STAMPEDE OF SLAVES AND A BATTLE.--Ten slaves, three women, two children, and five men, ran away from Pruyntown, Va., a few nights ago, taking with them seven other chattles in the shape of horses. They left the horses after the night's ride, and steered for the North Star on foot. They were followed and overtaken in Fayette county, Pa., where a desperate fight for freedom on the part of the negroes, and slavery on the part of the whites, took place. The slave catchers were badly beaten, and the fugitives from slavery made their escape. Col. Armstrong, one of the owners, in attempting to capture one of the slaves, was resisted with a corn cleaver, and would have been killed but for the interference of one of his own servants, who stepped in to protect his master. Another of the pursuing party was fiercely resisted, and badly injured in the melee. The Wheeling Intelligencer states that on the return of the discomfitted slave hunters, a party of about twenty-five persons from Morgantown started in pursuit of the negroes, but nothing additional had been heard at last accounts from either the pursuing or pursued.
“Stampede of Slaves and a Battle,” Milwaukee (WI) Sentinel, November 12, 1858