Remaining here a few days to recuperate
his almost worn-out energies, and receiving many invitations
from different cities to lay before the sympathizing
public the story of his wrongs, he determined to make
a tour through several Northern States. Accordingly
on the fourth day of April he was welcomed to the
city of Cincinnati, Ohio, in a manner which was worthy
of his unswerving patriotism and illustrious fidelity.
It was very much doubted whether the Opera House,
since it was first opened to the public, ever contained
a larger or more refined assemblage than on that evening.
Before the doors were opened, the
crowd had commenced to gather on Fourth street, and
before half-past seven o’clock, not a vacant
seat was to be found in the house, and the aisles
and every available spot occupied. Many were
unable to obtain even standing room, and left the
house. The turnout, considering that the admission
fee was fifty cents, must have been very gratifying
to the Parson.
The stage was decorated with a number
of American flags, and across the front part of it
were two rows of chairs, on which were seated the Vice
Presidents. Immediately in the rear was a raised
platform, on which were seated three hundred and seventy-two
boys and girls from the district, intermediate and
high schools of the city, who, under the direction
of Mr. L. W. Mason, sang the following:
SONG OF WELCOME.
All hail! all hail! the here unflinching!
The pure patriot we
sing, unwavering and bold,
Who foul treason denounced, and
with deeds was still clinching
His strong speech, when
vile traitors in numbers untold
Howled hatred demoniac, and madly
were clamoring,
His life should be forfeit!
triumphantly sing,
And utter the welcome with the tongue’s
feeble stammering,
The welcome, the warm
welcome, our hearts to him bring!
Safe! safe
in our midst, we shall hear the man’s voice,
That had
cowed all his foes, and made us rejoice;
Then hail
him again, and forever and aye!
His country
he loves, and for it he would die!
Rejoice! rejoice! for freedom is
marching
With her power resistless,
to punish and crush;
And the Iris of Union will soon
be o’erarching
Again our loved country,
when its brave children rush
To rescue its life from the demons
now seeking
To blot out its name
from the nations of earth.
But rather than this, let their
black blood be reeking,
Unpitied by earth, so
disgraced by their birth.
Thus speaks
he, the hero! Then sing with one voice:
We love
and revere him, in his presence rejoice!
Then hail
him again, and forever and aye!
His country
he loves, and for it he would die!
Shortly after eight o’clock
Parson Brownlow came upon the stage, leaning upon
the arm of Joseph C. Butler, Esq., the President of
the Chamber of Commerce.
Mr. Butler, in introducing Mr. Brownlow, said:
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: I
have been honored with the pleasing duty of inaugurating
the ceremonies of this occasion, in introducing a renowned
and loyal citizen of our sister State of Tennessee.
A State forced by usurpation, fraud and violence into
rebellion against a Government that her sons in bygone
times have done so much to maintain and establish,
and now suffers in being the field of conflict in a
desolating civil war. A State recently baptized
again into the fold of the Union by the martyr patriots’
blood shed upon her soil, and will be confirmed in
that fold by continued deeds of heroic daring; within
whose limits has been exhibited by her loyal sons
as unfaltering devotion and love of country as has
ever been displayed in the history of any people.
Surrounded by the armed band of desperate and cruel
military despots, given up to the mercy of ignorant
and vicious mobs, cut off from all communication with
and support from a Government they were sacrificing
themselves to maintain, these patriots of Tennessee
were driven from their homes, suffered in jails, and
sealed, when called on, with their lives on the scaffold
their devotion to the Union and Constitution established
by their fathers. Through a long and weary summer,
through the dreary fall and winter, with hearts sickened
by many disappointed hopes, they suffered and faithfully
endured. And now that the armies of the Union
have entered their State, and the flag of freedom once
more floats over its capital, may we not hope that
the hour of their deliverance is at hand. God
grant it may be speedy.
One of this noble band of patriots
is with us to-night. He will recount to you some
of the scenes he has witnessed, and give you in brief
the history of the rebellion in his once prosperous
and noble State. He has sacrificed on the altar
of his country all that man holds most dear, jeopardizing
not only his own life, but the lives of his family
and kindred in vindicating the sacred cause of his
country. If we honor the bravery displayed on
the battle-field, how much more should we honor him,
who almost alone, sick and in prison, tempted by seducing
offers of power and place, and with an ignominious
death daily threatened, maintains for weeks and months
with unfaltering trust, his faith and virtue.
