£S^i^iiii^ I \=>«r"\T ni. U OLE Cw^^fe^ t/^^^^t-^-v-^ THE Chisolm Massacre : A PICTURE OF "Home Rule" in Mississippi. By James M. Wells. Of the U. S. Intemal Revenue Service. THIRD EDITION. WASHINGTON, T>. C. Chisolm Monument AssociatAjn. 1878. COPYRIGHT, BY JAMES M. WELLS. 1877- PRESS OF DUNN & HEGGIE, CHICAGO, ILL. TO EMILY S. M. CHISOLM, The Faithful Wife, Fond Mother and Devoted Friend, whose bitter tears, hke the blood of her martyred and beloved dead, fall to the earth and pass from sight ' Unheeded and Unavenged, these pages are affectionately inscribed. INTRODUCTION. On Sunday, the t-wenty-ninth of April, 1877, a body of three hundred men, styling themselves "the best citi zens" of Kemper county, in the State of Mississippi, conspiring together and co-operating -with the sheriff and other officers of the county, coolly and premedi- tatedly murdered three men and two children; one of the latter a young and beautiful girl, and the other a delicate boy aged thirteen years. Against this act humanity itself, where humanity finds lodgment in the breasts of men, still cries out f6r vengeance; and the withering condemnation of an outraged public senti ment is everywhere turned upon the whole people of a State who stand supinely by, dumb and immovable spectators of such a crime without so much as a pre tended effort toward 'the enforcement of the law against its perpetrators. The inability of the courts of the country to arrest or punish is now admitted, and it is sought to palliate and justify the offense by invading the forbidden and hal lowed precincts of the grave, and assailing the characters of the victims whose voices are hushed in the unbroken sleep of death. In behalf of justice to the living or dead, the laws of the land and the wail of the widow and orphan are alike unavailing. 6 Introduction. Having been providentially called to witness this atrocity and its results, in their worst form and aspect, and knowing much of the men whose hands were employed in the bloody work, as well as of the causes which prompted theiri to its enactment; and, above all, being thoroughly acquainted with the lives and char acters of the victims and the circumstances surrounding those who are left to mourn their untimely and terrible death, a sense of a solemn and imperative duty has impelled the author to undertake the difficult task wliich has resulted in the production of these pages. Nor has this been done with the hope of reward or fear of con demnation from any political organization or other source. The book is a simple record of fadts, and for whatever there may be in them calculated to win plaudits from one or incur the displeasure of another the writer is in no •way responsible. In their preparation, however, the necessity of producing ' something more than a simple and unqualified statement by which to establish the authenticity of the subject treated has been kept steadily in view, and where the circumstances -seemed in any way to require it, some data or tangible proof of the correctness of every assertion made has been given, and the time, place and manner of its occurrence fixed. The facts, dating back as far as 1870, are gleaned from personal observation of the author, whose business, car rying him into different parts of the State, has been of such a nature as to lead to a close investigation of the moral, social and political status and conduct of the people. The past four years, living in a county Introduction. 7 adjoining that of Kemper, which he has visited regularly and often, he has been made acquainted from time to time with the men and things here discussed. With regard to the existence of the conspiracy to murder Judge Chisolm and his associates — which had its beginning soon after the clqse of the war, and culmi nated only when the last sod of earth was placed upon the grave of the faithful and heroic daughter, Cornelia — the circumstances of the murder itself, the subsequent treatment of the wounded, their sufferings and the man ner of their death and burial, the writer is indebted to his own eyes, to the death-bed declarations of Judge Chisolm, and to the story as it came from the pale lips of the martyred girl, while the angels stood waiting to waft her spirit above. To all this is added the swom testimony of more than twenty unimpeachable wit nesses now living, whose names for their safety only are as yet withheld. This evidence was taken by order of Attorney-General Devens, at the instance or demand of the British Min ister at Washington, and was done for the purpose of ascertaining the facts with regard to the citizenship and death of Angus McLellan, the alleged British subject, one of the victims of the slaughter. To make this work complete and reliable, a special agent — Mr. G. K. Chase — was sent from Washington to co-operate with U. S. District-Attorney Lea, of Jackson, Mississippi, and these gentlemen, in company with Gen. Geo. C. McKee, of Jackson, and the writer, visited Meridian and De Kalb, where the facts were obtained, in strict accordance with 8 Introduction. which these pages are written. The coolness and delib eration of the plot to entrap the victims under a hollow pretense of executing the law, and then to murder them in cold blood; the shooting of Gilmer and McLellan on the streets and the assault of the mob upon the jail soon after; the murder of the little boy Johnny by Rosser, the leader of the savage horde, and the terrible vengeance visited upon the assassin's head by Judge Chisolm; the heroic defense of the father by the brave girl, and the patient suffering of the wounded through all the days that followed the dark Sabbath, till death came to their relief; all taken together afford a theme well calculated to enliven the fancy of a writer of the most extravagant tale of fiction, and cannot fail to arouse the sympathy and indignation of every honest heart throughout the worlfl where the facts are known. A reproach to the civilization of the century in which we live, the cheek of every true lover of all that is worthy of adoration in woman will mantle with shame when a record of this horror shall desecrate the pages which perpetuate the memory of a boasted chivalry, and American manhood must deny its name and existence so long as the blood of Cornelia and Jolinny Chisolm is unavenged. " And do we dream we hear The far, low cry of fear. Where iu the Southern land The maslced barbaric band. Under the covert night. Still fight the coward's fight. Still atrike the assassin's blow — Introduction. Smite childhood, girlhood low ', Great Justice! canst thou see Unmoved that such things be? See murderers go free. Unsought? Bruised in her grave The girl who fought to aave Brother and aire. She died for man. She leads the lofty van ^ Of hero women. Lift her uarae With ever-kindling farae. Her youth's consuraraate flower Took on the exalted dower Of martyrdom. And death And love put on her crown Of high renown. * * * * Cease, bells of freedom, cease ' Hush, happy songs of peace ! If such things yet raay be. Sweet land of liberty. In thee, in thee ! " NOTICES OF Press and Distinguished Men. "I do not know what arrangements have been made for the distribution and sale of this thrilling volume, but it ought to find a place in every public library at the North, and deserves to be read and pondered in every family. Sitting down to its perusal I allowed nothing to interrupt me until I had read every line of it. * * This volume if widely circulated, cannot fail to do much -towards opening the eyes of the blind, unstopping the ears of the deaf, and melting the hearts of the obdurate." — William Lloyd Garrison. IO Introduction. "We would not be surprised to see it circulate as ex tensively as Uncle Tom's Cabin." — National Republican, Washington, D. C. "What heroism ! What wonderful courage, endurance, love ! Cornelia Chisolm will live with Virginia and Lu cretia. I trust her sad story may be told to endless gen erations, and that the fearful caste that destroyed her may find her memory ever its most deadly foe." — Eugene La-wrence, of Harpers' Weekly. " Discloses a condition of society which it is impossi ble for one not personally cognizant of the facts to com prehend. * * * The heroism of the dying girl is deeply touching." — Inter-Ocean, Chicago, III. , "A lurid picture of Home Rule." — Chicago Tribune. "A picture of society which is horrible to contemplate." — Indianapolis Journal. "A complete history of the Chisolm tragedy, including the causes leading to this and other terrible crimes." — Burlington [la.) Hvwkeye. "A faithful history as far as it goes, of the civilization we have in Mississippi. * * * ^ chapter of the outrages practiced upon Republicans, which equals the religious persecutions as given in Fox's book of Martyrs." — Hon. H. R. Pease. " The book is written with deep feeling, yqt with a personal repression in the writer, that, under the circum stances, reaches the sublime." — Mary Clem-mer. "The book itself is a monument to Judge Chisolm and his cjutiful and heroic children." — R. B. Stone, late Chancellor of Mississippi. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I— (p. 15)— Biographical Sketch of W. W. Chisolra and Emily S. Mann, hia wife. Birth of Cornelia. CHAPTER II — (p. 22.) — Life in Kemper in the good old ante-bellum- times. CHAPTER III— (p. 30.)— The Gullya. Their early career and reign, of outlawry. Death of Sam Gully and attempt of the Gullys to. assassinate Rush. The 'Acre Tax." Pioneer Republicans. CHAPTER IV— (p. 46.)— The caldron of political rancor. Intro duction of the Free School system, and origin and growth of the Ku Klux spirit. The "Sixteenth Section'' school fund. Report of Superintendent Pease for 1870. The killing of Ball,. and other terrible crimes committed by the Klan. CHAPTER V— (p. 64.) — Murder of Judge John McRea, and other , deeds of blood. John P. Gilmer and the death of Hal Dawson. Judge Chisolm elected Sherifif by the popular vote. CHAPTER VI — (p. 73.) — Invasion by Alabaraians into Mississippi.. The Meridian riot and massacre. CHAPTER VII — (p. 80.) — Second invasion of Alabaraians. Atterapt to raurder Judge Chisolra, Gilraer and others. Sworn testimony in the case. 12 Contents. CHAPTER VIII— (p. 86.)— Southern Repubhcans. Unsuccessful at tempt of Judge Dillard to take the life of Judge Chisolm. The combat. Anxiety of Cornelia for the welfare of her father. Murder of Hon. W. S. Garabrel CHAPTER IX— (p. 94.)— Judge Chisolm again elected sheriff. Nu merical strength of the tVo parties in Kemper. A large white republicau vote. Taxation and its causes. " Speculations " in cotton. Charge of "forgery" against Judge Chisolm, which fails. The '"race war" of 1874, and conspiracy to take Judge Chisolra's life. CHAPTER X— (p. 109.)— The Chisolm faraily at DeKalb. Their daily life The political contest of 1875. Incendiary speeches of the " gifted Lamar," aud others. Swom testimony of J. P. Gilmer. Cornelia graduates with high honors. Character of the girl. CHAPTER XI — (p. 125.)— The canvass for congress in 1876. Re peated atterapta to intimidate and murder Judge Chisolm. His house assailed at night by a mob. The assault renewed at day light. Sam Meek aud Johu W. Gully. Letter from CorneUa. Sworn testimony of Judge Chisolm relating to the campaign. CHAPTER XII — (p. 139.) — Indictment of the rioters who assailed Judge Chisolm and his family. Unsuccessful atterapts of the Deputy U. S. Marshal to make arrests. The Hon. Mr. Money contributes raeans to defend his constituency. Atterapt to assassinate John W. Gully. Suspicion is directed upon B. P. Rush, CHAPTER XIII— (p. 146.)