Owen Brown (abolitionist, born 1824)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Owen Brown
Brown in 1883
Born(1824-11-04)November 4, 1824
DiedJanuary 8, 1889(1889-01-08) (aged 64)
Resting placeA hilltop near Altadena, California, 34°13′3″N 118°9′37″W / 34.21750°N 118.16028°W / 34.21750; -118.16028
Known forJohn Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry
Parent(s)John Brown
Dianthe Lusk Brown
RelativesOwen Brown (grandfather)
John Brown, Jr. (brother)
Watson (half-brother)

Owen Brown (November 4, 1824 – January 8, 1889) was the third son of

Chatham, Ontario, Canada, when the raid was planned; he was chosen as treasurer of the organization of which his father was made president.[4]

Personal information

Owen was named for his grandfather, a prosperous Connecticut tanner, strong abolitionist, and one of the first settlers in Hudson, Ohio.

He described himself as "an engineer on the

the Harper's Ferry debacle.[5]: 346  ("[S]o strong is the woodsman in him, that he gave me not only the direction and probable extent of every mountain and valley he passed, night or day, but the nature and quality of the timber almost everywhere in his way."[5]: 344 ) He never married, and referred to his one-room cabin in Ohio as "bachelor hall".[6] When asked later in life if he had been too busy to marry, his reply was: "Hardly; there are men who fix their affections on one, and losing that one remain single ever after."[7] According to a writer who felt that Owen "seems to have been a bachelor from principle", he "went so far as to divulge the fact that there was one maiden near Springdale [Iowa] whom he would marry, if he ever married at all, but to whom, out of abundant caution, he had resolved never even to speak."[8]

He was much affected by the death of his mother, along with his newborn brother Frederick, when he was eight.

His burial site, atop a hill near Pasadena, California, is becoming (2021) a minor tourist destination.

Resemblance to his father

Physically

Of John Brown's six adult sons, he was said to be the one that most resembled his father physically;[7][9][10] he was "exactly like the portraits of his father",[11] "he bore the likeness of his father more perfectly than either of his brothers [Jason and John Jr.], and in many characteristics was like him."[12] He was described thus in the 1859 warrant for his arrest:

Owen Brown is thirty-three or thirty-four years of age, about six feet in height, with fair complexion, though somewhat freckled—has red hair, and very heavy whiskers of the same color. He is a spare man, with regular features, and has deep blue eyes.[13]: 549 

Owen's arm injury

According to his father, "Owen [was] to some extent a cripple from childhood by an injury of the right arm".[14]: 202 [5]: 344  In his will, his father referred to Owen's "terrible suffering in Kansas and crippled condition from his childhood".[14]: 616  He "had been badly injured after the campaign of June, and afterward very ill in Iowa, whither he had gone to regain his health.[14]: 315  John referred repeatedly to "our crippled and destitute unmarried son".[14]: 605  He wrote Lydia Maria Child: "I have a middle-aged son [Owen was 35], who has been in some degree a cripple from his childhood, who would have as much as he could well do to earn a living. He was a most dreadful sufferer in Kansas, and lost all he had laid up. He has not enough to clothe himself for the winter comfortably. I have no living son or son-in-law who did not suffer terribly in Kansas."[14]: 581 

The nature of the injury is something Owen did not talk about. Brown biographer Richard Hinton only had vague information: "he had been physically unfortunate, when younger, in the injury of an arm or shoulder, I think, through which he had suffered so severely as to prematurely age him, and produced a trouble of some kind by which he was subject to drowsiness. This, as well as being crippled in his arm, rendered him incapable of any very hard labor."[13]: 556 [15][5]: 344  One source says the injury was the result of "throwing a stone when a boy";[5] another, that Owen was "seriously crippled in his Kansas campaigns, and unfit for service in the Union army in consequence".[16][17]

Psychologically

He was also said to most resemble his father psychologically:

There was in Owen Brown, it is said[,] much of that excess of zeal, which is called sometimes eccentricity and sometimes fanaticism, and which was the characteristic of John Brown of Ossawatomie. Like his father, he was perfectly inflexible in carrying out what he had determined upon, and his courage was absolutely dauntless. He was renowned among his acquaintances for his passion for exact justice, and was honored by them for his sterling uprightness and integrity.[18]

