Elijah Parish Lovejoy

Elijah Parish Lovejoy

Elijah Parish Lovejoy (November 9 1802 – November 7 1837) was an American Presbyterian minister, journalist and newspaper editor who was murdered by a mob in Alton, Illinois for his abolitionist views.

He had a deeply religious upbringing, as his father was a Congregational minister and his mother a devout Christian. He attended Waterville College in his home state of Maine, and graduated at the top of his class, with first class honors. Afterwards, he traveled to Illinois and, after realizing that the area was largely unsettled, he moved to St. Louis, Missouri in 1827. There, Lovejoy worked as an editor of an anti-Jacksonian newspaper and ran a school. Five years later, influenced by the Revivalist movement, he decided to become a preacher. He attended the Princeton Theological Seminary and became an ordained Presbyterian preacher. Once he returned to St. Louis, he set up a church and became the editor of a weekly religious newspaper, the "St. Louis Observer". He wrote a number of editorials, critical of other religions and slavery. In May 1836, he was run out of town by his opponents after he chastised Judge Luke E. Lawless, who had chosen not to charge individuals linked to a mob lynching of a free black man.

Lovejoy moved to Alton, Illinois, where he became editor of the "Alton Observer". On three occasions, his printing press was destroyed by pro-slavery factions who wanted to stop his publishing abolitionist views. On November 7, 1837, a pro-slavery mob approached a warehouse belonging to merchant Winthrop Sargent Gilman that held Lovejoy's fourth printing press. Lovejoy and his supporters exchanged gunfire with the mob. The leaders of the mob decided to burn down Gilman's warehouse, so they got a ladder and set it alongside the building. They attempted to climb the ladder to set fire to the warehouse's wooden roof, but Lovejoy and one of his supporters stopped them. After the mob set up their ladder along the side of the building for a second time, Lovejoy went outside to intervene, but he was promptly shot five times with a shotgun and died on the spot. Lovejoy was hailed as a martyr by abolitionists across the country. He was honored by the naming of monuments or buildings in his memory. His brother Owen entered politics after his death and became the leader of the Illinois abolitionists. Lovejoy also had a cousin, Nathan A. Farwell, who served as a U.S. Senator from Maine.

Early life

Lovejoy was born at his grandfather's frontier farmhouse near Albion, Maine as the first of the nine children of Reverend Daniel Lovejoy and Elizabeth Pattee. [Lawson and Howard, p528.] Lovejoy's father was a Congregational preacher and farmer and his mother, a devout Christian. Daniel Lovejoy named his son "Elijah Parish" in honor of his close friend and mentor, the Reverend Elijah Parish. [Dillon, p3.] Due to his own deprived education, he encouraged his sons—Daniel, Joseph Cammett, Owen, John and Elijah—to become educated men. As a result, Elijah was taught to read the Bible and other theological texts at an early age. After completing his early studies in public schools, Lovejoy attended the Academy at Monmouth and China Academy. After becoming proficient enough in Latin and mathematics, he enrolled at Waterville College (now Colby College) in Waterville, Maine as a sophomore in 1823. [Lovejoy and Lovejoy, pp18–19.] He excelled in his studies, and upon faculty recommendation, he became a teacher at the college's preparatory division. Lovejoy received financial support from Reverend Benjamin Tappan to continue his attendance at Waterville College.Dillon, p5.]

Despite his academic success, Lovejoy had a number of emotional troubles, and at one point, he even contemplated committing suicide. [Letter from Lovejoy to his father Daniel Lovejoy, September 16, 1824.] Although he was able to overcome these thoughts, he was still deeply affected by a feeling of isolation. He had been brought up in a simple atmosphere, in which he learned to think of religion as the most important aspect of his life. However, the atmosphere of the world outside his home was very complex, and he found himself alienated by people, many of whom did not adhere to his religious beliefs.