—" Horae rule and local self government " estabhshed. Judge Chisolm and Cornelia visit Washington and the North. Letter frora the latter descriptive of her trip. CHAPTER XIV— (p. 154)— The Judge and daughter turn their faces homeward. A glimpse of Kemper county society in the spring Contents. rj of 1877. Robbery and corruption. The Chisolm family again at home. Death of John W. Gully. Rush charged with the CHAPTER XV — (p. 162.) — Burial of Gully. Conspiracy to assassinate Judge Chisolm and all his associates. George S. Covert acting under the advice of eminent counsel. The fraudulent warrant of arrest. CHAPTER XVI— (p. 170.)— The Klaus called together at DeKalb in the dead hour of night. Sinclair, the imbecile sheriff and ready tool of the conspirators. Arrest of the two Hoppers and, Judge- Chisolra. They are all takeu to jail. The Judge is followed by his faraily and Angus McLellan. Gilraer aud Rosenbaura arrestedi and the former shot to death. CHAPTER XVII— (p. 176.)— Mrs. Gilraer and the aged mother of the, murdered man. Whipping and hanging of the two colored raen to enforce evidence. The guards inside the jail. Cornelia goes for araraunition. The raother and Willie go to the stable McLellan ahot. The mob break into the jail. The struggle of Mrs. Chisolra, Cornelia and Johnny against the savages. Johnny murdered and Rosser killed. The terrible scenes which followed. CHAPTER XVIII— (p. i8g.)— Second assault of the mob upon Judge Chisolm and Cornelia ; both shot aud mortally wounded. The Judge carried home in a dying conditiou. Third assault of the mob ; heroism of the wounded girl. Assistance arrives. Gover nor Stone visits the scene of the massacre. CHAPTER XIX — (p. 200.) — Letters of condolence and sympathy for the distressed family. , CHAPTER XX— (p. 216.) — Mrs. Chisolm appeals to Governor Stone for aid ; it is denied. Death of Judge Chisolm and Cornelia. CHAPTER XXI — (p. 227.) — The character of the victiras assailed) after death. The newspapeus of the State defend the murd)Siers„ 14 Contents. CHAPTER XXII— (p. 241.)— The innocence of Rush estabhshed. ' Attempt to kidnap and murder him in Alabama. Grand Jurors chosen by democrats. False argument of J. Z. George. CHAPTER XXIII— (p. 255.)— The Governor has "no power to do anything at all" — and again he is all powerful. The real facts analyzed and the true state of Mississippi society and politics disclosed. CHAPTER XXIV— (p. 265.)— Governor Stone's action endorsed by the people. Welch elected Sheriff of Keraper county. The Circuit Court. Six or seven of the murderers indicted. Judge Harara's charge to the Grand Jury. Walter Riley condemned to death. No arrest of those indicted. Bulldozers still rarapant and un whipped. The Governor's "powers " once more. CHAPTER XXV— (p. 276.)— Naraes of the DeKalb rioters. They will be reraerabered. CHAPTER XXVI— (p. 279.)— Tribute to the memory of the martyred dead. CHAPTER XXVII— (p. 287.)— A retrospect. Deductions drawn therefrora, left to the reader. The Chisolm Massacre; A PICTURE OF "HOME RULE" IN MISSISSIPPI. CHAPTER I. William Wallace Chisolm, a sketch of whose eventful life and late tragic death will form, perhaps, the most important feature in the progress of this work, was born in Morgan county, Georgia, December 6th, 1830. At the age of sixteen years, together with his parents, he became a resident of Kemper county, Mississippi, a country which, then as now, was infested with great numbers of wicked and lawless men, the records of whose bloody crimes are still fresh in the memoiy of many of Kemper's oldest and most respected citizens. So marked was the spirit of violence and so light the regard for human life that the growth and improvement of the country was very slow; a condition which has followed its fortunes up to the present time. The accession of sober, industrious and trustworthy families to a community like that of Kemper, in those days, was welcomed and hailed with delight by all good people far and near, and the Chisolm family were not long in 1 6 The Chisolm Massacre. establishing their claim upon the latter class, where they ever after took rank among the first. In the month of March, 1851, the head of the family died, leaving William — then a boy nineteen years old — its guardian and protector. Three of the children were younger sisters, and on his death-bed the father exacted of the son the promise that he would discharge all obli gations of the estate, which amounted to a large sum for those early times and primitive surroundings, and that he would also educate the three sisters and provide for them comfortably in life; To the faithful perform ance of this duty young Chisolm at once set himself at work. How well he carried out this pledge the creditors or their heirs, and two of the sisters in good homes, sur rounded by happy families, are still living to attest, while the mother, now at the ripe old age of seventy- four years, is provided with a neat cottage, situated on a farm which yields her a bountiful support, and that within sight of her early home in Mississippi, where all her children were reared and around which the survivors and their descendants are clustered to-day, if not happy, certainly honored and revered. The 29th of Oct., 1856, the subject of this sketch was married to Emily S. Mann, an accomplished young lady, a daughter of John W. Mann, who was a native of Amelia Island, Florida, a prominent lawyer and a gentleman of high literary and social culture. The career of the Manns, in the eariy settlement of 'Florida, was somewhat remarkable. The grandfather of Emily S. Mann, who owned a large tract of land under ''Home Rule'' in Mississippi. 17 a Spanish grant, was the first settler, and built the first house where the city of Fernandina now stands. In the dispute between the early American settlers in Florida and the Spanish authorities, in which the former sought to take from Spain the lands claimerf- by that government, the Manns, among others, took prominent part, and by virtue of superior intelligence,,, skill and bravery soon rose to distinction. These set tlers were, many of them, driven from their homes, while others were put to death outright or carried off and compelled to drag out a life of refined torture as pris oners in Moro Castle, Cuba. Whether the theory is correct or not, it is one of the inherent elements of human conjecture to credit and foster the belief that the- strong characteristics which may in any way distinguish. the conduct of individuals are sure to mark and mould, irt some degree, the fortunes of their lineal posterity. Per haps the bold and venturesome spirit which charac terized the lives of this family in generations past, when the iron rule of Spain was laid heavily upon these early settlers, has had its influence in shaping the remarkable life and character of Emily Mann Chisolm. The education acquired by young Chisolm, up to the date of his marriage, was only such as could be gleaned at odd times in the common schools of the country, which were then very poor; but with the assistance of a dutiful and fond wife, his acquirements were soon made to equal the spirit of enterprise and just emulation already settled upon his heart. This dates the beginning of an eventful and prosperous life. 2 1 8 The Chisolm Massacre Full of vigor and manly strength, young Chisolm first entered upon the business of farming, almost the only legitimate pursuit then open to the young men of the country, most of whom preferred a life of idleness and debauch to one of uninterrupted toil. The 30th of January, 1858, W. W. Chisolm, at a special election held for the purpose of filling a vacancy in the office of magistrate, was elected to that important and honorable position in the beat or township in which he lived. It was on the eleventh of February, 1858, that Cor nelia Josephine, the first fruit of the marriage of W. W. Chisolm and Emily S. Mann was born. The sublime character of this pure girl, who, nineteen years after, fell a victim of savage outlawry, and died while defending her father against the assault of a blood-thirsty mob, is worthy the emulation of America's most exalted woman hood. Her young life, yielded up on the altar of filial love, and devotion to those principlesiof justice and right, which ever inspired the hearts of parent and child alike, cannot have been given in vain. The lesson taught by her example will live on, after the generation and the spirit which prompted these inhuman acts shall have been forgotten or numbered with the things of the past. As time advances and the proud names of our country's noble women are recorded, that of Cornelia Chisolm will be written in golden letters on the brightest page. From this slight digression, the reader is brought back to the historical events in the order of their occurrence, which enter into the ground-work of this narrative. "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 19 In October, 1858, at a general election, young Chisolm was again made the choice of the people of his district, who re-elected him Justice of the Peace for a term of two years, which time he served with honor and credit to him self and to the entire satisfaction of his constituency. At all events, so well were the duties of this office per formed, that in November, i860, he was made Probate Judge of the county, a place which he held almost unin terruptedly until the year 1867, when he resigned in favor of John McRea, who was appointed by the then Provis ional Governor of the State. During the long term in which he held this important position. Judge Chisolm was elected three times, running against Judge Gill, an older man, and one said to have been, next to Judge Chisolm, the most popular ever elected to an office in the county. In all these years in which he enjoyed the confidence of his countrymen to such a high degree. Judge Chisolm was a pronounced Union man of Whig proclivities, and an uncompromising enemy of the party which precipi tated and hurled head-long upon the country the terrible consequences of the rebellion. When the tide of seces sion swept over Mississippi like a devouring flame, he, with thousands of others like himself, who shuddered at the thought, in an unguarded moment, through force and intimidation, cast a vote favoring the disruption of the Union, an act which it is known he regretted all the re mainder of his life. As a civil officer and citizen he was always opposed to the fratricidal contest, to which he steadily refused to lend any personal service, and never 20 The Chisolm, Massacre. entered the army ^ve only in the thirty days militia, and then under protest. The popular voice of the county, in the meantime, was in favor of a vigorous prosecution of the war, even unto the " last ditch." Against all these odds Judge Chisolm was continued in office, from term to term. Whig and Unionist as he was. Young and inexperienced in politics, there must have been in him, from the beginning, something whicii won the hearts of, his fellows and called around him the elements of his unbounded success. At the close of the