The instinctive homage of the human heart to genuine
courage we pay to an endurance like this. The
historian who will record for the perusal of our children
the list of heroes that this wicked rebellion has
brought forth, will name none whose matchless courage
is surpassed, or the bold outline of whose character
for outspoken patriotism, so overshadows all cavil
and criticism, as the hero of the pulpit and the press.
I have now the honor of introducing Mr. W. G. Brownlow,
of Knoxville, Tennessee.
SPEECH.
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: I
appear before you in accordance with the arrangement
of a committee a large committee of
intelligent and influential citizens of your own town.
I am not before you for the purpose of making an effort
as an orator, or a speaker, with any view or wish
to fascinate or to charm my audience with the style
or the language I employ in the brief address I am
about to deliver.
I am before you for the purpose of
relating facts and localities, and giving you names
in regard to the rebellion in the South, and the persécutions
of my fellow countrymen, and their sufferings even
unto death. I have met, since I came to this
city, with not a few intelligent and high-toned gentlemen men
of years and of knowledge who have inquired
of me seriously: “Is it a fact that they
hanged men, shot down men, in your country, for their
sentiments?” You cannot, it seems to me, realize
the state of things that has existed beyond the mountains.
In what I shall say to you, without
effort at all at display, I shall deal in nothing
but facts. I will state nothing that I do not
personally know to be true nothing that
I cannot sustain, if a controversy is raised in reference
thereto.
I have seen the day when I was a young
man, ladies (I speak of my age with a great deal of
freedom, for I have a wife who is likely never to
die) [laughter] I have seen the
day when I could be heard by an audience of any size when
I have been able for four or five dreadful hours on
a stretch to speak in the open air. Those days
with me have gone by, and are numbered with the days
and years beyond the flood. For some three years
back I have labored under a disease of the throat a
bronchial affection a severe affliction
it was. Until the last twelve months I could
but whisper. In the providence of God, and through
his agency, I am better now. In repeated denunciation
of secession my voice has been gaining all the time
[applause,] and I shall not be astonished if in six
months “Richard is himself again.” [Applause.]
You will bear with me, I know, for
I shall not detain you long. I shall by no means
be tedious, but you will bear with me, I am certain,
if I make a few remarks, by way of “preliminary,”
personal to myself. The circumstances surrounding
me, the connection that my name has had for the last
twelve months with the rebellion and with this subject,
will justify me in so doing, without the dread of
incurring the charge of egotism.
I am a native of the Old Dominion born,
raised and educated in the State of Virginia.
I have the pleasure of announcing to you this evening
that you have before you the first man who ever made
the acknowledgment in public, that he was the descendant
of one of the second families of Virginia. [Laughter.]
My parents before me, on both sides,
were Virginians. On both sides of the house they
were slaveholders, as most of the citizens of the Old
Dominion are and have been. Although I am branded
at home, since the inauguration of rebellion, with
being myself an anti-slavery man, and a tory and the
descendant of tories, I take great pleasure and pride
in announcing to you that my father was a volunteer
in the war of 1812, under Old Hickory. My uncle
William, after whom I was named, lived and died a
naval officer, and his remains sleep in the Navy Yard
at Norfolk, Virginia. My uncle Alexander was
also a naval officer, and his remains rest in the
Navy Yard at New Orleans. My uncle John was also
a navy officer. He died at sea and was thrown
overboard, and became food for the fishes thereof.
My uncle John was the third man who scaled the walls
at the battle of the Horseshoe. [Applause.] On my mother’s
side the Galloways not a few
lost their lives at Norfolk, from yellow fever, camp
diseases and fatigue. They did not fight for a
section of the country not for the yellow
fever swamps of the South but for every
State, and every particle of this glorious Union of
ours. [Applause.]
I may as well make a remark or two
on the subject of politics. I am not here for
the purpose of reviving any old party prejudice not
at all nor yet with a view to drop a solitary
remark that shall offend even the most fastidious
political partisan who may be under the sound of my
voice. In Tennessee, thank God, we have merged
all political party questions into the one great question
of the Union and its preservation. [Applause.]