In September 1826, Lovejoy graduated from Waterville College with first class honors [Lovejoy and Lovejoy, p23.] at the top of his class. [Dillon, p6.] During the winter and spring, he taught at China Academy. Unsatisfied with the mundane teaching environment, Lovejoy contemplated moving to the South or Western United States. His former teachers at Waterville College advised him that he would best serve God in the West. [Dillon, p7.] Lovejoy agreed with their words, and in May 1827, he said goodbye to his family and went to Boston. He searched for a job to fund his journey to Illinois, his chosen destination, but was unsuccessful. [Dillon, p9.] He left the city and headed to Illinois on foot. He stopped in New York City in mid-June, with the intention of again trying to find employment to fund his travels. Lovejoy had difficulties searching for a job, but was eventually able to land a position with the "Saturday Evening Gazette" as a newspaper subscription peddler. For nearly five weeks, he walked up and down streets, knocking on peoples' doors and wheedling passersby, in hopes of getting them to subscribe to the newspaper.Dillon, p10.] Lovejoy was still struggling with his finances, and so, he wrote a letter to Reverend Jeremiah Chaplin, the president of Waterville College, explaining his situation. Chaplin unhesitatingly sent the money that his former student so desperately needed. Lovejoy promptly embarked on his journey to Illinois, reaching Hillsboro, Montgomery County in the fall of 1827. Lovejoy did not think he could maximally realize his potential in Illinois's scantly settled land, so he headed for St. Louis. [Dillon, p11.]

In St. Louis, Lovejoy quickly established himself as the editor of the anti-Jacksonian newspaper, the "St. Louis Times", and as the headmaster of a coeducational private school. In 1832, upon influence of the Christian revivalist movement led by abolitionist David Nelson, he decided to became a preacher. [Balmer, p346.] He then studied at the Princeton Theological Seminary, and upon completion, went to Philadelphia, where he became an ordained minister of the Presbyterian Church in April 1833. Upon returning to St. Louis, he set up a Presbyterian church and also became editor of a weekly religious newspaper, the "St. Louis Observer". In 1835, Lovejoy married Celia Ann French, who would later bear him two children.

As a journalist and editor

As editor of the "Observer", Lovejoy wrote a number of pieces, expressing his affiliation with New School Presbyterianism and social reform movements. In his writing, Lovejoy attacked Roman Catholics, Baptists, Campbellites and pro-slavery advocates. He sided with the anti-Catholicism views of Lyman Beecher and harshly criticized the influence of the religion in St. Louis. He supported the emancipation of slaves, to the disapproval of many Missourians. Despite threats of violence against the newspaper, Lovejoy maintained that he was expressing his right to free speech.

In May 1836, Lovejoy cried out against the mob lynching of Frank McIntosh, a free black man who was in jail on suspicion of murder. Luke E. Lawless, the judge presiding over the grand jury investigation of the lynching, told jurors that an insane frenzy gripped the mob. Lawless went on to say that legal action should not be sought against any particular individuals, because the jury was not familiar with the captivating mania of mob mentality. Lovejoy chastised Lawless for essentially turning a cold shoulder to the lynching, calling him a "Papist". The day after Lovejoy's comments appeared in the "Observer", a mob, presumably the same one that orchestrated the McIntosh lynching, destroyed his printing press. Lovejoy responded by announcing that the paper would be moved to Alton, Illinois. However, another mob destroyed the press before it could reach Alton. Once there, Lovejoy became the editor of an abolitionist paper, the "Alton Observer".

On three different occasions, Lovejoy's printing press in Alton was seized by states-rights/pro-slavery factions and thrown into the river. He received another printing press from the Ohio Anti-Slavery Society (or possibly the Anti-Slavery Society of Illinois—records conflict). When local pro-slavery elements heard about the arrival of the new printing press, they decided to destroy it. In October 1837, Alton's leaders asked Lovejoy to leave town, but he refused. He argued that he had as much right to be in Alton as anyone else.