great struggle, he was among the few Southern men who early declared themselves in favor of reconstruction and the principles of the dominant party of that day, and to which he ever after adhered with a steadfastness and zeal amounting to patriotic devotion. Such were the leading characteristics of Judge Chisolm in youth and early man hood, and which gathered strength as time and age ad vanced, and through life marked the conduct of his public and private career. Through an acquaintance with the people of Kemper county, as they were found in an early day, before the spirit engendered by rebellion,^could have had anything to do in moulding Southem character, the reader will be enabled more clearly to comprehend the peculiar state of morals which is found to have existed among them in later years; and which it must be believed is the natural outgrowth of a long-neglected and depraved con dition of society. To make this point clear, the two fol lowing chapters are written. That there were then, as "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 2i now, many good and true men and women living in this wild and unreclaimed region cannot be doubted, and they have nothing to fear from this record. To them every meed of praise is given, and should the eyes of any such chance to meet these pages, it must be borne in mind that only " the wicked flee when no man pursueth." CHAPTER II. For many years before the war and at its close, Kem per county, if not the whole State of Mississippi, might well have been included with Kentucky in her historic designation of " the dark and bloody ground ;" for its population was, to a great extent, made up from a class of men who disregarded alike the laws of God and man, and " upon whom the multiplied villanies of nature swarmed in unwonted profusion." But unlike Kentucky, the deeds of barbarity committed within the borders of Kemper were not chargeable upon the untutored red man. None but the pure Anglo-Saxon race, and those to the manor bom, were in any way responsible for the facts which are here recorded. Against this class, the efforts of the better citizens were often powerless and futile ; and the officers entrusted with the execution of the law, either did not have the ability or were wanting in the disposition to arrest and punish. In the little town of Narkeeta, in the year 1837, there was a tavern kept by one Geo. Capers, and a grog shop which was presided over by a rare genius named Nicholas Caton. The courts of the country at that time had very little influence in controlling the actions of men, as the judge, the sheriff or the juries were sure to have friends on one side or the other of the question to be settled ; hence brute force became the only arbiter of peace. As a natural consequence of this, little neigh- "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 23 b9rhood factions would spring up, hold brief but abso lute sway for a day, or a month, and then as quickly give way to the temporary rule of another, which had proved itself more valiant in the use of the pistol or knife. For many years at Narkeeta there were two par ties of the kind described, which alternated in the brief establishment of their authority, sometimes extending all over the county. These were led by the Doughtys on one side and the McLeans on the other. Horse racing, rapine, robbery and murder were of almost weekly if not daily occurrence throughout that and other sections. It is impossible, at this time to furnish the details of all the diabolisms that were then and there witnessed, as they would furnish a record of crime containing volumes. Only the most aggravated case, the details of which are still fresh in the memory of Narkeeta's oldest citizens, is here recounted. It will be sufficient to say, that from the year 1837. to 1842, there were committed, in the neighborhood spoken of, eighteen murders, the most dia bolical of which occurred in the year 1839; in which George Capers waylaid and shot Nicholas Caton by the roadside. Caton, it appears, was apprised of his danger, and fearing death from a concealed enemy, while making a short journey through the country on horse-back, took up before him on the saddle a little child, eighteen months old, believing that its tender years and innocent prattle would form a temporary safeguard against the assassin's bullet. But in those days, as has been proved in more modern times, the presence of childhood' had no power or influence in staying the hand of violence. 24 . The Chisolm Massacre. While passing through a thicket, Caton was shot from his horse and fell to the ground dead, still clasping in his arms the innocent child. In the early spring of i860, Adam Calvert had on his place two colored boys, the property of some heirs for whom a Mrs. Davis was guardian. The negroes, when hired to Calvert, had just recovered from an attack of measles. Mrs. Davis stipulated in the contract, before letting them go, that they should be subjected to no un necessary exposure to the weather. ' Ferguson, Calvert's overseer, a man of low instincts and beastial habits, had these two boys at work hauling rails, one day in the early spring, when there came up a very heavy and driving rain. Ferguson himself repaired to a shelter, leaving the injunction with one of the lads that if he should stop his team to take shelter from the rain it would be done at the peril of his life. But the storm came thicker and faster, and the poor fellow, chilled, benumbed and blinded, took refuge, for a few moments, under a large tree near by. When the rain had passed, Ferguson gave him a terrible beating, and left him with the promise that he would renew the punishment on the following day. The boy, then . suffering from a raging fever, fearing that Ferguson would kill him, ran back to his mistress, Mrs. Davis, to whom he told the story of the cruel treatment he had received. It will be bome in mind that the penalty for harboring, or in any way aiding a runaway slave, was very severe ; and, although Mrs. Davis' heart bled for him, she was compelled to send the boy back, with a note to Mr. Calvert, asking him not to Home Rule" iu Jfississippi. -3 inflict too seva-e punisliment, and not any until he should reco\-cr from his fever. Mr. Calvei-t, it appears, had gone from home that moming, and when the slave i-oached his place he handed the note to Mrs. Calvcrt. Before sun rise of the next day Fei-guson took him out behind a stable, stripped and tied him across a log, and, with a large rope, luuing knots tied in the end, w hipped him in a most shocking and outrageous manner. The victim's screams were heard by the neighbors living a mile and a half distant in every direction, and then to conclude, the brute jumped upon his back and stamped him w ith his coarse heavy boots. On being released, it was found that the boy could not walk, and his brother, who was compelled to stand by and witness the scene, was ordered to cany him to the house, whei^ he lingered in gTcat agoiu' until death camo to his rehef. The brother then ran away, but was subsequently caught and the same treatment inflicted upon him ; and, with the blood run ning from his wounds, he was lashed to a plow and made to follow it all da\-. without food or water. Ferguson was never molested for this in any way. Some five or six >'ears before this, there was a man li\- ing neai- Scooba, who hired a negro cliild belonging to the McCaleb estate, and while having it in cliai^e, whipped the child to death. The people of the neighborhood wore indignant at this outrage, and the murderer was compelled to pay diimagis for the property t/iiis des- tr Its con taminating and poisonous influence are no longer felt." Was there ever a more fatal error committed? The young men of the South to-day are those who have ar rived at youth and maturity within the past eighteen years, which time with them has been a continuous era of blood and outlawry. They are thoroughly imbued with aU the cruelty and blood-thirstiness of their negro- whipping ancestry. Their hatred for the Union and the men whose gallantry and patriotism fprced obedience to the laws and homage to a common flag, is fully equal with that of their fathers, and has the hot blood of youth to feed its undying flame. It is to these young men that the coijntry is indebted for the Ku-KIux and Rifle Club organ izations of the present. The natural bent of their genius is to ride, whip and shoot, and as there is no other class upon whom this disposition can be exercised and carried into practice without incurring some risk to themselves, 296 - The Chisolm Massacre. the poor negro is made the target for the gratification of their hellish desires. To do these things well is considered a mark of the true spirit of the old time chivalry of the South, and the cultivation of these refining and manly sports is looked upon with encouraging smiles by their sweethearts and venerable sires. " The enthusiasm of the young men must not be checked," is a saying which has passed into a proverb in the history of Mississippi politics. There has never been a time since the outburst of the great rebeUion, in 1861, when secession and the doctrine of State rights breathed such an open air of defiance throughout the South as it does at the present time. To be fully convinced of the truthfulness of this, one has only to read the newspapers of that section as they come daily to hand, freighted with the breath of treason. Below is given an extract from an ode delivered before the Baldwin Memorial Association of Mississippi, May lOth, 1878, by William Walter Haskins, a youth, twenty- one years of age, a very prince among the young Ku- Klux desperadoes of the South. It is upon this class that the hopes of a peaceful solution of the southem question and a permanent union is based. " Tell the North that the South is ready as ever To lay down her life for the faith that she owns ; That each link of her tyrants shall valiantly sever, Though her weapons of war be but fence-rails and stones. Tell the North that our sons are all trainied to remember The dreams and the hopes of their fathers of old ; Tell the North that our spirits are watchful as ever. Our will and our purpose as eager and bold. "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 297 Tell the North that the South is a unit and mighty. Already the gleam of the hand 's on the wall. Already the first goldenTvords have been written That herald proud tyranny's o'erthrow and fall. Oh, martyrs, from Heaven look doi^n on her sorrow. And pray that her dream may at last become true ; That to-day's but the eve of a gladder to-morrow. When the Lee of the Grey '11 beat the Grant of the Blue. Oh, Savior in Heaven, look down on her kneeling ; Oh, hear her sad heart in humility pray. And scatter the storm cloud so darkly concealing The stars and the bars of her grand C. S. A." Indeed what else than this may be looked for from the young men of the South, under the teachings of the old leaders, whose very atmosphere is scented with the blood of innocent victims and filled with seditious utterances. Mr. Davis, in his secession speech at Miss. City, delivered July 10, 1878, said: "Representing no one, it would be quite unreasonable to hold any other responsible for the opinions which I entertain." But young Haskins, it appears, entertains precisely the