In all time to come though
I have been a Whig of the strictest sort though
I have lived up to the creed and fought Democracy in
all its ramifications, and in all its windings I
would, in the language of Milton, see a man where
cold performs the effect of fire or, in
the still more nervous language of Pollock, I would
see a man where gravitation, shifting, turns the other
way even hell-ward before I
would vote for any man who was not an unconditional,
straight-out Union man. [Great applause.]
I have fought Andrew Johnson, of Tennessee,
systematically, perseveringly and untiringly, for
the last twenty-five years of my somewhat eventful
life. He has scored me on every stump in the State
of Tennessee, and I have paid him back to the best
of my ability. But honors with us are easy. [Laughter.]
We take each other by the hand now, as brethren. [Applause.]
Now I will fight for him, and under him engaged
as we are in the same cause, against the same vile
foe to God and man, and especially to our country.
[Applause.]
I have always been a Union man.
I commenced my political career in Tennessee in 1828.
I remark again, ladies, that although I may have the
appearance of being I confess the fact with
more candor from the consideration that I never expect
to be a widower [laughter], I commenced
my political career in Tennessee in 1828. I was
one of the corporal’s guard who, in that State,
got up the electoral ticket for John Quincy Adams
against Andrew Jackson. I name this fact simply
to show you that I was not a sectional man in ’28;
that I did not go for a man because he was born and
lived south of Mason and Dixon’s line, nor against
him because he resided north of Mason and Dixon’s
line. Having mentioned the name of Old Hickory,
I take pleasure in saying that, while I opposed him
in his political aspirations, Jackson was always a
patriot and a true lover of his country. If my
prayers and tears could have brought him from his
grave, during the last twelve months of the iniquitous
reign of James Buchanan, I would have brought him out,
that he might have destroyed secession as he did nullification that
might have sunk South Carolina in some sort of Lake
not unlike the Dead Sea where she will
ultimately go. [Applause.]
In the next contest I was a supporter
of Henry Clay. In the next contest I was a supporter
of Ulasu White. In the next I supported William
Henry Harrison, and I sung louder, jumped higher,
and fell flatter and harder than anybody else in the
whole State of Tennessee. I wrote upon log cabins,
and waved coon-skins and water-gourds high and low.
[Laughter.] In succeeding contests, gentlemen and
ladies, I supported Taylor, Fillmore and Donelson.
The last contest I was engaged in, was in the support
of the Bell and Everett ticket. The tail of that
ticket is now doing well enough in the State of Massachusetts.
It stands erect, and carries itself majestically.
But the latter end of the ticket will yet do to tie
to, but as to the frontispiece “pity
the sorrows of a poor old man.” [Laughter.]
One word before I progress further upon
the subject of slavery. What I have to say on
that subject all I have to say at home or
abroad, I will say to you now, for, ladies and gentlemen,
I have no sentiments in the South that I do not entertain
when I am in the North. I have none in Cincinnati
that I do not entertain when I am at home in Knoxville.
[Applause.] The South, as I told them months ago, when
I was surrounded by three thousand Confederate troops the
South is more to blame for the state of things that
now exist than the North is. But yet, I have to
say, just in this connection, that if, about two years
ago, I had been authorized to collect if
I had been let hunt them up, for I know the men I
would have wanted if I had been allowed
to hunt up about one or two hundred anti-slavery agitators
and fanatics at the North, scattered here and there,
and about an equal number of our God-forsaken, hell-deserving,
corrupt secessionists and disunionists, I should have
marched the whole army of them into the District of
Columbia, and dug a common ditch, erected a common
gallows, after embalming their bodies with gipsy weed
and dog-fennel. Had this been done, I should not
have been here to-night we would have had
none of the troubles which afflict the country now.
One word more upon the subject of
slavery. If the issue shall be made by the South if
they are mad enough, if they are fools enough to make
the issue of Slavery and no Union, or Union and no
Slavery I am for the Union. [Applause.]
I have told them so at home upon the stump in my own
town. I will stand by the Union until you make
the issue between the Federal Union and the Christian
religion; then I will back out from the Union but
for no other institution. [Applause.]
