary; dixie; harpersferry
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To: Arkinsaw

Talk about apples and oranges and you bring up Timothy McVeigh! John Brown is getting his final judgment just as anyone who is involved in killing and warfare. I believe he was just in his war and you and I obviously disagree. Too much indifference to the injustice for far too long.


41 posted on 03/21/2009 9:14:10 AM PDT by bushfamfan (United States of America: July 4, 1776-November 4, 2008)
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To: usmcobra; stand watie

Can you come out and play? : )


42 posted on 03/21/2009 9:24:38 AM PDT by freema (MarineNiece,Daughter,Wife,Friend,Sister,Friend,Aunt,Friend,Mother,Friend,Cousin, FRiend)
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To: bushfamfan
You do realize the American Revolution was a movement by a minority against their own country, don’t you? And over taxes which they considered ‘slavery’! I am not saying you supported slavery, but I will say with someone like you slavery and the suffering would have continued on for many more yrs. to come. And as for ‘evil actions’, like I say, the only way there ever is FREEDOM is because of BLOODSHED. It is a necessary evil and I believe Brown brought the issue to a much sooner conclusion with his actions.

You continue to somehow equate the founders and their methodology with John Brown and his. Sounds good in abstract, but in actuality they are not related.

The founders who declared independence were appointed representatives of the local colonial governments functioning as the only available representative bodies of the people of those colonies. John Brown was appointed by NO ONE and had not even a wisp of legal authority to act.

The founders took their actions openly, presented their justifications to the world prior to any hostilities as appointed representatives, and acted jointly to establish the best legal justification for their actions as they could. Brown acted on his own counsel as representative of nobody but himself and with no interest in justification under any human legal system.

The founders did not act with the specific desire to cause bloodshed and probably had forlorn hope that they could achieve their goal without bloodshed. John Brown specifically and deliberately planned and caused bloodshed to trigger more bloodshed in hopes that the resulting storm would result in his goal.

You cannot hide John Brown under the Continental Congress's skirts.
43 posted on 03/21/2009 9:26:54 AM PDT by Arkinsaw
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To: bushfamfan
Talk about apples and oranges and you bring up Timothy McVeigh! John Brown is getting his final judgment just as anyone who is involved in killing and warfare. I believe he was just in his war and you and I obviously disagree. Too much indifference to the injustice for far too long.

John Brown and Timothy McVeigh are much, much, more comparable than John Brown and the Continental Congress or John Brown and US service members are. I leave it for the reader to judge which comparisons are more likely.
44 posted on 03/21/2009 9:28:46 AM PDT by Arkinsaw
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To: bushfamfan
John Brown is getting his final judgment just as anyone who is involved in killing and warfare.

John Brown did not kill anyone in warfare. John Brown murdered some people and hoped and planned for the murder of others in hopes of causing warfare that would end in his goal.

Murder as a precursor that results in warfare is the proper characterization. Archduke Ferdinand was murdered, not killed in a war.

To suggest that John Brown would be judged the same as "anyone who is involved in killing and warfare" does a disservice to real soldiers and people of honor.
45 posted on 03/21/2009 9:39:48 AM PDT by Arkinsaw
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To: freema

Hmmmm, John Brown?

I’m no fan.

John Brown was at best an addled lunatic that believe that if guns were in the hands of slaves that they would rise up in mass and commit in this country the sort of violence and bloodshed that had happened in Haiti.

Personally I am glad that the Marines and some unknown passed over regular army Colonel named Robert E. Lee to a stop to his madness, before it got a lot of American families killed.

Brown was a klutz with no experience or planning who thought a spontaneous eruption of hate, murder and mathem would engulf this country if he could only get enough guns into the hands of slaves, and he did not care what happened to either the slaves or their masters or even ordinary families without slaves once the revolt was underway.

He deserved to fail and what he got but more importantly he deserves in part to be blamed for the south’s unwillingness to debate the issue of slavery in a constitutional amendment, it was his radicalism that gave them all the fuel they needed to secede.


46 posted on 03/21/2009 9:45:38 AM PDT by usmcobra (Your chances of dying in bed are reduced by getting out of it, but most people still die in bed)
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To: Arkinsaw

WOW! Who are you and why ain’t I capable of saying what you say in the same way that you do and may I borrow some of your brillance? WOW!


47 posted on 03/21/2009 9:50:07 AM PDT by artifax (I may be schizophrenic but at least IÂ’ve got each other)
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To: Fiji Hill
The smoke from the battlefield never clears.

