STILL'S
UNDERGROUND RAIL ROAD RECORDS,
REVISED EDITION.
(Previously Published in 1879 with title: The Underground Railroad)
WITH A LIFE OF THE AUTHOR.
NARRATING
THE HARDSHIPS, HAIRBREADTH ESCAPES AND DEATH STRUGGLES
OF THE
SLAVES
IN THEIR EFFORTS FOR FREEDOM.
TOGETHER WITH
SKETCHES OF SOME OF THE EMINENT FRIENDS OF FREEDOM, AND
MOST LIBERAL AIDERS AND ADVISERS OF THE ROAD
BY
WILLIAM STILL,
For many years connected with the Anti-Slavery Office in
Philadelphia, and Chairman of the Acting
Vigilant Committee of the Philadelphia Branch of the Underground
Rail Road.
Illustrated with 70 Fine Engravings
by Bensell, Schell and Others,
and Portraits from Photographs from Life.
Thou shalt not deliver unto his
master the servant that has escaped from his master unto thee. -
Deut. xxiii 16.
SOLD ONLY BY SUBSCRIPTION.
PHILADELPHIA:
WILLIAM STILL, PUBLISHER
244 SOUTH TWELFTH STREET.
1886
pp. 623 - 641
THOMAS GARRETT
Page 623
The recent death of Thomas Garrett, called forth
from the press, as well as from abolitionists and
personal friends, such universal expressions of respect
for his labors as a philanthropist, and especially as an
unswerving friend of the Underground Rail Road, that we
need only reproduce selections therefrom, in order to
commemorate his noble deeds in these pages.
From the "Wilmington Daily Commercial," published by
Jenkins and Atkinson (men fully inspired with the
spirit of impartial freedom), we copy the following
notice, which is regarded by his relatives and intimate
anti-slavery friends as a faithful portraiture of his
character and labors:
Thomas Garrett, who died full of years and
honor, this morning, at the ripe age of eighty-one, was
a man of no common character. He was an
abolitionist from his youth up, and though the grand old
cause numbered amongst its supporters, poets, sages, and
statesmen, it had no more faithful worker in its ranks
than Thomas Garrett.
He has been suffering for several years, from a disease
of the bladder, which frequently caused him most acute
anguish, and several times threatened his life.
The severe pain attending the disease, and the frequent
surgical operations it rendered necessary, undermined
his naturally strong constitution, so that when he was
prostrated by his last illness, grave fears were
entertained of a fatal result. He continued in the
possession of his faculties to the last, and frequently
expressed his entire willingness to die.
Yesterday he was found to be sinking very rapidly.
Just before midnight, last night, he commenced to speak,
and some of those in attendance, went close to his
bed-side. He was evidently in some pain, and said:
"It is all peace, peace, peace, but no rest this side of
the river." He then breathed calmly on for some
time. About half an hour later, one of those in
attendance ceased to hear his breathing, and bending
over him, found that his soul had fled.
He retained a good deal of his strength through his
illness, and was able to get up from his bed, every day,
with the assistance of one person.
He will be buried in the Friends' grave-yard, corner of
Fourth and West Streets, on Saturday next, at three
o'clock, P. M., and in accordance with a written
memorandum of an agreement made by him a year ago with
them, the colored people will bear him to his grave,
they having solicited of him that honor.
He was born of Quaker parents, in Upper Darby, Delaware
county, Pa., on the 21st of August, 1789, on a farm
still in the possession of the family. His father,
though a farmer, had been a scythe and edge-tool maker,
and Thomas learned of him the trade, and his
knowledge of it afterwards proved of the utmost
advantage to him.
He gave up and married at Darby, his wife being
Sarah Sharpless, and
[pg. 624]
in 1820 they came to
Wilmington to live, bringing with them several children,
most of whom still live here.
Some years after his arrival here, his wife died, and
in course of time, he again married, his second wife
being Rachel Mendenhall, who died in
April, 1868, beloved and regretted by all who knew her.