The speaker here commenced the narrative
of the doings of treason in East Tennessee. About
twelve months ago, he said, a stream of secession
fire, as hot as hell, commenced pouring out of the
Southern States in the direction of Leesburg, Richmond
and Manassas, by way of Knoxville, Tennessee.
Then it was that the rebel soldiery of the South, made
drunk upon mean whisky, halted over night day
in and day out in the town of Knoxville,
and commenced their depredations, visiting the houses
of Union men and stoning the inmates, blackguarding
all whom they saw in them, male and female. His
(Mr. Brownlow’s) house, in Cumberland street,
was more frequently visited by them than any other
building in the town. At the same time he was
reading, in the Mobile and South Carolina papers,
that the best blood of the South had volunteered in
the cause of “Southern rights.” He
said to his wife, “If this is the flower of the
South, God deliver us from the Southern rabble.”
The rebel soldiers became more and
more insulting and overbearing. Finally, in the
month of May, they commenced to shoot down Union men
in the streets. The first man they singled out
was Charles S. Douglas, a gentleman who had been conspicuous
at the election as a Union man. They deliberately
shot him down from the window of his house, in the
day time. Mr. Brownlow was in the street at the
time they made propositions to shoot down other Union
men. Thinking prudence the better part of discretion,
they retired from the crowd, many of them slipping
into their houses quietly. But the work of murder
and slaughter went on. Finally, many of the loyal
men had to flee to the mountains to the
mountains of Hepsidam, if you please, said the speaker.
They remained away for several days,
sleeping in the open air, and subsisting on bread
and meat brought from their homes, with a quantity
of game which they shot.
The rebel troops took possession of
Mr. Brownlow’s printing office destroyed
his press and type, and converted the building into
a blacksmith shop for altering old flintlock muskets
which Floyd had stolen from the Government. They
were contemplating the destruction of his dwelling
house, and would have accomplished it but for the timely
arrival of General Zollicoffer, who, being a personal
friend of the Dr.’s, set a guard around the
premises, and issued an order confining the Texan
troops to their camps for two days.
Retiring to Knoxville, Mr. Brownlow
received a letter from Gen. George B. Crittenden,
stating that he had been ordered by the Confederate
Secretary of War to give him (Brownlow) a passport
beyond the Confederate lines into the State of Kentucky
to a Union neighborhood. Mr. Brownlow was about
to accept the General’s proffer, when he was
arrested on a charge of treason, for writing and publishing
what appeared in the Knoxville Whig as his
farewell letter to his patrons and subscribers.
On the 6th of December he was thrust into the Knoxville
jail. He found in the jail one hundred and fifty
Union men the building crowded to overflowing.
Every man confined on a charge of treason was a personal
friend of Mr. Brownlow’s. They ran around
him in astonishment, and asked him what he was thrown
into prison for. Some of them shed tears, others
smiled when they saw him enter the iron gates.
He told them he was under arrest for treason on a
warrant just issued. He had been in jail ten
or twelve days when a Confederate Brigadier General,
whom he had known as an old Union man, paid him a visit.
Upon entering the jail with two of his Aides he shook
hands with him. The prisoners all crowded round
to see the “sight.” After a while
the Brigadier said it was too bad to see Brownlow
in such a place, and tried to impress upon the patriot’s
mind the propriety of his taking the oath of allegiance
to the Confederacy, upon which condition he should
be released immediately. Brownlow was in a good
humor until that proposition was made. That stirred
up the bile of his stomach. “Sir,”
said he to the officer, looking him full in the eye,
“I will be here till I die with old age, or
till I rot in prison, before I will take the oath
of allegiance to the Southern Confederacy. You
have no Government. I deny that you are authorized
to administer such an oath. You have organized
a big Southern mob not a Government.
You have never been recognized by any civilized Government
on the face of God Almighty’s earth, and you
never will be. And yet you are here asking me
to take the oath of allegiance to the vilest mob that
was ever organized South of Mason and Dixon’s
line. Not wishing to be profane, nor desiring
to be regarded by you in that light, permit me to
conclude my remarks by saying that I will see your
Southern Confederacy in the infernal regions, and
you high on top of it before I will take the oath.”