same views expressed by his illustrious prototype and chief tain. And so it is: every newspaper of the South re-echoes the sentiments so recently uttered by the ex-president of the late Confederacy, and these are the sentiments of the southern people. Representing no one, and no longer ambitious of polit ical honors, Jeff. Davis feels free to speak, and from his 298 The Chisolm Massacre. own we may judge weU of the sentiments of southern statesmen of the present day, who can only hope to reach the goal of their ambition through hypocritical professions of love for the /Union and the old flag, while their hearts remain a sealed book. When it was first publicly announced that a work of this kind was contemplated^pending the execution of Walter Riley — southern newspapers were loud in their calls for the author to write and append a "Sequel to the Chisolm Massacre," which, as before intimated, it was then confidently believed by the inquisitors, would be furnished by the colored man, Riley, in the form of a confession on the gallows, clearly impUcating Judge Chisolm, Gilmer and others, in the murder of John W. GuUy. I On the 7th of December, 1877, simultaneously with the issue of the first edition of this l^ooky Walter Riley " expiated, at De Kalb, Mississippi, according to the forms of law, whatever crime" he may have been guUty of; and now, in the second edition of the " Chisolm Massacre," it affords the writer infinite satisfaction to be able to pre sent to the world the much coveted " sequel," then and there furnished by the condemned man, in the presence of death and a thousand living witnesses. Just what was there said and done was taken down at the time and on the spot by " Hanson," a well-known correspond ent of the Cincinnati Gazette, and is reproduced here. It affords a fitting chapter with which to close a record of this kind, and with it we would gladly let the dark mantle of shame fall upon and ever after hide from the "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 299 sight of their feUows a people thus self-condemned and steeped " In cowardice so mean, in infamy so vast. That hell gives in and devils stand aghast." KEMPER BAFFLED. Extraordinary Scene at a Mississippi Gallows. THE load of GUILT SETTLED FIRMLY UPON THE KEMPER COUNTY CHIVALRY. [Special Correspondence Cincinnati Gazette.] Scooba, Kemper Co., Miss., Dec. 7, 1877. Another act in the series of Kemper tragedies has just closed, and the body of Walter Riley lies in the soil of the sand hill and under the pine boughs, where at 11.20 A. M. to-day he met his fate. This was my first view of a hanging, and though I have seen death in .many shapes, I never saw a man approach eternity with such perfect bearing of a hero. In full health, in the prime of life, in his sober senses, and after nearly two hours' literal torture from questioners, this criminal died with a resignation equaUy removed from sullen despair, brazen hardihood and maudlin sensibUity. , But connected with this execution were events which can never be fully understood by the people of the North. In this man's consciousness lay the key to the Gilmer and Chisolm tragedy. With one word this mulatto might have brought joy to hundreds in Kemper county; but that , word he declared he could not honestly speak. If he had only said that Chisolm and GUmer instigated him to assassinate John W. Gully he would then have justified the murderous mob of April 29th, and brought relief to 300 The Chisolm Massacre. many a sore conscience. Hence the extraordinary scenes at the gallows to-day. For a month past, since Riley's last reprieve, every effort has been made by those inter ested to lead him to admit the compUcity of Judge Chisolm in the murder. Friends of the Gully clan have been freely admitted to his presence, and all others denied; and when he escaped and was found in the Chisolm gin-house, there, was positively a shriek of joy at this link in the chain of evidence. But even this proved to be of no consequerice, and hence the fearful anxiety of the crowd to-day to extort a confession more to their liking, The prisoner was brought from the jail at an early hour, there being a heavy body of guards all around with ¦double-barreled shot-guns, formed in hollow square around the cart. By courtesy of the sheriff your cor respondent and Dr. E. Fox, attending physician, were placed inside the guard line; and in this order we moved slowly to the grove east of town, there being about four hundred persons present, nearly all white men and boys. No white ladies and very few colored people were pres ent. Riley, who was a good looking quadroon, or light mulatto, conversed with perfect ease, and looked around with evident interest on the scenes he was viewing for the last time. The day was one of extraordinary beauty, even for this fine climate. There was not a cloud in the sky; the air was dead calm, save when a faint south wind wafted over us the odor of the pines. The cart stopped with the animals that drew it on the very verge of his grave, and the prisoner, rising briskly, sprang up on the scaffold in an easy, graceful manner, as if he were 'in a hurry. The gallows was of the rudest description. Two upright beams, a cross piece at the top, from which hung a sUp noose; below a narrow platform, supported at one end by a rope which was tied around the upright. The guards stood about the scaffold, surrounding the "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 301 Sheriff and assistants, Dr. Fox and myself; and the carpenter, pointing to the coffin in the rear end of the cart, kindly suggested that I might rest my paper on it to take down his last words. Glancing around the throng, I saw that my presence there had excited immense curiosity, not altogether unmixed with delight, and as the guard iri a minute or two had scattered among the throng, two or three of the ruder sort crowded up and whispered : " Take down every word he says — he'U confess, I tell you, he'U confess, confess who put him up to it." And in the moment or two of preliminaries such murmurs ran around the throng as " Now you'll hear the truth about Chisolm and John Gully."" He'U teU it all, he said he would;" " He'll teU who paid him forit and gave him the gun," etc. The life of the man was- nothing, aU interest centered in ,^he statement he was to make. Being asked by the sheriff if he had anything to say,. the condemned replied: "A great deal; I want to talk about an hour;" and again there was a stretching for ward of necks, and a general murmur, "It's coming." Then said the sheriff: " Men, Walter Riley will speak tO' you. Let all be attentive." And the prisoner stepped to the front, and bowing gracefully,, spoke as follows : " Well, I stand here on the brink of eternity to address. my old neighbors and friends for the last time. But I feel that, wicked as I have been, I am freely forgiven, and am going to a merciful God. I have been a wicked man,, but now I feel no fear — no fear of the great God, and only sorrow for those I leave. For my poor old mother,, whose heart is almost broken this day, and for my wife and three poor little children, away up in Tennessee.'" (At this point the prisoner faltered a moment, but in a moment resumed in a calm and dignified tone.) " I have been a bad man, and you see it has brought me to a bad end. My grave is dug in tbe woods as though I was a. 302 The Chisolm Massacre. .\ ,_ , wild man, and my portion is among the despised. I am not to be laid to rest with my race, nor numbered as one among the dead of my people. But that gives me no concern for God will raise me up even from this sand hiU in the pine forest, and I will stand with you all on that awful day. I fear not the face of this cpngregation, fpr I am soon to stand before a mightier congregation than this earth ever saw. I forgive all who have injured me, and beg forgiveness of all. I bless my friends and I bless my enemies. I am guUty of these two murders, and I alone am guilty, but I have truly repented, and hope for pardon." The prisoner here exhorted at great length, and several times repeated his confession of having killed Bob Dabbs in 1871, (the crime for which he was con victed) and John W. Gully last AprU ; then kneeled and offered a fervent prayer. He then confessed again and was silent. Sheriff. — " Would any of the people like to ask Walter a question?" Then ensued a performance the like of which probably was never witnessed at any legal execution. A murmur of questions rose on all sides, a dozen speaking at once, till the sheriff said : "Let Dr. Fox talk?" Dr. F. — "Walter you told me when we last talked that you killed John Gully, and that you were alone. Was that correct ? " " It was." " Were you hired to do it ? " " No, sir." " Remember, Walter, you are going into eternity soon, and if you can speak a word to relieve the minds of the people, do it, please do it, for your own sake and the sake of this distracted country." From aU sides the cry wa repeated: "Tell us. "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 303 Walter, tell us why you killed John Gully. Tell us who got you to do it, and relieve the minds of the people." "Well, (hesitatingly) I might say I was persuaded to do it — but only by bad company." "Walter, Walter!" almost shrieked an old man in the crowd, " Don't you know there is no hope of a heaven for you if you go into eternity with a Ue in your mouth ?" " Yes, I know that." " And don't you know that if you keep back the truth it's as bad as to tell a lie ? " Sheriff (impatiently). — "Yes, yes, Walter understands all that." Old man.— "Then let him speak and relieve the minds of the people. God cannot forgive anybody who keeps back the truth." And from all sides again came the appeal : " Tell us, Walter, what led to the murder of John Gully." "WeU," — a long pause — "I was persuaded to do it." "Who? Who? Who persuaded you ?" "Well, only bad company." "'What bad company? Who was it?" " Well, I call all" that bad company that leads a man to drinking, and from that to murder." "Oh, dear, dear, dear,' groaned the old man, "he's going into the presence of God with a lie in his mouth." I now saw that Dr. Fox was deeply affected. And here I take occasion to say that he appears to me the most intelligent and high-minded man I have met in this county ; and I confess myself under great obligations to him while here. He spoke again : " Walter, don't you see that these people are troubled in their minds ? In your mouth lies the issue of life and death to the persons here. You may save the innocent by pointing out the guilty. You have to die — no one here can help or hurt you. Tell us if you have any other knowledge, and give relief to the innocent and the troubled."' 304 The Chisolm Massacre. But the prisoner, with the sanie calm dignity and measured tone, without a trace of fear, replied : " Doctor, I knows I'ze got to die. Man can't save me. I only am guilty." A young man spoke: "Whose gun did you kill him with?" " WeU, it was a gun I had." " But whose?" "WeU, onel had." Driver of cart.