His business career was one of the vicissitude, but
generally and ultimately successful, for he made the
whole of the comfortable competence of which he died
possessed, after he was sixty years of age. While
in the beginning of his business career, as an iron
merchant in this city, a wealthy rival house attempted
to crush him, by reducing prices of iron to cost, but
Mr. Garrett, nothing dismayed, employed another
person to attend his store, put on his leather apron,
took to his anvil, and in the prosecution of this trade,
as an edge-tool maker, prepared to support himself as
long as this ruinous rivalry was kept up. Thus in
the sweat of the brow of one of the heroes and
philanthropists of this age, was laid the foundation of
one of the most extensive business houses that our city
now boasts. His competitor saw that no amount of
rivalry could crush a man thus self-supporting and gave
up the effort.
Of course, Thomas Garrett is best known for his
labors in behalf of the abolition of Slavery, and as a
practical and effective worker for emancipation long
before the nation commenced the work of liberation and
justice.
Born a Quaker, he held with simple trust, the faith of
the society that God moves and inspires men to do the
work he requires of their hands, and throughout his life
he never wavered in his conviction, that his Father had
called him to work in the cause to which he devoted
himself.
His attention was first directed to the iniquity of
Slavery, while he was a young man and twenty-four or
twenty-five. He returned one to his father's
house, after a brief absence, and found the family
dismayed and indignant at the kidnapping of a colored
woman in their employ.
Thomas immediately resolved to follow the
kidnappers, and so started in pursuit. Some
peculiarity about the track made by their wagon, enabled
him to trace them with ease, and he followed them by a
devious course, from Darby, to a place near the Navy
Yard, in Philadelphia, and then by inquiries, etc.,
tracked them to Kensington, where he found them, and, we
believe, secured the woman's release.
During this ride, he afterwards assured his friends, he
felt the iniquity and abomination of the whole system of
Slavery borne in upon his mind so strongly, as to fairly
appal him, and he seemed to hear a voice within him,
assuring him that his work in life must be to help and
defend this persecuted race.
From this time forward, he never failed to assist any
fugitive from Slavery on the way to freedom, and, of
course, after his removal to this city, his
opportunities for this were greatly increased, and in
course of time, his
[pg. 625]
house became known as one of the refuges for fugitives.
The sentiment of this community was, at that time,
bitterly averse to any word or effort against Slavery,
and Mr. Garrett had but half a dozen friends who
stood by him. Nearly all others looked at him with
suspicion, or positives aversion, and his house was
constantly under the surveillance of the police, who
then, sad to say, were always on the watch for any
fugitives from bondage. Thomas was not
disheartened or dismayed by the lack of popular sympathy
or approval. He believed the Lord was on his side,
and cared nothing for the adverse opinion of men.
Many and interesting stories are told of the men and
women he helped away, some of them full of pathos, and
some decidedly amusing. He told the latter which
related to his ingenious contrivances for assisting
fugitives to escape the police with much pleasure, in
his later years. We would repeat many of them, but
this is not the time or place. The necessity of
avoiding the police was the only thing, however, which
ever forced him into any secrecy in his operations, and
in all other respects he was "without concealment and
without compromise" in his opposition to Slavery.
He was a man of unusual personal bravery, and of
powerful physique, and did not present an encouraging
object for the bullying intimidation by which the
pro-slavery men of that day generally overawed their
opponents. He seems to have scarcely known what
fear was, and though irate slave-holders often called on
him to learn the whereabouts of their slaves, he met
them placidly, never denied having helped the fugitives
on their way, positively refused to give them any
information, and when they flourished pistols, or
bowie-knives to enforce their demands, he calmly pushed
the weapons aside, and told them that none but cowards
resorted to such means to carry their ends.
He continued his labors, thus, for years, helping all
who came to him, and making no concealment of his
readiness to do so. His firmness and courage
slowly won others, first to admire, and then to assist
him, and the little band of faithful workers, of which
he was chief, gradually enlarged and included in its
number, men of all ranks, and differing creeds, and,
singular as it may seem, even numbering some ardent
Democrats in its ranks. He has, in conversation
with the present writer and others, frequently
acknowledged the valuable services of two Roman
Catholics, of Irish birth, still living in this city,
who were ever faithful to him, and will now be amongst
those who most earnestly mourn his decease.