Another reporter said that Owen, of John Brown's sons, "is perhaps the greatest character of them all. Noticeably eccentric, with a strange mingling of gentleness and roughness, sentiment and course practicability [sic], which even his intimate friends cannot understand, with one of the warmest of hearts and the readiest hand, he leads a wandering kind of life, seeming to cut himself off from old friends and associations, and yet after a while returning to them, or letting them know by some kind message that they are not forgotten. He seems literally a man without a home, for realizing his restless disposition he has never married or formed any ties that could not easily be shaken off. He resembles his father in form and feature, and also—though in an exaggerated degree—his independence of the world's opinion."[19]

Comments on his personality

Abolitionist activities

Kansas

Owen fought with his father

Border ruffians from Missouri burned his house and stole his cattle. He participated, along with brother-in-law Henry Thompson, in the Pottawatomie massacre.[20][25]: 18  "He was imprisoned, ill-treated, and finally driven from the State, for the sole reason that he was an abolitionist."[26] In 1888 and 1889 he recalled some of his Kansas activities.[27][28]

Harpers Ferry

Owen was the only child of Brown to participate in the

Chatham, Ontario, meeting in which the raid was planned. He was chosen as treasurer of the organization, of which John Brown was president.[4]

Owen, as he told it later, before the raid "spent many months in the mountains of the South, searching out suitable places for the rendezvous and concealment of liberty-seeking slaves". During the three months before the raid, his father, under cover of prospecting for minerals, examined and approved of a number of them.[29]

Owen participated in

Barclay Coppock and Francis Jackson Meriam, as well as Brown's first biographer, James Redpath.[32]

In early February Owen was indicted by a Virginia

Attorney General of Ohio, Republican Christopher Wolcott, refused to honor Virginia's request for Owen's arrest and extradition.[34][13]
: 554–555  Owen remained in Ohio for many years.

Owen was the last surviving member of the raiding party; his older brothers

Kennedy farm
before the raid.

Put-in-Bay, Ohio

Gibraltar Island, Ohio

Owen was "extremely averse to talking at all about the exciting adventures of his early days".[23] A reporter had to make many visits to get him to tell the story of his difficult escape, which he said he had never told in 12 years.[5]: 344  Mark Twain's comment on this report was: "Three different times I tried to read it but was frightened off each time before I could finish."[35]

At that time Owen and his older brother John Jr. were farming at Put-in-Bay, Ohio, Owen in a "one-roomed shanty", full of mementos, near his brother's house.[5][36] "Everything in the room was neat and tidy, but very cheap and rude. He had a cot for a bed, and heat was supplied by a little stove fed with dry cuttings from the grapevines."[37] Ruth Brown, their sister, and her husband lived there as well, having moved in 1882 from Wisconsin to another "very small, unpainted" house.[38]

Locals described Owen as "extremely eccentric".[23] He spent the winter months, and sometimes the summer months as well, alone, except for a dog, as a hermit on neighboring Gibraltar Island, caretaker for the home of Ohio financier Jay Cooke.[29][7][39] He spent much of his time fishing.[40] John Henry Kagi had taught him shorthand while they were training in Iowa in 1857–58.[32]: 32  He continued his study from books and copied the Bible in shorthand twice.[29] He remained there until 1885, when the Cooke property was sold.[29][41]

Pasadena, California

Ruth Brown Thompson, eldest daughter of John Brown
House of Ruth Brown Thompson and her husband, Pasadena, California, 1893
The first cabin of Owen (left) and Jason Brown, near Altadena, California. The beams protect from the winds high on the hill. This cabin was destroyed by fire in 1888.[42]
Bird's-eye view, Brown boys' rancho (first cabin). Note the visitors. The supporting beams have not yet been installed.
Visitors at the Brown boys' cabin.
Owen Brown
, with their livestock. 1888? John Jr. is visiting.
Jason and Owen Brown's second cabin, Altadena, California. In the background is Little Round Top.

In 1885, his health failing,[16] Owen moved to Pasadena, California, joining his brother Jason, who emigrated in 1881 after his Akron, Ohio, home was destroyed by fire,[37] and sister Ruth, a teacher, and her husband Henry Thompson, who moved there with their family in 1884;[43][44][45] Henry had bought 15 acres (6.1 ha) of land.[46] They were seeking to escape "the increasingly negative broad popular memory of Brown."[25]: 17  John Jr. came to visit subsequently, to see if he should move there too, but he decided not to.[16]

Jason had a wife and children in the east. "He goes to visit them occasionally, and they have been here, but why they are separated no one seems to know."[47]