—" Did you bring it from Tennessee when you came to kill John GuUy ?" " I didn't come purpose to kill him. I was working down this way on the railroad. That's how I came to be here." '' Then why did you kill him ?" " Well, I heard he was after me." Again the blear-eyed old man sang out, in a sort of whining tone : " God can't forgive anybody who keeps back part of the truth. Tell it all, Walter." Then from aU sides rose a confused shout: "Tell it!" "TeU it!" " You've got to die for it." " Them as brought ' ye here ought to be known." " There's no reprieve for ye this time." (Referring to the fact that he had previously been respited when on his way to the gallows.) " They's too many talking," said the sheriff angrily. " Let Dr. Fox talk to him." " Yes," said the doctor; " I believe Walter will tell me. Whose gun was it, Walter?" " I got the gun from Hezzy Jack." "Ah-ah-ah," ran around the crowd; "it's comin' now, he'U tell aU about it now." But he didn't. At any rate, he did not tell what they wanted to hear. He said he got the gun of Hezzy Jack, and that he knew Jack worked for Judge Chisolm. Then Dr. Fox came to the direct question : " Did you see Judge Chisolm or Gilmer about it ?" "Ho-me Rule" in Mississippi. 305 " No, sir; never." * " Did they send you any word ?" " No, sir ; if they did I never got it." Again the blear-eyed old man groaned out, " O, Walter, Walter, teU the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, or you can never enter Heaven." For over an hour did this sickening business go on, the poor, tortured man replying always with gentleness and dignity that beyond what he had stated he knew noth ing, and the whole crowd urging and contradicting him in half-whispers. It seeined to nje the most curious, irregular and iUegal proceeding ever had in any civilized country. Then Mr. Brame, a magistrate, and a very fair minded man, I think, from my acquaintance with him, said: "Walter, let me tell you the law. What you say now can't be used against any one. You are dead in law. No one can be touched unless there is other evidence than yours. But it is to satisfy the minds of the people. There is a mystery about the death of John Gully that must be cleared up. Can't you tell who persuaded you to kill him, and give this community relief?" " Mr. Brame, I can't go before God with a lie in my mouth. If any white man had anything to do with it I don't know it. Nobody ever sent me any word that I ever got. Only I told Hezzy Jack, and he said 'all right; go ahead.'" The whole crowd then fell to questioning again, and and elicited the fact that Riley took $40 in money, a hat, pair of boots, and roU of cloth from Gully. In the midst of the hubbub the sheriff suddenly called out : "WiUiam Riley, will you come up here?" and a venerable old man ascended the scaffold- The prisoner began to whisper to him, 'when the crowd shouted : " Louder, louder; let us aU hear." The aged man, who was a preacher, turned to the crowd and said : " Brethren and 20 3o6 The Chisolm Massacre. friends, I have a few words with you. That man (point ing to the prisoner,) was once my property. He stiU bears my name. He was a bad boy, as he told you; but I am not come here to play the detective on him ; I came only to exhort him to true repentance. ' He that confesseth his sins only shaU be forgiven.'" The old man then offered a fervent prayer, and said': "Walter, in a very few minutes you are to stand before God. I believe it is the will of God that you should confess to this people. Keeping back the truth is as bad as a lie. Tell it "Walter, tell it all, a/id may the 'great Searcher of hearts accept you in his everlasting kingdom." Walter. — "No, no; I cannot die with a lie in my mouth, and I cannot say what this crowd wants me to say. I am guilty. I cannot bring an innocent man into this thing. O, my friends, you do not believe me now, I know you do not ; but the great day will come when in the presence of a far mightier congregation than this, you wiU know I have told the truth; and with these words I am wiUing to meet my God." For the first time he showed signs of impatience, but the crowd persisted in questioning him about his attempt to escape from jaU. He replied that the file was fur nished by a friend, and he did not think a just God would require him to betray that friend. He insisted that the Chisolms knew nothing of his escape, and that Bird, Clay Chisolm's cousin, only knew it when he went to the gin-house. Again and again did the crowd urge him, and always with the phrases, " There is trouble and sor row among us," " Do speak and relieve the minds of this people," etc. At last, when this torturing process had lasted an hour and a half, the sheriff ended it by summoning a colored preacher, who offered prayer. Walter took the hymn book, and he himself gave out two lines at a time, in the Wesleyan method, the hymn — "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 307 " And must this feeble body fail. And must it sink and die ? And some shall quit this mournful vale. And soar to worlds on high." He led the singing in a clear voice, then sang a short hymn alone; knelt and offered a moving prayer. His brothers and a few colored people hurried up to bid him good-bye. 'His old master came, shook hands fervently,- and hurried, away into the forest, the tears streaming down his face. The black gown was put on him, and the black cap was drawn over his head, and the rope adjusted; then said he, "I want to speak last to Dr. Fox." The doctor hurried forward, and such wds the anxiety of the crowd for a confession that there were murmurs all around, " Ah, he'll tell who hired him now ; he didn't believe he was to die before." But, as the doctor told me, Riley only murmured in his ear. There was an awful pause. His lips moved in prayer. The sheriff severed the rope with a single blow, and, though Riley fell but two feet, his neck was broken and he died almost without a struggle. From first to last he had not exhibited a tremor of fear; nothing more than a slight impatience at the persistent questioning. Vital action continued for twenty minutes. With him died all knowledge of causes for the killing of John W. Gully — that act which was the pretext for the awful tragedy of April 29. Could this man have told what this crowd so longed for him to say, he would have lifted a heavy -weight from some men's consciences this day. * * * I was leaving De Kalb with a sad heart, for I could, in the interest of truth, but illy requite the courtesies extended by a few men ; when Dr. Fox first stopped me in the pine grove and urged me to express as charitable a judgment as possi ble. Said he : " At least say this in your report, that whether or not Chisolm and Gilmer conspired to have Gully killed, these people fully and honestly believed it. 3o8 The Chisolm Massacre. I see in your eye that the events of to-day are proof to you that they did not, but consider and say that they think, they have proof the other way. And say that everybody here regrets the death of Johnnie and Cor nelia Chisolm, and that only the long series of troubles could have brought about that mob. Good-bye, and God bless you," and he wrung my hand a,nd galloped away. His request is herewith granted, and I will further add my own opinion, that the great error in Judge Chisolm was in the iron rule he exercised over this county by the the aid of negro votes. It could not be patiently bome by white men. But neither that nor any other wrong can palliate the massacre of April 29. Only let the other facts be also stated, if they relieve anybody's mind. Now, after all this, imagine my astonishment on reach ing this place at dark to learn that it had already been telegraphed to Gov. Stone that Walter ReUey, on the scaffold, had virtually confessed he was urged to kill John W. Gully by a negro in the employ and intimate companionship of Judge Chisolm; and that he had virtually connected the Judge with the murder. And perhaps this statement is even now flying over northem wires, and a million people will read it to-morrow morn ing. Well, may be it's a sort of providence that I staid to the execution. I'm a swift witness that Walter ReUey's statement did not implicate either Chisolm, Gilmer, Hopper or Rosenbaum. HANSON. CHAPTER XXIX. At the February terra of the United States court for 1878, the case against the Gullys and others, aUuded to elsewhere, for conspiring together to prevent Judge Chisolm from advocating his election to Congress in the year 1876, was caUed. Of the result of that trial the Vicksburg Herald at the time spoke as follows : " The citizens of Kemper county, recently tried in Jackson for violation of the enforcement act, were triumphantly ac quitted." These "citizens" are the same who committed the wholesale murders at DeKalb in April of the preceding year, and each of the five victims of that slaughter, it will be borne in mind, if permitted to live would have furnished overwhelming evidence of the guilt of the accused in the case referred to, now so happily and " tri umphantly "disposed of. Had the "citizens of Kemper'' knpvvn or dreamed when apprehended, that^ upon trial, they were to be dealt with thus tenderly by the United States authorities, and made the objects of such deferen tial consideration by the people at large, it is possible that Judge Chisolm and his chUdren, and Gilmer and McLeUan might have been living to-day. At all events the immediate cause leading to their death would thus have been temporarily rernoved ; for, as transpires, the accused could just as weU have been " triumphantly acquit ted " without this appalling sacrifice of innocent blood. 3iO The Chisolm Massacre. Whatever may have been the disposition of the oflScers of the court to punish, the very idea of a prosecution of this case from the outset, seemed to be regarded by all in the light of a farce, and in its results the trial itself only goes to confirm the truth sought to be impressed upon the reader in another chapter of this work, viz : that the Federal courts are as impotent and inoperative in Mississippi as those of the State. The natural and settled prejudice against Federal authority in the South is such as to make this true although the subject involved may have no political significance whatever; but let the question of civil or political rights be raised, and there is at once a moral pressure brought to bear, which defies all law and scoffs at the very name of justice, and there is no force either moral or physical — be it said with humiliation and shame — within the general Government as it exists to-day, capable of reaching this great evU. Notwithstanding the presence at this trial in Jackson, of Mrs. Chisolm, her son Clay, and a score of other unimpeachable witnesses for the government not yet murdered, and in face of the fact that the guilt of these men is nowhere denied, the charge of Judge Hill to the jury ^d the feeble objections interposed by District Attomey Lea to the extraordinary latitude assumed by the defense and allowed by the court, the case was at once placed beyond the pale of a possibility of a success ful prosecution, and every effort to procure a conviction was relaxed. Four of the prisoners under bond at the outset, defied the authority of the court, and sent the following certificate in lieu of answering in person : "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 31 1 State of Mississippi, i Kemper County, j I, George L. Welsh, Sheriff of Kemper county, certify that William H. Gully, Jesse GuLly, Hous ton Gully, and Virgil Gully, parties against whom indictments are pending in the United States court at Jackson, are now under arrest by me, and in my cus tody, and that the law of our State does not aUow bail in their cases. Signed, GEO. L. WELSH, . Febmary 4, 1878. ^^^"^ "^ Y^^m^^x County. A forfeiture of bond was taken in these cases, the Dis trict Attorney summoned courage enough to issue alias capiases returnable instanter, and a deputy marshal was dispatched with writs and an order from the court to bring the defaulting prisoners if not actually in the county jail or the custody of the sheriff. Proceeding to DeKalb, the deputy found and arrested one, of the par ties unattended on the streets, and after much parleying and persuasion, all consented to accompany him, with the accommodating sheriff, to Jackson, where they appeared upon the streets armed to the teeth. " In due time," says the Jackson Times, "they appeared before the court and remained in Jackson during the trial two days, going and coming as they pleased without the least restraint being exercised over them. Accused and wit nesses for both the prosecution and defense mingled freely together during their forced (?) visit to the capital, and to use a stereotyped expression, the utmost harmony and good feeling prevailed." These proceedings, coupled with the document fur nished by " Geo. L. Welsh, sheriff," are in themselves. 