The officer remarked that that was d d
plain talk. Mr. Brownlow replied that it was
the right way to make men understand each other.
The General turned upon his heel, tipped his duck-bill
cap and walked off. [Applause.]
When the speaker entered the jail
he found among the inmates three Baptist preachers.
One of them, a Mr. Pope, 77 years of age, was charged
with having prayed to the Lord to bless the President
of the United States, to bless the General Government,
and put an end to this unholy war. Another old
man a minister 70 years of age,
was thrust into jail for having thrown up his hat
and hurrahed for the stars and stripes when a company
of Union Home Guards marched by his house with the
stars and stripes flying over them. The third,
a young man, was confined for having volunteered as
chaplain in a Union regiment.
The sufferings of the inmates of the
jail the speaker described as horrible. The food
they were supplied with was rank and unwholesome.
He, himself, got permission to receive meals from
his family, otherwise he should not have been able
to live through his long confinement.
Toward the conclusion of his address,
Mr. Brownlow related several instances in which prisoners
had been taken from the jail and hung by the troops
after a few hours warning. Once they hung a father
and son, whose sole offence was their loyalty to the
Government, on the same gallows. They compelled
the father to witness the agonies of the son before
permitting death to come to his relief. The most
affecting case mentioned was that of an old man, who,
after a lengthy incarceration, was sentenced at ten
o’clock one morning to be hung at four that
afternoon. His name was William Henry Harrison
Self. His daughter, a highly intelligent and
well educated lady, hearing this awful news during
the day, hastened to the jail, and, with great difficulty,
obtained permission to visit the condemned man.
The meeting of father and daughter was a scene which
drew tears from the eyes of a hundred and fifty men
long used to hardship and suffering themselves.
They embraced and kissed each other, neither of them
able to utter a word for some time. At about
one o’clock the young lady approached Dr. Brownlow,
and asked him to write, in her name, a despatch to
Jeff. Davis, at Richmond, asking him to grant
a pardon to her father. The Dr. did this, stating
in the despatch, as follows:
“Honorable Jefferson
Davis:
“My father, W. H. H. Self,
is under sentence to hang to-day at four
o’clock. My mother is dead; my father
is my only hope and stay. I
pray you pardon him. Let me hear from you
by telegraph.
“ELIZABETH
SELF.”
The young lady carried this despatch
to the telegraph office, a distance of two miles,
in greatest haste, and had it sent to Richmond immediately.
Shortly before three o’clock she received an
answer from “President” Davis commuting
the old man’s sentence to imprisonment, for
such length of time as the Commanding General should
see proper. The joy of his daughter was, of course,
boundless. When Mr. Brownlow left Knoxville,
on the 3d of March, Self was still in jail. He
has been released before this time, Southern “justice”
being satisfied in the premises.
REMARKS OF GENERAL S. F. CAREY.
General S. F. Carey was next introduced.
He referred to the deliverance of Dr. Brownlow as
a release from dangers greater than those that surrounded
Daniel in the lion’s den, and from beasts far
worse than beset the prophet. His deliverance
was not to be credited to their magnanimity, but their
fears.
He did not like to find fault with
the Government, but it did seem to him that it was
time it should bestir itself, and prosecute the war
with greater vigor. Nor did he approve the policy
pursued towards those taken in rebellion against the
Government, referred with much bitterness to the tenderness
displayed in the cases of Magoffin, Buckner, and the
rebel prisoners at Columbus. He didn’t think
the penitentiary the place for them, and would not
have the convicts contaminated by them. There
was no inmate of the penitentiary, though he had been
guilty of murdering his father, mother, or brother,
whose crime was not innocence itself compared with
that of these rebel prisoners, who sport their uniforms
in the streets of Columbus, insulting the fathers and
brothers of those men who had fallen in defence of
the Union, and sitting in privileged seats in the
legislative chambers of the State.
The audience had heard the narrative
of the sufferings of loyal women in the South, and
yet we have women in the State of Ohio who go to Columbus,
with the avowed purpose of making the rebel officers
comfortable, conduct that in his opinion,
and notwithstanding their sex, deserved the halter.
He had no sympathy with the rebellion or with rebels,
and was for cleaning them out root and branch.