Pasadena was sympathetic to the memory of John Brown; it was a Republican city, settled by immigrants from Indiana.[48][25]: 22  Owen, Jason, and to a lesser extent Ruth and her husband were treated as celebrities,[49] the men "eccentric and charming".[25]: 25  However, Owen "suffered from the celebrity which his adventures and his father's fame gave him; and this was one reason why he retired with his brother to a remote cabin, where, nevertheless, sight-seers and importunate friends followed him, and left him very little of that solitary leisure which he so much valued."[16] A different source says the brothers "delighted in having callers";[6] yet another, that they were guides for tourists.[50] "They were much visited by tourists and citizens, some from mere curiosity and other[s] from a warm sympathy with the heroic career of the family."[51] They were "often" visited by the naturalist Charles Frederick Holder, who talked with them about their experiences and the Underground Railroad.[52] According to one report, "it was difficult to get Owen to speak of the tragic events of his life",[6] but another says that "to listen to his recital of their escape was as thrilling and much more interesting than stories of the most daring of fictitious heroes."[50] "Owen Brown had related to his sister Ruth all the particulars of the expedition to the South with a colored man named Green, and she will publish this with many valuable memorandas of her father not yet printed";[37] this publication never took place.

An obituary reveals that besides raising poultry and cows, Jason and Owen, through "selling their photographs", "received enough barely to survive".[6] At the time (1886–1889), to print a picture using ink onto paper or card stock was expensive, as it required a human engraver, but making photographic copies was much easier. There was then no amateur photography, the equipment and the processing were too expensive and cumbersome, but well-to-do travelers bought as souvenirs photographs of sights they saw, made available by local photographers. The Brown boys' cabins, with them and sometimes visitors outside, were photographed several times for this purpose, for souvenir pictures which the men sold. Their mountain cabins were only a mile from the house of Ruth Brown Thompson, their sister, and her husband, in Pasadena.[53]

During the visit of the veterans of the

John Brown’s Body,” and the whole enthusiastic crowd singing the stirring battle hymn and cheering. The demonstration visibly affected the occupants of the carriage. When the procession reached the depot Owen Brown made a pithy and characteristic speech.[55][56]

Owen and Jason Brown won the respect of their neighbors, "but their ideas of law and justice were as peculiar as their father's. They kept to themselves their charities, and they were always quick to help anyone who was persecuted. When the boycott was placed upon the Chinese in Los Angeles county, three years ago [1886, see Chinese Exclusion Act] Owen and Jason went down into Pasadena and hired each a Chinaman to work on his place for the sake of the principle, although they had no need of the Celestials' labor, and would be troubled to find money to pay for it. They refused to take interest on money when they had any to loan. When some friends raised a contribution for them, they asked that the money be sent instead to the colored sufferers of the 1886 Charleston earthquake."[37]

According to an obituary:

About five years ago Jason and Owen Brown took a homestead on a bench of mountain land five or six miles north of Pasadena, at the settlement now called Las Casitas. This they subsequently sold and took land higher up the mountain side, built a cabin, cleared and worked a few acres, and li[v]ed there—two feeble old men, alone. ...They were much visited by tourists and citizens, some from mere curiosity and others from a warm sympathy with the historic career of the family. They had made a good wagon trail up to their mountain hermitage, and were continuing it as a donkey path to the top of the mountain known as Brown's Peak, but it is not completed yet. Owen had a desire to be buried on the top of Brown's Peak; and if Jason ever succeeds in finishing the trail he will try to have his brother's grave up there as he desired.[57]

Jason wrote, in an 1886 letter, "The people of Pasadena are eastern, mostly, and are very kind to us; they raised over $100 (~$3,391 in 2023), a short time ago without our knowing it, and gave it to us to buy a cow."[58] When John Jr. visited them (see picture at right), and decided not to stay, they had to sell the cow to get money for John Jr.'s return east.[20]

There, they were celebrated and supported, not for helping their father end slavery, but for a more contemporary movement, temperance.[25] Owen became "one of the best known of Pasadena's early residents."[43] The two "feeble old men", as an obituary described them, were "much visited by tourists and the curious".[22]: 4  An as-yet unidentified photographer carried his equipment up the mountain on several occasions, and left us good pictures of both cabins, including the second one seen from above.

Temperance

"He was a zealous advocate of temperance, to advance which was the great aim of his later life."

Women's Christian Temperance Union.[60]

An obituary noted that he sent "fruit and sympathy" to the anarchists on trial in the Haymarket affair.[61][21] At the time of his death Owen was living with his sister Ruth in addition to brother Jason.[62]: 53 

Funeral and grave marker

Souvenir of Owen Brown's funeral, Pasadena, California, in 1889. Building is Methodist Tabernacle.
Funeral procession of Owen Brown. Note the marching band.