Maybe these Civil War threads should be moved to the smoky Backroom.< /sarcasm>

48 posted on 03/21/2009 10:20:29 AM PDT by ReformedBeckite
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To: bushfamfan
I’m curious what you would have thought if you found yourself in the position of a slave and in those times. It was time for the brutal injustice to end.

I have accused no slave of terrorism and after all that's the subject I referred to, not slavery. I said that John Brown was a terrorist. His acts testify to that fact.

If terrorism is ok in some instances for a "just cause", then the jihadists are ok. I can assure you that they believe with all their hearts that their cause is just and so are their tactics. They have an ok from their god and so John Brown thought also.

I don't believe for one minute that God told John Brown to murder and butcher adult males in the presence of their families but he certainly thought so.

Don't interpret my condemnation of terrorism as defence of slavery, it isn't.

49 posted on 03/21/2009 10:35:14 AM PDT by Graybeard58 (Selah)
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To: Liz

I find it quite odd that Brown was able to contain his anti-slavery passion and refrain from attacks on Union states that still allowed slavery. Some are more equal than others.

I guess that shows how full of S he was.


50 posted on 03/21/2009 10:50:40 AM PDT by Troy McGreggor
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To: bushfamfan
There was blatant injustice going on in Kansas and they sought leading figures out.

Well, that makes grisly murder in the middle of the night O.K. then I guess.

What about the innocent people killed at Harper's Ferry? The ends justify the means in your view?

51 posted on 03/21/2009 10:54:35 AM PDT by Virginia Ridgerunner (Sarah Palin is a smart missile aimed at the heart of the left!)
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To: neocon1984
Eventually slavery was going to end and the South’s economy would have to adapt.

That's actually a myth since the 1860 Census showed that planters were actually transitioning their slaves over from the cotton and tobacco fields to the nascent industries, especially mining, that were beginning to take root in the South, about twenty or thirty years behind the North.

52 posted on 03/21/2009 10:59:52 AM PDT by Virginia Ridgerunner (Sarah Palin is a smart missile aimed at the heart of the left!)
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To: Liz
More important was the attack on Ft. Sumter that symbolized
the opposition to The South's paying tariffs imposed by The
North.
53 posted on 03/21/2009 11:33:59 AM PDT by upcountryhorseman (An old fashioned conservative)
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To: Fiji Hill; Fedora
The movie Santa Fe Trail, starring Raymond Massey as John Brown and Ronald Reagan as George Armstrong Custer provides an exciting and dramatic portrayal of Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry.

Thanks-----movie has an amazing star-studded case.

54 posted on 03/21/2009 11:45:50 AM PDT by Liz (I was like Snow White, then I drifted. Mae West (on liberalism.)
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To: usmcobra

John Brown got me an awesome A in high school with a teacher I hated, and who hated me.

It was kinda like a raid. Teacher never saw it coming.... had to surrender to my awesomeness. What can I say.

: )


55 posted on 03/21/2009 12:08:20 PM PDT by freema (MarineNiece,Daughter,Wife,Friend,Sister,Friend,Aunt,Friend,Mother,Friend,Cousin, FRiend)
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To: Virginia Ridgerunner

I think you misunderstood my point.

(1) Slavery was going to end because of growing moral concerns in the US and elsewhere. The South would have been forced, through diplomatic means and trade sanctions, to make that change. It would have been nice if John Brown and others had not so inflamed passions that people (e.g., Robt. E. Lee) felt that the morally correct choice was to defend their state (i.e., Country). Under the same circumstances, I may have made the same decision as General Lee.

(2) With the end of slavery, the South needed to adapt it’s labor intensive practices in favor of more mechanized processes. It doesn’t matter if it’s farming or mining or whatever.


56 posted on 03/21/2009 12:22:30 PM PDT by neocon1984
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To: PurpleMan

“I’m so confused”

Don’t be. His opposition to slavery is not the issue here.
He took the law into his own hands, and massacred people.
He was a bloody murderer. Hanging was an easy death.


57 posted on 03/21/2009 2:04:56 PM PDT by TexConfederate1861
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To: bushfamfan

Well, he may have had convictions, but to murder innocent people did not help his cause.


58 posted on 03/21/2009 2:06:05 PM PDT by TexConfederate1861
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To: IrishCatholic

By Christian belief, I am sure he is already there. I am simply stating that like Hitler, he deserves it.


59 posted on 03/21/2009 2:07:50 PM PDT by TexConfederate1861
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To: PurpleMan

He was a cold-blooded murderer, regardless of what he professed. Slavery was the law of the land. Laws are changed thru channels. To murder innocent people is not Christian or biblical.


60 posted on 03/21/2009 2:10:18 PM PDT by TexConfederate1861
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