312 The Chisolm Massacre. convincing proof of the manner in which the " citizens of Kemper" county are punished for crime, either by the State or Federal courts. WiUiam H., Jesse, Houstin and Virgil Gijlly are all under indictment in the circuit court of Kemper county for murder, "and," in the language of the sheriff, " the law of the State does not allow bail in their case," yet, instead of languishing in jaU from month to month until their trial shall take place, these self-convicted murderers and outlaws go scott free on their "parole of honor." More than a year has passed since William H. Gully and his confed erates shot Cornelia and Johnny Chisolm to death. Virgil, it was, who emptied the contents of a loaded gun into GUmer's back, while Jim Brittain, the deputy sheriff, held his hands." Nearly a year has passed since the indictments were found, and they have never been ar rested! Federal power, feeble and inefficient at best, has en tirely withdrawn its hold, where the constant presence of its strong arm was the only guarantee of domestic tranquility, and that form of government prescribed by the constitution for each and every State. The presi dent himself, as silent as the graves of the martyrs, has never so much as placed the seal of his personal, much less his official, condemnation upon this great over shadowing national crime, and these men are now busily employed in circulating a petition for their complete pardon and absolution from all sin, through the execu tive of the State, who is chiefly remarkable for having " no power to do anything at all." CHAPTER XXX. From the date of the Kemper county tragedy and the earliest commencement of this volume, up to the present time, the original purpose of the author has never been abandoned. Though disappointed in the reception of the work by the people at the outset, embarrassed by lack of pecuniary means to carry it to that degree of success which money alone so often accomplishes for pur poses having less merit; deceived, delayed and embar rassed by placing the work into the hands of an impe cunious, avaricious and fraudulent — so called — publishing house; the labor of bringing our picture of " Home Rule" fairly to the attention of the patriotic and justice- loving men and women of the country has been attended with many disparaging obstacles and rebuffs. After the first outburst of indignation and horror felt in regard to the Kemper county tragedy, coming just at the time when the pronounced policy of the administra tion had spread the wet blanket of conciliation, smother ing and stultifying party fealty and every spirit of manly patriotism, there settled upon the country a silence and apathy so profound as to impress all freedom-loving hearts with a feeling not unUke that produced by the stUl ness which precedes the coming storm. The metropoli tan journals of the country, heretofore conspicuous for manly advocacy of the great truths which form the foundation stone upon which the superstructure of our 314 Tlu Chisolm Massacre. govemment rests, the acknowledged organs of the party leaders, for the most part, observed the same ominous silence upon this and aU other matters touching the polit ical situation in the southem States ; and their notices of the "Chisolm Massacre" woe meagre and generally occupied obscure comers among the "book notices," without the responsibility of editorial sanction. Admit ting in one issue that the constitution and laws in many of the southem States were subverted, and that through blood and violence a large proportion of the citizens of that section were disfranchised; while in the next breath they would as loudly declare the southem ques tion to be dead and among the things of the past. The party leaders themsel-ves, to whose attention the work and the objects which it aims to accomplish, were repeatedly called, seemed as loth to give the subject public endorsement as the newspapers or the president, who was then traveUng through Tennessee and Georgia, apologizing to southem rebels for the very humble part bome by himself in whipping them into obedience to the laws. But beUeving he is best armed whose cause is just, the author and publisher has strug gled on, aided here and there by a warm and eamest heart, never for a moment losing hope in the true nobUity of American character, its genuine patriotism, just appreciation of exalted womanhood, and all the virtues which adorn and beautify the highest type of modem ci-vilization. About the first of January, through the efforts of a few devoted friends, Mrs. Chisolm and Mrs. Gilmer, both This beautiful monument of white bronze is to be erected over the gra-res of the Chisolm martyis, in Cedar HiU Cemetery, Clinton Connty, Pennsylvania, by J. C. Sigmond, Esq. Height of monument, 20 feet 4 inches; base, 6x6 feet. "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 315 widowed by poUtical assassination, and in destitute circumstances, were given clerkships, the first in the Treasury, and the other in the War Department, at Washington, where they stiU labor for daily bread. .Meantime the book found its way, step by step, to the hearts of attentive readers throughout the northern States, and Mr. J. C. Sigmond, a kind hearted and benevolent stranger friend, living near Lock Haven, in Pennsylvania, made a liberal proposition to furnish a lot and erect a monument, a cut of which is hereby appended, in Cedar Hill cemetery, a somewhat retired, though beautiful and picturesque place, near his own home. Further than this, the first twelve months passed with apparently slow progress in the accompUshment of the work thus discouragingly begun. But it is said God moves in a mysterious way. Murdered as the victims were, by savages in open day on the Sabbath, within sight and hearing of three edifices whose spires point upward to the Throne of Grace; surrounded by sweet flowers, cultivated fields and green pastures ; within the domains of a government which had its birth and stal wart growth in a gigantic struggle for human rights; buried as they had been slain, like beasts, and without christian obsequies, a whole year went by and no funeral services were held, no arrests were made, and no public recognition whatever, either by church or state was given this great national crime; and but for the efforts of a few who never ceased to labor, its terrible- details would now have been forgotten, and the heroic .3 1 6 The Chisolm Massacre. virtues of the dead cherished only in the hearts and .memories of those who knew and loved them most. The month of May came and with it the days of the -first anniversary of the Chisolm massacre, when at the adopted home of the widowed mother — the nation's capitol — where assemble from year to year the chosen representatives of the people and judges of the^law, upon whose talents, integrity and patriotism is based the hope of a final and satisfactory solution of the great problem of human liberty, it was confidently beUeved hy earnest friends that proper ceremonies might be held in commemoration of a father who died because he loved his country, and that all who knew the sad story of their martyrdom would hasten ta do homage to the memory of his children, who died because they loved their father. A member in good standing of the Meth odist Episcopal church, Mrs. Chisplm, at the solicitation of friends, sought the assistance of the Rev. Dr. Lana- han, of the Foundry M. E. Church, the place where the president and Mrs. Hayes worship. On being invited to conduct memorial services, on Sunday, the 19th of May, the Sabbath nearest the anniversary of Cornelia's death, which took place on the 15 th, the reverend gentleman poUtely decUned to do so, giving various reasons therefor, and among others, this: "Washington was not the home of the deceased, their death had occurred a long time ago, and it was now too late to revive recollections of the pecu liar circumstances attending their demise, all of which had been well-nigh forgotten." Not only did he do this, but, when asked to announce from his pulpit the fact that the "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 317- desired services would be held at the Metropolitan church,. he declined to respond affirmatively to this request, giving the reason for so declining — after having been first asked to conduct the ceremonies himself — that he was not in the habit of inviting people away from his own church. In these objections Doctor Lanahan was well sustained by the democratic press of the country, from which there went up a howl like that pf a jackal over a newly made grave, protesting against these solemn rites„ because of the political significance which might attach, detrimental to the great party of reform. But from this the error should not b^ committed that it is sought here to impress a belief that the Christian Church is everywhere dead to the dictates of patrotism and common humanity The church is presumed to be humjin and like human nature everywhere, has its bright and glorious, as well as dark and ' unlovely side. The atmosphere surrounding- Dr. Lanahan in his little pas torate, fortunately, does not comprehend the broad uni verse in\ its grasp. There are churches beyond the power or dictation of Democratic newspapers ; churches surrounded and controUed by a better influence than those of Kemper county or that ui which the president worships. CHAPTER XXXI. Tuming, somewhat disheartened from the Foundry, the Metropolitan church presided over by the Rev. Dr. Naylor, was next appealed to, and not in vain. Dr. Naylor at once consented to perform the desired cer- monies and the distinguished services of the Rev. Dr. Haven, Bishop of the M. E. church, resident at Atlanta, Georgia, were called to his assistance. Following the announcement of this fact, Sunday morning the 19th of May came, when the capacious pews and aisles of the Metropolitan church were filled to overflowing with sympathizing friends, those in full accoi-d with the occa sion and the objects sought to be attained. Among these were a large number