Fruits of the Southern Upas!
Americans! see here the legitimate fruits of that deadly tree you have so long pruned and cherished, and around which you have thrown the protecting arms of Church and State. It is for an 'institution' bearing such fruits that your priests have 'prophesied lies' in the name of the Lord, and your Statesmen clothed themselves with falsehood as with a garment. It was for the support of this institution that your fathers made 'concessions' and 'compromises,' which their degenerate children have neither the honest nor the courage to repudiate!
READ! READ!
THE GREAT SLAVE STAMPEDE IN MISSOURI.––The Canton, Lewis county, Mo. Reporter, gives the following account of the recent great slave stampede there.
A great excitement prevails in Lewis county, in regard to the recent attempt of the negroes to run away and rise in insurrection; and as many reports are in circulation in relation thereto, we deem it our duty to publish a true statement of the matter as it occurred.
A little before day on Friday morning last, a negro man, belonging to James Miller, came into the house, ostensibly to make a fire. Before going out, Mr. Miller heard him step towards the gun rack, take something, and leave with caution. The circumstance exciting some suspicion, he went to the door and called first one and then another of his negroes, but receiving no answer, he went to the negro quarter and found no one there. He then aroused the family, first ascertaining, however, that both of his guns were missing. The neighbors were alarmed as soon as possible, and pursuit made. Mr. Harvey Henderson was the first to come in sight of them. In addition to the guns, they had taken Mr. Miller’s wagon and team. Mr. Henderson approached near enough to identify the wagon, &c., and then quickly wheeled his horse to notify and bring up additional force; and it was well he did so. It was afterwards ascertained from some of the negroes, that they had determined to kill him, and for that purpose were bringing a loaded gun to bear upon him, as he wheeled his horse and disappeared.
The pursuers, numbering about thirty guns, soon came up. The negroes, amounting to between twenty and thirty, halted. They had three guns, together with large clubs and butcher knives. Besides Miller’s negroes, some eighteen or twenty, there were several belonging to Judge Wm. Ellis, Mr. McKim, and Mr. McKutchen. As soon as they halted, they made their dispositions for an obstinate defence. Their pursuers marched towards them in regular order with presented guns. When near enough, they asked them to surrender–they refused. They drew nearer parleying and instating on a surrender–the negroes still manifesting the most dogged and settled hostility, peremptorily refused to yield. Finally, after waiting and reasoning the case with them without the least apparent effect, and until all patience was exhausted, they commenced closing upon the negroes, when Miller’s John, a very powerful negro, and fierce as a grizzly bear, confronted Capt. J.H. Blair with his club raised in the act of striking, when Mr. Miller, his master, Blair to shoot him. Blair made one step backwards and fired–the negro turned partly around, recovered, seized his knife, and was in the act of rushing on Blair, when Jon Fretwell fired at him, and he fell dead. Both shots took effect.
Undismayed by the occurrence, the other negroes still maintained the same hostile attitude. Five minutes were given to them to consider of their surrender. The women first gave up, and implored the men to do likewise, as John was already dead. Before the end of time the men yielded; gave up their weapons, were bound and brought to Canton. The leaders have been shipped to St. Louis and sold.
It has since been ascertained that it was intended to be a general insurrection, and, to that end, it is believed that nearly all the slaves in the county had notice, and were to have met and rendezvoused on Friday at Canton. The plan was to kill all the negroes who would not join them–and with force of arms move off in a body to Illinois, and thence to Canada. However preposterous the plan may seem, it certainly had a good deal of truth for its foundation. The younger negroes disclosed it, but others, who did not join them, acknowledged they were notified and knew of it. Besides, others have made a break. We understand that Parson James Lillord’s negroes, in his absence, after abusing the family and making many wicked threats against them, made off, but were luckily caught by the neighbors, and lodged in the Monticello jail.
"Fruits of the Southern Upas!," New Lisbon (OH) Anti-Slavery Bugle, February 2, 1850, p.1.