His efforts, of course, brought him much persecution
and annoyance, but never culminated in anything really
serious, until about the year 1846 or '47.
He then met, at New Castle, a man, woman, and six
children, from down on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.
The man was free, the woman had been a slave, and while
in Slavery had had by her husband, two children.
She was then set free, and afterwards had four children.
The whole party ran away. They traveled several
days and finally reached Middletown, late-
[pg. 626]
at night, where they were taken in, fed and cared for,
by John Hunn, a wealthy Quaker, there. They
were watched, however, by some persons in that section,
who followed them, arrested them, and sent them to New
Castle to jail. the sheriff and his daughter were
Anti-slavery people, and wrote to Mr. Garrett to
come over. He went over, had an interview, found
from their statement, that four of the party were
undoubtedly free, and returned to this city. On
the following day, he and U. S. Senator Wales,
went over and had the party taken before Judge Booth,
on a writ of habeas corpus. Judge Booth
decided that there were no evidence on which to hold
them, that in the absence of evidence the presumption
was always in favor of freedom and discharged them.
Mr. Garrett then said, here is this woman with a
babe at her breast, the child suffering from a white
swelling on its leg, is there any impropriety in my
getting a carriage and helping them over to Wilmington?
Judge Booth responded certainly not.
Mr. Garrett then hired the carriage, but gave
the driver distinctly to understand that he only paid
for the woman and the young children; the rest might
walk. They all got in, however, and finally
escaped, of course the two children born in slavery
amongst the rest.
Six weeks afterwards the slave-holders followed them,
and incited, it is said, by the Cochrans and
James A. Bayard, commenced a suit against Mr.
Garrett, claiming all the fugitives as slaves.
Mr. Garrett's friends claim that the jury was
packed to secure an adverse verdict. The trial
came on before Chief Justice Taney and Judge
Hall, in the May term (1848) of the U. S. Court,
sitting at new Castle, Bayard representing the
prosecutors, and Wales the defendant. There were
four trials in all, lasting three days. We have
not room here for the details of the trial, but the
juries awarded even heavier damages than the plaintiffs
claimed, and the judgments swept away every dollar of
his property.
When the trials were concluded, Mr. Garrett
arose, the court being adjourned, made a speech of an
hour to the large crowd in the court-room, in the course
of which he declared his intention to redouble his
exertions, so help him God. His bold assertion was
greeted with mingled cheers and hisses, and at the
conclusion of his speech one of the jurors who had
convicted him strode across the benches, grasped his
hand, and begged his forgiveness.
Mr. Garrett kept his pledge and redoubled his
exertions The trial advertised him, and such was
the demand on him for shelter, that he was compelled to
put another story on his back buildings. His
friends helped him to start again in business, and
commencing anew in his sixtieth year with nothing, he
again amassed a handsome competence, generously
contributing all the while to every work in behalf of
the down-trodden blacks or his suffering fellow-men of
any color.
[pg. 627]
In this the war came, and as he remarked, the nation
went into the business by the wholesale, so he quit his
retail operations, having, after he commenced to keep a
record, helped off over twenty-one hundred slaves, and
no inconsiderable number before that time.
In time, too, he came to the honored instead of
execrated for his noble efforts. Wilmington became
an abolition city, and for once, at least, a prophet was
not without honor in his own city. Mr. Garrett
continued his interest in every reform up to his last
illness, and probably his last appearance in any public
capacity, was as president of a Woman Suffrage meeting,
in the City Hall, a few months ago, which was addressed
by Julia Ward Howe, Lucy Stone, and Henry B.
Blackwell.
He lived to see the realization of his hopes for
Universal Freedom, and in April last on the occasion of
the great parade of the colored people in this city, he
was carried through our streets in an open barouche,
surrounded by the men in whose behalf he had labored so
faithfully, and the guards around his carriage carrying
banners, with the inscription, "Our Moses."
A. Moses he was to their race; but unto him it
was given to enter into the promised land toward which
he had set his face persistently and almost alone for
more than half a century.