Death

On November 7, 1837, pro-slavery partisans congregated and approached Gilman's warehouse, where the printing press had been hidden. [cite news| last=|first=|title = Winthrop S. Gilman Dead: An Original Abolitionist and Successful Business Man and Banker | work = The New York Times | date =1884-10-05 | url =http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9B0CE5DF1038E033A25756C0A9669D94659FD7CF |accessdate = |quote=Winthrop Sargent Gilman, head of the banking house of Gilman, Son Co., of No. 62 Cedar-street, this city, died at his Summer home in Palisades, Rockland County, N.Y., on Friday, age 76. Mr. Gilman was known as a business ...] [cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Elijah Parish Lovejoy Was Killed By a Pro-slavery Mob |url=http://www.americaslibrary.gov/cgi-bin/jb_date.cgi?day=07&month=11 |quote= On November 7, 1837, Elijah Parish Lovejoy was killed by a pro-slavery mob while defending the site of his anti-slavery newspaper, The Saint Louis Observer. |publisher=Library of Congress |date= |accessdate=2008-06-07 ] According to the "Alton Observer", shots were then fired by the pro-slavery advocates, and balls from muskets whizzed through the windows of the warehouse, narrowly missing the defenders inside. Lovejoy and his men returned fire. Several people in the crowd were hit, and one was killed.

As some people began to demand the warehouse be set on fire, leaders of the mob called for a ladder, which was put up on the side of the warehouse. A boy with a torch was sent up to set fire to the wooden roof. Lovejoy and one of his supporters, Royal Weller, volunteered to stop the boy. The two men crept outside, hiding in the shadows of the building. Surprising the pro-slavery partisans, Lovejoy and Weller rushed to the ladder, pushed it over and quickly retreated inside.

Once again a ladder was put in place. As Lovejoy and Weller made another attempt to overturn the ladder, they were spotted. Lovejoy was shot with a shotgun loaded with slugs and was hit five times; Weller was also wounded. Suffering the same fate as its predecessors, the new printing press was destroyed; it was carried to a window and thrown out onto the riverbank. The printing press was then broken into pieces that were scattered in the river.

Afterwards, Lovejoy was considered a martyr by the abolition movement, and in his name, his brother Owen Lovejoy became the leader of the Illinois abolitionists. His murder was a sign of the increasing tension within the country leading up to the Civil War, and it is for this reason that he is considered by some to be the "first casualty of the Civil War."

Legacy

Elijah Lovejoy is buried in Alton Cemetery in Madison County, Illinois. In the late 1890s, local citizens erected a monument to Lovejoy's memory within the cemetery, created by Richard Bock, the celebrated sculptor. The monument commemorates his dual commitment to both freedom and freedom of the press. The memorial mainly consists of a tall column topped by a symbolic figure. The monument overlooks the Mississippi, meaning that visitors who come to see the monument can also see the river into which his presses were thrown.

Lovejoy himself is buried some fifty yards away, beyond the farthest reach of the memorial figure's longest shadow. The monuments of some of his supporters are near the burial site.

The Lovejoy Library at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville is named in his honor; it was initially proposed to name the whole university after him. The African American village of Brooklyn, Illinois (popularly known as Lovejoy), located just north of East St. Louis, is also named for him. The Albert King album and song "Lovejoy, Illinois" draws its name from the town.

The Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award, given annually by Colby College, Lovejoy's alma mater, honors a member of the newspaper profession who "has contributed to the nation's journalistic achievement." A major classroom building at Colby is also named for Lovejoy. Elijah Lovejoy also has a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.

References

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Notes

External links

* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USASlovejoy.htm Biography from Spartacus Schoolnet]
* [http://www.stlouiswalkoffame.org/inductees/elijah-lovejoy.html St. Louis Walk of Fame]
* [http://www.altonweb.com/history/lovejoy/ao1.html Full story from the Alton Observer Nov. 7, 1837]
* [http://swco.ttu.edu/location/Manuscripts/lovejoy/Lovejoy_Elijah_Guide.html Correspondence & manuscripts, 1804-1891, at Southwest Collection/Special Collections Library, Texas Tech University] See also papers of nephew Austin Wiswall, officer with 9th US Colored Troops, captured and held at Andersonville.
* [http://www.faithdesperes.org/meetinghouse.htm Frontenac, Missouri meetinghouse where Lovejoy once preached]


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