In speaking on this subject, he felt
the utter feebleness of human language. After
it was exhausted, the great crime of rebellion looms
up in all its terrible proportions. God speed
the day when we shall be delivered! And yet he
had no hope for the country till all the remnants
of miserable partyism are swept away; he had no hope
for it, while politicians were busy at the Capital
intriguing and scheming for the preservation of some
old broken down faction called a party. We need
patriotism, not party.
Referring to the remarks of Mr. Brownlow,
respecting the treatment that should be meted out
to disunionists North and South, Mr. Carey said that
while he respected the right of free speech, he was
for hanging any man who favored disunion and dared
to say so. Every man has his rights, the convict
on the gallows, the thief in the penitentiary, but
when a man abuses his rights, the right of free speech,
to express himself in favor of disunion, be he Wendell
Phillips, or any other man, cut him down.
The masses of the people in the North
are in favor of a restoration of the Union as it existed
before the war. But if the war continues, and
the people of the rebellious States are given over
to hardness of heart, if they shoot our pickets, if
it proves necessary to send a few more thousand men
from the loyal States to put down the rebellion, and
people Southern grave yards, a cry will go up from
Maine to the Pacific to clean out the rebels, niggers
and all.
He believed the whole purpose of the
Administration in the prosecution of the war, was
to preserve the Republic and all its institutions as
they existed when it came into power; and nothing is
more certain than that the Union will be preserved,
though it cost all our property and half the lives
in the Republic.
He appealed to mothers to exert their
influence in kindling a spirit of exalted patriotism,
and to teach their sons not to be Democrats or Republicans,
but to be patriots; and appealed to the ladies of the
city to visit the hospitals, comfort the sick, point
the dying to the land where there is no secession
and no rebels, and give of their time, sympathy, and
means to soothe the sufferings and lighten the afflictions
of those who had volunteered in defence of the Union.
Gen. Carey, of whose vigorous speech
we give but a brief outline, retired amid prolonged
cheers. The “Star Spangled Banner”
was sung, and Lieutenant-Governor Fisk, of Kentucky,
introduced by the Chairman.
REMARKS OF MR. FISK.
Mr. Fisk said he believed we were,
all of us, filled with a righteous determination to
give the present Administration all the aid in our
power to put down the rebellion. He remembered
when deputations of the Legislatures of Tennessee,
Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio had met in that place,
and that on that occasion no sentiment met a more hearty
response than that of Andrew Jackson: “The
Union must be preserved.” What we want
is the Union and the Constitution as they were; and
while our armies are in the field fighting for their
preservation, let us be careful that no mischief-makers
at home pervert the object of the war to the utter
subversion of one or the other.
He didn’t believe in this talk
about the subjugation of the South. On his side
of the river that was the argument of the secessionists,
and was considered evidence of sympathy with the rebellion.
He did not know what it was called on this side of
the Ohio, but he did know that every such menace was
eagerly caught up and magnified by those confederated
with the rebels. The Government was doing nothing
of that kind. It was fighting for self-preservation
and a restoration of its authority, and it was its
duty to send out all the troops necessary to put down
the rebellion. We must fight for the preservation
of the Constitution and Union, and we must preserve
them or we cease to exist as a nation. If the
rebellion succeeds the Government is at an end, and
our history as a nation terminates. We must fight
to preserve them not only for ourselves, but the rising
generation and those who shall come after them.
He asserted that all the bloodshed,
and all the suffering and misery entailed by this
war, history would charge directly to the account of
the wicked men who had inaugurated it, and not to the
loyal people of this country. It was our duty
to go on with this war, and to prosecute it, not in
a malignant and revengeful spirit, but with the simple
and patriotic purpose of putting down the rebellion
and restoring the supremacy of the Government over
every inch of its rightful territory.
At the conclusion of Mr. Fisk’s
remarks, the little sons of the members of the Ninth
Ohio Regiment were conducted to the stage, and introduced
to the audience. The lads sang a song in German;
and when they had retired, the whole audience joined
in three cheers for the Ninth Ohio, which were given
with a will, the vast assembly rising to their feet.
The resolutions were unanimously adopted;
after which, the proceedings were brought to a conclusion,
and the audience dispersed.