He was beloved almost to adoration by his dusky-hued
friends, and in the dark days of the beginning of the
war, which every Wilmingtonian will remember with a
shudder, in those days of doubt, confusion, and
suspicion, without his knowledge or consent, Thomas
Garrett's house was constantly surrounded and
watched by faithful black men, resolved that, come weal
come woe to them, no harm should come to the benefactor
of their race.
He was a hero in a life-time fight, an upright, honest
man in his dealings with men, a tender husband, a loving
father, and above all, a man who loved his neighbor as
himself, and righteousness and truth better than ease,
safety, or worldly goods, and who never let any fear of
harm to person or property sway him from doing his whole
duty to the uttermost.
He was faithful among the faithless, upright and just
in the midst of a wicked and perverse generation, and
lived to see his labors rewarded and approved in his own
life-time, and then with joy that the Right had
triumphed by mightier means than his own; with
thankfulness for the past, and with calm trust for
the future, he passed to the reward of the just.
He has fought a good fight, and has finished his course,
he has kept the faith.
From the same paper, of Jan. 30th, 1871, we extract an
account of the funeral obsequies which took place
on Saturday, January 28th.
FUNERAL SERVICE ON SATURDAY.
The
funeral of Thomas Garrett, which took place on
Saturday, partook almost of the character of a popular
ovation to the memory of the deceased,
[pg. 628]
though it was conducted with the plainness of form which
characterizes the society of which he was a member.
There was no display, no organization, nothing whatever
to distinguish this from ordinary funerals, except the
outpouring of people of every creed, coalition, and
color, to follow the remains to their last
resting-place.
There was for an hour or two before the procession
started, a constant living stream of humanity passing
into the house, around the coffin, and out at another
door, to take a last look at the face of the deceased,
the features of which displayed a sweetness and serenity
which occasioned general remark. A smile seemed to
play upon the dead lips.
Shortly after three o'clock the funeral procession
started, the plain coffin, containing the remains, being
carried by the stalwart arms of a delegation of colored
men, and the family and friends of the deceased
following in carriages with a large procession on foot,
while the sidewalks along the line, from the house to
the meeting-house, more than six squares, were densely
crowded with spectators.
The Friends' Meeting House was already crowded, except
the place reserved for the relatives of the deceased,
and, though probably fifteen hundred people crowded into
the capacious building, a greater number still were
unable to gain admission.
The crowd inside was composed of all kinds and
conditions of men, white and black, all uniting to do
honor to the character and works of the deceased.
The crowd inside was composed of all kinds and
conditions of men, white and black, all uniting to do
honor to the character and works of the deceased.
The coffin was laid in the open space in front of the
gallery of ministers and elders, and the lid removed
from it, after which there was a period of silence.
Presently the venerable Lucretia Mott arose and
said that, seeing the gathering of the multitude there
and thronging along the streets, as she had passed on
her way to the meeting-house, she had thought of the
multitude which gathered after the death of Jesus,
and of the remark of the Centurion, who, seeing the
people, said: "Certainly this was a righteous
man." Looking at this multitude she would say
surely this also was a righteous man. She was not
one of those who thought it best always on occasions
like this, to speak in eulogy of the dead, but this was
not an ordinary case, and seeing the crowd that had
gathered, and amongst it the large numbers of a once
despised and persecuted race, for which the deceased had
done so much, she felt that it was fit and proper that
the good deeds of this man's life should be remembered,
for the encouragement of others. She spoke of her
long acquaintance with him, of his cheerful and sunny
disposition, and his firm devotion to the truth as he
saw it.
Aaron M. Powell, of New York, was the next
speaker, and he spoke at length with great earnestness
of the life-long labor of his departed friend in the
abolition cause, of his cheerfulness, his courage, and
his perfect consecration of his work.