of men and women the most honored in Washington. The church choir, one of more than ordinary merit, had selected and practiced suitable music which was rendered in an impressive man ner. The sermon delivered by Dr. Naylor, was care fully prepared and breathed a spirit of christian grace and resignation. He was followed by Bishop Haven in a dis course which moved the hearts of that vast assembly as, perhaps, a church auditory was never moved before. The ominous silence which for so long a time had settled like a dark pall over the country, closing the eyes of the people against a terrible truth only because its contem plation gave them pain, was here broken. The eloquent appeal of Bishop Haven went straight to the hearts and consciences of his hearers, and that sympathy and "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 319 patriotism so long slumbering in their breasts, was by it fanned into a flame, and despite the place and occasion, found vent in continued bursts of applause. As hoped and believed, the feeling aroused on that day has contin ued to spread. The " Ladies' Chisolm Monument Asso ciation " followed soon, in a movement to raise money through the sale of this volume, it being deemed the most practical means through which the proposed monument could be erected, while, by this agency alone the important truths contained in the work would become more widely known and better understood. Foremost in this movement are found the honored names of Mary Clemmer, Mrs. Lippincott, (Grace Green wood), Mrs. H. C. Ingersoll, and many others if not so widely known, equally earnest and true. The demand for copies of the " Chisolm Massacre," from that day began to increase, and all that remained of the first edition was rapidly taken up. In response to the "Address to the Women of the Country," letters of encouragement and orders for books are now coming in from all parts. While there is no longer a doubt as to the ultimate success of the enterprise, to those who are entrusted with its labor, many rugged obstacles are yet presented, and it is only through the persistent individual effort of those whose hearts are really enlisted, that we may look for a realization of our cherished hopes. Thankful for the many kindnesses already extended, never losing sight of the glorious objects to be attained, those who have undertaken the accomplishment of this work,wiU press- steadily forward untU the goal is reached. Washington, D. C, Aug., 1878. THE MARTYRS OF MISSISSIPPI. An address delivered by Bishop Haven at Metropolitan church, Washington, May xg, 1878, in commemoration of the martyrdom of the Chisolm family. It is an instinct of man that funeral rites should accompany his body to its long home. The ancient heathen could not cross the Styx and reach the Elysian fields if his body lacked the proper ceremonies of sepul ture. However hasty the flight of the living, he must still pause long enough to throw three handfuls of dust upon the corpse of his comrade, and pronounce a solemn hail and farewell. Otherwise that companion must wander a hundred years on the shaded side of the land of shades ere he finds repose and bUss. What is instinct is also religion. Christianity lays a like necessity upon its devotees and the peoples to whom it is the only religion, even when they are not its devotees. One shrinks less from the cremation fires than from the faithless, hopeless and riteless circumstances that attend that act. No prayer, no word of sympathy, no hymn of consolation, no hint of reunion accompany the dread burning. The ancient employers of this mode of hurial were less irreverent. To the height of their relig ious knowledge they performed this sad service. In accordance with this race-honored custom, we come together to-day to engage in the solemn duties demanded by the dead, no less than by the living. We come to bury, not to praise. We come to satisfy the just long ings of a widowed and child-reft heart, of a fatherless and sisterless family, that their dead may be decently buried. We come to scatter flowers from full hands on " a rare and radiant maiden," on a brave and true man, on a sweet and loving lad. We come to bury the dead out of our sight by those ceremonies known and felt in "Home Rule" ih Mississippi. 321 all ages and lands as befitting these sad necessities of humanity. If the occasion leads further in its sugges tions, these suggestions do not create the occasion. A stricken family craves a funeral service. Shall it be refused?. They have waited a year and a day for such services. Shall they continue to wait ? ShaU the wife and mother mourn with a bitterer mourning because no voice of prayer, no song of comfort, no word of christian consolation has been uttered over her lost ones ? Who of us can begrudge this little gift ? Who of us shall say that such consecration is a desecration? Who shall complain that the Lord's day and the Lord's house are employed in this most christian service? Let us with bowed hearts dwell under the shadow of this still present calamity. Let us stand around this mouming Rizpah, who lies prostrate before her dead, not sons alone, but husband, and daughter and son — ^that perfect trinity to woman's heart — who has lain there, lo, these many month|S ; who refuses to be comforted, not only because they are not, but also because, in every fibre of her soul, they are still unburied. Let us gather about these lads, who stand in manly sUence before the graves of their household — the revered father, the oldest brother, heir thereby in their consciousness to the headship of their own family and generation, and their adored sister, and who solemnly await the due rites of the church over their beloved dead. May Rizpah now find comfort, and the household accept these tributes as a proper burial. I shall not dwell upon the scene that rises before your eyes in all its horrors. I dare not. My own feelings cannot bear the sight. A year ago the 29th of last month no happier family blossomed in all this land — in any land. The father and daughter had just returned from a journey to the North, where the mighty Niagara had been first seen by those young eyes, which dreamed 21 322 The Chisolm Massacre. not that they should look ere many weeks on a more deadly cataract, and be whelmed beneath its rushing torrents of madness and death. She had written a description of that trip only two days before the open ing of the fearful drama. They were exulting in the opened glory of the coming year — the soft, rich land scape, the blooming trees and fields, the music of birds, every gayety of nature in its ecstacy of joy. How beau tiful was that opening landscape, let that daughter's words tell, written just a week before the fatal shot : " This afternoon brother and I mounted our horses and gaUoped away for a ride. We left the road about five miles from town and took to the woods; and I would tell you how beautiful they looked if I could. The trees are aU clothed in a soft and tender foUage, the leaves being about half grown. There are lovely flowers of every color and variety now in bloom* along the creek. The beautiful yellow jessamines meet across the stream and clasp their soft sweet blooms and tendrils together, while the banks are gemmed with forget-me-nots, butter cups, wild violets, dogwood and honeysuckle. O, I wish you could have been with us on our ride; then you would know ' how delightful it was. Sweet papa has just returned from St. Louis." What a pretty picture is this — the lad just budding into youth; the sister blossoming into maidenhood, knit together in the last ride on earth, amid the glories of a southern spring. "Sweet papa," too, is introduced thoughtlessly, but with sad significance, into the picture. Into that scene of loveliness in home and nature the destroyer came. On the fifteenth of the next month, a year ago last Wednesday, the grave had closed over three of that household, gone down in bloody winding clothes, unwept, unhonored and unsung. No prayer, no sermon, no word of christian strength and sympathy was uttered at the darkened home or at the grave's mouth. The "Home Rule"' in Mississippi. 323 stroke of fate was never swifter or sharper. " So swift treads sorrow on the heels of joy." Had this violence happened at the hands of the red man, how the whole land would have rung with indig nation ; , how fast would have flowed the tears of neigh bors and of the nation; how intense the throb of sympathy ; how eamest the prayers ; how hot the right eous anger. But it was thou, mine equal, my guide, my acquaintance. We took sweet counsel together, and walked into the house of God in company. It was those that had eat bread from his hand that smote him unto the death — nay, it was the great, great wrong behind, above, below, through these, which bore them on too willingly to the deed. To-day the only reparation meet is a public funeral where fhey fell, a public confes sion from those by whom they fell, a public monument testifying to their sorrow at the event that has made their county fearfully famous in all the world. Such lamentation and dedication will yet be made. If they or their children fail to do this holy duty, others wUl certainly do the same. It is the eternal law. A week ago I rode by a granite statue, exquisitely carved, of a brave and beautiful woman. It was erected only a year or two since, and is in honor of Hannah Dustin, who,in i698,nearly two hundred years ago, there showed extraordinary valor in rescuing herself from savage captors. The land has never let the memory of her courage die, and has at last moulded it into enduring shape. None the less will the same land remember the not inferior courage and faithfulness of Cornelia Josephine Chisolm. Nay, it will the more remember, for this woman died for her love and devotion. She chose to die. Her " sweet papa " was in jeopardy — nay, was in the grip of death. Rather than fly from his side she hastened unto it. She prepared for the defense of his life with ammunition concealed about her person. She inter- 324 T'^^ Chisolm Massacre. posed to save him after her own face had been filled with wounds from shot that cleft the iron from the prison bars, and her arm had been shattered from wrist to shoulder as she covered his heart with its protecting embrace. She begged them to take her life and spare her " darling papa." But all in vain. Theirs was the long intimacy of the pldest child and only daughter with the father, an intimacy the deepest that family ties can know, unless it be the corresponding affection of the oldest child and only son with his mother, and this intimacy is less deli cate and tender in its filial phases. They had made this depth of mutual devotion deeper and dearer by their winter in Washington, and in northern travel. They had clung together these many months of home separa tion, only now to show how they could die together. Brave and manly as were the father and son in that awful hour, they were exceeded in coolness of daring, in intensity of purpose, in completeness of self-possession, in readiness of resource, in earnestness of petition, in every element of highest manhood, by this frail girl of nineteen. Comelia is a name that ranks high in Roman annals. Her boast of her sons as her jewels has shone her brightest jewel for more than twenty centuries. But this Cornelia