Shortly before his death, a friend asked Owen for his autograph and sentiment. Above his name, he wrote: "The only true religion is to be true to every human being, and to all animals so far as it is possible, and be just."[47] His last intelligible words were: "It is better—to be—in a place—and suffer wrong—than to do wrong."[51]

Owen died of pneumonia January 8, 1889, at the home of his sister Ruth Brown Townsend, in Pasadena, California, at the age of 64. His death was reported across the country.[25]: 16 

January 10 was called by a newspaper "a historic day for Pasadena".

pallbearers had known John Brown in Massachusetts, Iowa, or Kansas;[57][26] among then were John Hunt Painter and James Townsend, who had known him from Springdale, Iowa.[65]: 53  There were four stations set up along the route for photographers.[6] "John Brown's Body" was sung.[22]
: 4 

A marching band escorted the 2,000 mourners, nearly the entire population of Pasadena, in the funeral procession up to Little Roundtop Hill in West Altadena in the Meadows (34°12′58″N 118°09′41″W / 34.216199°N 118.161381°W / 34.216199; -118.161381).[66] Owen had asked to be buried on the hilltop near his cabin,[43] in a spot called sublime, "on one of the highest peaks of the Sierra Madre mountains, commanding a view of the valley below for 60 miles (97 km), the sea and even the islands of the sea."[47] It was subsequently called Brown Mountain.[67]

In May 1889, a newspaper remarked that "the tomb of Owen Brown receives as much attention from visitors as any other point of interest in the Sierra Madre range. It is not uncommon to see fresh flowers laid upon the mound, which appears as barren for want of grass as when first made."[68]

Jason left the cottage when Owen died, and found employment in the Sierra Madre with the new, scenic Mount Lowe Railway. He lived at Echo Mountain, a railway junction. His wife and children never came to California.[47] He returned to Ohio, but in 1895 was about to return to California, to live with his sisters.[69]

Grave marker

Nine years later, a gravestone, paid for by pallbearer Major H. N. Rust,[70] was placed at the grave site.[71][72] It read: "Owen Brown, Son of John Brown, the Liberator, died Jan. 9, 1889." Two iron ornaments, a heavy hook on the left, and a 6" diameter ring on the right, were attached to eyelets in the marker and could be moved—symbolizing freedom from the shackles of slavery and rapture from mortal bounds. 200 people attended the dedication.[73]

The marker disappeared from the grave site in 2002, along with the concrete base and surrounding rail fencing, after the property on which it was located was sold.[74] No legal action was taken, as the person or persons responsible have never been identified. In 2012, the missing gravestone was found a few hundred feet from the gravesite.[75][76] In 2021, it was announced that the gravestone would be reinstalled.[77]

Brown's grave, early 20th century

In popular culture

He is the narrator, an old man living in California in 1909 (50 years later), in Russell Banks' novel about John Brown, Cloudsplitter. In this novel he accompanies his father on his trip to England of 1848, and a pregnant unmarried woman, who commits suicide by jumping overboard, is the mysterious lady he loved. This is fiction.

Owen Brown is a supporting character in Ann Rinaldi’s novel Mine Eyes Have Seen. The book is from the perspective of Owen’s sister, Annie Brown.

Actor Jeffrey Hunter portrayed Owen in the 1955 film Seven Angry Men. The title refers to John Brown and his six grown sons, focusing mostly on the moral debate between Owen and his father.

He is portrayed by actor Beau Knapp in the 2020 Showtime limited series The Good Lord Bird, based on the 2013 novel of the same name by James McBride.

Writings by Owen Brown

  • Letter to his mother, August 27, 1856.[14]: 315-–317 
  • "Letter to the editor, with corrections to his interview in The Atlantic", The Atlantic, p. 101, July 1874
  • Statement about Harpers Ferry, May 5, 1885.[14]: 541–542 
  • "Owen Brown's Account of the Fight at Black Jack, Kan. A Striking Episode of Border History in 1856, Now First Printed as Owen Brown Told It".
    Springfield Republican. Springfield, Massachusetts
    . Jan 14, 1889.
  • Brown's Account of Leaving Kansas in 1856, Unpublished. Boyd B. Stutler Collection, West Virginia Archives, Ms. 78–1, April 26, 1888{{citation}}: CS1 maint: others (link)

Media

Archival material

Some letters of Brown are held at the Oregon Historical Society Research Library, Portland, Oregon.

See also

References

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Further reading (most recent first)