[pg. 629]
He alluded to the fact, that deceased was a member of
the Society of Friends, and held firmly to its faith
that God leads and inspires men to do the work He
requires of them, that He speaks within the soul of
every man, and that all men are equally His children,
subject to His guidance, and that all should be free to
follow wherever the Spirit might lead. It was
Thomas Garrett's recognition of this sentiment that
made him an abolitionist, and inspired him with the
courage to pursue his great work. He cared little
for the minor details of Quakerism, but he was a true
Quaker in his devotion to this great central idea which
is the basis on which it rests. He urged the
Society to take a lesson fro the deceased, and
recognizing the responsibility of their position, to
labor with earnestness, and to consecrate their whole
beings to the cause of right and reform. It is
impossible for us to give any fair abstract of Mr.
Powell's earnest and eloquent tribute to his friend,
on whom he had looked, he said, as "a Father in Israel"
from his boyhood.
William Howard Day, then came forward, saying,
he understood that it would not be considered
inappropriate for one of his race to say a few words on
this occasion, and make some attempt to pay a fitting
tribute to one to whom they owed so much. He did
not feel to-day like paying such a tribute, his grief
was too fresh upon him, his heart to bowed down, and he
could do no more, than in behalf of his race, not only
those here, but the host the deceased has befriended,
and of the whole four millions to whom he had been so
true a friend, cast a tribute of praise and thanks upon
his grave.
Rev. Alfred Cookman, of Grace M. E. Church, next
arose, and said that he came there intending to say
nothing, but the scene moved him to a few words.
He remembered once standing in front of St. Paul's
Cathedral, in London, and seeing therein the name of the
architect, Sir Christopher Wren, inscribed, and
under it this inscription: "Stranger, if you would see
his monument look about you." And the thought came
to him that if you would see the monument of him who
lies there, look about you and see it built in stones of
living hearts. He thanked God for the works of
this man; he thanked Him especially for his noble
character. He said that he felt that the body had
been the temple of a noble spirit, aye the temple of God
himself, and some day they would meet the spirit in the
heavenly land beyond the grave.
Lucretia Mott arose, and said she feared the
claim might appear to be made that Quakerism alone held
the great central principle which dominated this man's
life; but she wished it understood that they recognized
this "voice within" as leading and guiding all men, and
they probably meant by it much the same as those
differing from them meant by the Third person in their
Trinity. She did not wish, even in appearance, to
claim a belief in this voice for her own sect alone.
T. Clarkson Taylor then said, that the time for
closing the services had
[pg. 630]
arrived, and in a very few words commended the lesson of
his life to those present, after which the meeting
dissolved, and the body was carried to the grave-yard in
the rear of the meeting house, and deposited in its last
resting place.
THE TRIAL OF THE CASES, 1848.
To the Editor of the Commercial:
Your
admirable and interesting sketch of the career of the late Thomas
Garrett contains one or two statements, which, according to my
recollection of the facts, are not entirely accurate, and are
perhaps of sufficient importance to be corrected.
The proceedings in the U. S. Circuit Court were not
public prosecutions or indictments, but civil suits instituted by
the owners of the runaway slaves, who employed and paid counsel to
conduct them. An act of Congress, then in force, imposed a
penalty of five hundred dollars on any person who should knowingly
harbor or conceal a fugitive from labor, to be recovered by and for
the benefit of the claimant of such fugitive, in any Court proper to
try the same; saving, moreover, to the claimant his right of action
for or on account of loss, etc.; thus giving to the slave-owner two
cases for action for each fugitive, one of debt for the penalty, and
one of trespass for damages.
There were in all seven slaves, only the husband and
father of the family being free, who escaped under the friendly help
and guidance of Mr. Garrett five of whom were claimed
by E. N. Turner, and the remaining two by C. T. Glanding,
both claimants being residents of Maryland.
In the suits for the penalties, Turner obtained
judgment for twenty-five hundred dollars, and Glanding, one
for thousand dollars. In these cases the jury could give
neither less nor more than the amount of the penalties, on the
proper proof being made. Nor in the trespass case did the jury
give larger damages than were claimed." A jury sometimes does
queer things, but it cannot make a verdict for a greater sum than
the plaintiff demands; in the trespass cases, Glanding had a
verdict for one thousand dollars damages, but in Turner's
case only nine hundred dollars were allowed, though the plaintiff
sued for twenty-five hundred.