exceUed the earliest of her name. Her jewel was her passionate devotion to her father in this hour of death. That shall shine forever. No waste of time can dim its brightness. Immortality will but increase its beauty and worth. Josephine is a historic name. A proud and capable woman stands at the front of this century, mastering the master of the world. Divorced and degraded, she rules him from her enforced seclusion. Those of her blood stiU sit on thrones, and are heirs to imperial crowns. But this Josephine would be gladly welcomed by that illustrious lady as her peer in every quality of womanhood and manhood, for the highest traits of humanity met and mingled in one brief hour. "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 325 On that morning she was a simple girl, " heart-whole," as she wrote loving, girlish things. In that hour she towered into an angel, princely and potent, glowing in the fires of death with the strength and glory of Beatrice in the upper circles of the heavens. "Welcome to the undying names of mankind be that of this worthy suc cessor of the great Cornelia and Josephine. We shall not enter upon the field that lies before your every thought : Why was this deed done, and what shall be the end of these things if allowed to go unrebuked of the nation ? Ye need not that I should teach you. Your hearts are inditing no pleasant, though" perhaps it may prove a profitable matter. The sodden lamb, the unleav ened cake, and the bitter herbs made a useful meal to the thoughtful Israelite. He reflected on the hour when death reigned in every Egyptian household, and his own, by miracle, escaped. So we may sup on lenten food this hour and find it nutritious to soul and spirit. The angel of death, not God-sent, but devil-driven, hovers over much of our land, smiting with blood strokes the victims of his cruel wrath. He has left yoiir homes free, yet only for a season. If we aUow murder for opinion's sake to be the law in one part of our land, it wUl soon be of all parts. Can one member suffer and not all suffer with it ? Can a leading citizen and his family be set on and slain in Massachusetts for political causes, and peace and safety attend the ballot in Mississippi ? No more can the reverse be true. The present honeycombing of Pennsylvania with murder, which stem and unrelenting justice cannot abate; the communistic threatenings in Chicago and California; the bloody strikes along the Ohio; the tramp wandering murderously over one-half of our union, is the natural, the inevitable outcome of the unwiUingness of the national government to protect its citizens in the other half. The theory that State gov ernments have such absolute control of life and death 326 The Chisolm Massacre. within their territories that the nation cannot cross their boundaries to protect its citizens and punish their mur derers, has brought us to this weak and miserable pass. We are affrighted at the shadow glowering at our own hearthstone. In secluded Vermont, in crowded Cincin nati, in remote Maine, in central Indiana, the same terror besets us by night, the same deadly danger by day. One Indian massacre arouses every part of the land,, be it the Modocs of Oregon, or the Sioux of Minnesota, or the Utes of Colorado, or the Comanches of Arizona,. indignation and wrath leaps from end to end of the continent, and that, too, when no one dreams that the, dread foe is to steal into Eastern homes and renew his horrors at Wyoming or Schenectady. But this deed has universal national application. It proves universal national weakness; it breeds universal national disaster. A people that cannot protect itself is no people. It falls to pieces when it allows its members to be cut to to pieces. [Applause.] Said a gentlemen to me but yesterday, who had just returned from abroad: "The old world is over-governed;, we, under-govemed." Nothing strikes one more forcibly on re-entering this land than the lack of national power over its own citizens. Unless a stronger govern ment arises, we shall dissolve and disappear as a nation. We sigh for the verification of the seal of Massachusetts — an uplifted arm holding a sword, which alone gives placid quiet under liberty. We have taken the first step in verifying our right to exist as a nation on gigantic fields of strife by bloody and costly valor. We must carry forward and complete this work in the national protection of every citizen in his every right. [Ap plause.] We inust defend freedom of speech and freedom of ballot, or we perish from the earth. To this coming perfection of national peace and power this sad event will contribute. This family group "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 327 are martyrs to American equality of right, to the Declar ation of Independence, and to the preamble of the Constitution. It was for the cause of equal rights the father fought and family feU. It was for the protection of every citizen at the polls: for true Democracy — the government of the majority of the voters, legally and fearlessly expressed; for the American nation; for the rights of mankind-, that this citizen of America, his brave son and braver daughter, laid down their lives. Their cries of agony and death shall never be for gotten, never below, never above. " Their moans The vales redouble to the hills, and they To heaven." Their forms will be wrought into marble, painted upon , canvas, honored in prose and verse, held in high and higher remembrance as years and ages go by. The chU dren of the fathers who so ignorantly slew them will • build their sumptuous sepulchers. That lone and dread procession that thrice threaded the dismal path a score of miles — a feeble few, without minister, or even sexton, to assist them, bearing the bloody dead, in jeopardy of Ufe, as they pursued their mournful journey — wUl yet be changed into a solemn, penitential, but glad multitude of the citizens of the same county, with their wives and daughters and sons, gathering about that green spot, where they were thus buried, to make confession of their fathers' transgression by such deeds of atonement as marble, and eulogy, and prayer, and sermon are able to give. To the future, then, poor stricken wife and mother, poor fatherless and sisterless youth, to the future cast your wet but hopeful eyes, wet with joyful tears, tears for the dead beloved, joy that they died so gloriously, and won in one short hour immortal fame. Had they not thus died, the world had never known them. Had 328 The Chisplm Massacre. they not thus died, liberty, equality, fraternity for all our land, and all its people, perhaps, had never been attained. There may be many another bloody step ere that high table-land of humanity in America is reached. It may be that others, who now speak and hear, may be required also, to make for their nation like holy sacri fice. In this city, where our greatest citizen gave his life for the life of the land, we can properly note the slow and bleeding feet of the martyrs to Christ and our country. May we^ if called, be as wiUing and ready to follow the Christ, and these his disciples, for the perfec tion of the work of human regeneration. It may be that the whole nation wiU yet be compelled to wrestle in the sweat of this great agony, for equal rights of all men, as it had to wrestle for independence and for existence. It may be that Enceladus wUl yet arise from under this mountain of permitted prejudice and hate in a manner at which all the world shall stand aghast — a Kemper County massacre in every hamlet of the land. It may be that we shall yet be compelled to cry out in bitterness of spirit : Ah, me ! for the land that is sown With the harvest of despair ! ¦Where the burning cinders, blown From the lips of the overthrown, Enceladus, fill the air ! God forbid that such a horror shall light upon our land ! God will not forbid it if we let his children's blood cry to him from the ground. God did not forbid, could not forbid, Cain's deluge from washing out Cain's sin. Yet, if the deluge shall come, if the waters of death shall prevail, even above the tops of the highest moun tains, if the nation shall be wrapped iri the flames of civU strife more dire than any we have yet felt, and our in difference to the fate of our brothers sha'l doom us to a worse suffering, out of it all shall the new earth come. "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 329 The deluge shall pass away ; the land of righteousness ' of brotherliness, of Christ without caste or violence, or hatred, or disloyalty, or murder, shall appear above the flood. And then will still gleam forth, nay wUl more brightly blaze, the fame of this just father, this brave lad, this Cornelian jewel of filial maidenhood. Hope, then, sad hearts; hope and endure, and be patient. Pray for those who have despoiled your house of its hpme, its head, its heart. Pray for them by name, pray for them with all the heart. So will you be still one household, for thus prays your family in heaven. In Christ they lived, for Christ they died, with Christ they dwell. Live ye in Christ in petition for the forgive ness of your enemies, so that, if spared the martyr's fate, you may still rejoice in the martyr's crown. For thus you shall win like honor from God, with those of your own flesh and blopd that have gone up — yes blessed be the Lord, gone up, up, up, up, in human love and reverence, in earthly fame, into heavenly seats, through great tribulation, and have washed their robes of blood, and made them white in the bloodier blood of the Lamb, who died for them as they died for Him, and will make them to reign with Him in peace and bliss forever and forever 330 The Chisol-m Massacre. TO THE MEMORY OF CORNELIA J. CHISOLM. BY STEPHEN S. HARDING. Written on the first anniversary of her death. Brave murdered, martyred maid ! I've listened long in silence — listened long To hear some raatchless poet's song. Great soul, to thee and thine, ' Thou peerless heroine. To soothe thy wandering shade. But all in vain. Why sleeps the silent lyre. With its wild, sobbing strain? Why hushed the poets words of fire. That rouse brave hearts with manly ire 'Gainst lawless deeds of blood. And wrongs of helpless womanhood. In cowardfce so mean, in infamy so vast. That hell gives in and devils stand aghast. Oh, peerless heroine, what tho' thy name May lack in euphony and rythm ; What boots the name When deeds of thine shall burn a deathless flame In hearts of valiant men ; And thy pure soul, from mortal dross refined. Shall glow with magic light, as when A dew drop is enshrined In bosom of trihedral prism ? Comelia Chisolm ! Hadst thou but died in classic Rome, When thy great namesake died. Thou wouldst have lived in Parian stone. Supreme in excellence alone ; "Home Rule" in Mississippi. 331 Through the long ages dim. Thy very name the poet's synonym For filial love and courage deified. Why should Columbia's daughter's weep For Jephtha's virgin daughter? Victim to vo-^ — dread vow to keep — For Ammonitish slaughter. Why wander forth in fancy's dreams. Along the mountain paths and streams, WitK misty eyes, where Mezpeh's maiden trod. Doomed sacrifice to Judea's God, And have no tears, brave Kemper girl for thee. Thou more than virgin maid of Gallilee? Milan, Ind., May 15, 1878 YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 3 9002 01289 4383