It is hardly true to say that any one
of the juries was packed, indeed, it would have been a
difficult matter in that day for the Marshal to summon thirty sober,
honest, and judicious men, fairly and impartially chosen from the
three counties of Delaware, who would have found verdicts different
from those which were rendered. The jury must have been fixed
for the defendant to have secured any other result, on the
supposition that the testimony admitted of any doubt or question,
the anti-slavery men in the state being like Virgil's ship-wrecked
mariners, very few in number and scattered over a vast space.
[pg. 631]
What most
redounds to the honor and praise of Mr. Garrett, in this
transaction, as a noble and disinterested philanthropist is, that
after the fugitives had been discharged from custody under the writ
of habeas corpus, and when he had been advised by his lawyer,
who was also his personal friend, to keep his hands off and let the
party work their own passage to a haven of freedom, not then far
distant, or he might be involved in serious trouble, he deliberately
refused to abandon them to the danger of pursuit and capture.
The welfare and happiness of too many human beings were at stake to
permit him to think of personal consequences, and he was ready and
dared to encounter any risk for himself, so that he could insure the
safety of those fleeing from bondage. It was this heroic
purpose to protect the weak and helpless at any cost, this fearless
unselfish action, not stopping to weigh the contingencies of
individual gain or loss, that constitutes his best title to the
gratitude of those he served, and to the admiration and respect of
all who can appreciate independent conduct springing from pure and
lofty motives. He did what he thought and believed to be
right, and let the consequences take care of themselves. He
never would directly or otherwise, entice a slave to leave his
master; but he never would refuse his aid to the hunted, panting
wretch that in the pursuit of happiness was seeking after liberty.
And who among us is now hold enough to say, that in all this he did
not see clearly, act bravely, do justly, and live up to the spirit
of the sacred text: - “Whatsoever ye would that men should do to
you, do ye even so to them?”
In a
letter addressed to one of the sons, William Lloyd
Garrison pays the following beautiful and just tribute to his
faithfulness in the cause of freedom.
BOSTON, January 25th, 1871.
MY DEAR
FRIEND: - I have received the intelligence of the death of your
honored and revered father, with profound emotions. If it were
not for the inclemency of the weather, and the delicate state of my
health, I would hasten to be at the funeral, long as the distance
is; not indeed as a mourner, for, in view of his ripe old age, and
singularly beneficent life, there is no cause for sorrow, but to
express the estimation in which I held him, as one of the best men
who ever walked the earth, and one of the most beloved among my
numerous friends and co-workers in the cause of an oppressed and
down-trodden race, now happily rejoicing in their heavenly-wrought
deliverance. For to no one was the language of Job more
strictly applicable than to himself: - “When the ear heard me, then
it blessed me, and when the eye saw me, it gave witness to me;
because I delivered the poor that cried, and the fatherless, and him
that had none to help him. The blessing of him that was ready
to perish came upon me; and I caused the widow’s heart to sing for
joy. I put on righteousness, and it clothed me; my judgment
was as a robe and a diadem. I was eyes to the blind, and feet
was I
[pg. 632]
to the lame. I was a father to the poor; and the
cause which I knew not I searched out. And I brake
the jaws of the wicked, and plucked the spoil out of his
teeth." This is an exact portraiture of your
father, a most comprehensive delineation of his
character as a philanthropist and reformer. It was
his meat and drink.
" The poor to
feed, the lost to seek,
To proffer life to death,
Hope to the erring, to the weak
The strength of his own faith.
" To plead the captive's
right; remove
The sting of hate from law:
And soften in the fire of love
The hardened steel of war.
" He walked the dark world
in the mild,
Still guidance of the light:
In tearful tenderness a child,
A strong man in the right." |
Did there ever live one who had less of that "fear of
man which bringeth a snare," than himself? Or who
combined more moral courage with exceeding tenderness of
spirit? Or who adhered more heroically to his
convictions of duty in the face of deadly peril and
certain suffering? Or who gave himself more
unreservedly, or with greater disinterestedness, to the
service of bleeding humanity? Or who took more
joyfully the spoiling of his goods as the penalty of his
sympathy for the hunted fugitive? Or who more
untiringly kept pace with all the progressive movements
of the age, as though in the very freshness of adult
life, while venerable with years? Or who, as a
husband, father, friend, citizen, or neighbor, more
nobly performed all the duties, or more generally
distributed all the charities of life? He will
leave a great void in the community. Such a
stalwart soul appears only at rare intervals.
Delaware, enslaved, treated him like a felon; Delaware,
redeemed, will be proud of his memory.
" Only the
actions of the just
Smell sweet and blossom in the dust." |
His rightful place is conspicuously among the
benefactors, saviors, martyrs of the human race.
His career was full of dramatic interest from beginning
to end, and crowded with the experiences and
vicissitudes of a most eventful nature. What
he promised he fulfilled; what he attempted, he
seldom, or never failed to accomplish; what he
believed, he dared to proclaim upon the housetop;
what he ardently desired, and incessantly labored
for, was the reign of universal freedom, peace, and
righteousness. He was among the manliest of
men, and the gentlest of spirits. There was no
form of human suffering that did not touch his
heart; but his abounding sympathy was especially
drawn out towards the poor, imbruted slaves of the
plantation, and such of
[pg. 633]
their number as sought their freedom by flight.
The thousands that passed safely through his hands, on
their way to Canada and the North, will never forget his
fatherly solicitude for their welfare, or the dangers he
unflinchingly encountered in their behalf.
Stripped of all his property under the Fugitive Slave
law, for giving them food, shelter, and assistance to
continue their flight, he knew not what it was to be
intimidated or disheartened, but gave himself to the
same blessed work as though conscious of no loss.
Great-hearted philanthropist, what heroism could exceed
thy own?
"For, while
the jurist sitting with the slave-whip o'er
him swung,
From the tortured truths of freedom the lie
of slavery wrung,
And the solemn priest to Moloch, on each
God-deserted shrine,
Broke the bondman's heart for bread, poured
the bondman's blood for wine -
While the multitude in blindness to a
far-off Saviour knelt,
And spurned, the while, the temple where a
present Saviour dwelt;
Thou beheld at Him in the task-field, in the
prison shadow dim,
And thy mercy to the bondman, it was mercy
unto Him!" |
I trust some one, well qualified to execute the
pleasing task, will write his biography for the
grand lessons his life inculcated.
|
Yours, in
full sympathy and trust, |
WM.
LLOYD GARRISON |
A contemporary who had known him long and intimately -
who had appreciated his devotion to freedom, who had
shared with him som of the perils consequent upon
aiding the fleeing fugitives, and who belonged to the
race with whom Garrett sympathized, and for whose
elevation and freedom he labored so assiduously with an
overflowing heart of gender regard and sympathy - penned
the following words, touching the sad event:
|
|
CHATHAM,
C. W., January 30, 1871. |
TO MR.
HENRY GARRETT: -
Dear Sir: - I have just heard, through the intelligence makes me
fell sad and sorrowful; I sincerely sympathize with you and all your
brothers and sisters, in your mournful bereavement; but you do not
mourn without hope, for you have an assurance in his death that your
loss is his infinite gain. For he was a good Christian, a good
husband, a good father, a good citizen, and a truly good Samaritan,
for his heart, his hand and his purse, where ever open to the wants
of suffering humanity, wherever he found it; irrespective of the
country, religion or complexion of the sufferer. Hence there
are many more who mourn his loss, as well as yourselves; and I know,
verily, that many silent tear was shed by his fellow-citizens, both
white and colored, when he took his departure; especially the
colored ones; for he loved them with a brother's love, not because
they were colored, but because they were oppressed, and, like
John Brown, he loved them to the last; that was manifest by his
request that they should be his bearers. I can better
feel than I have language to express the mournful and sorrowing
pride that must have stirred
[pg. 634]
the inmost souls of those men of color, who had the
honor conferred on them of bearing his mortal remains to
their last resting-place, when they thought of what a
sacred trust was committed to their hands. We are
told to mark the perfect man, and behold the upright,
for the end of that man is peace; and such was the end
of your dear father, and he has gone to join the
innumerable company of the spirits of the just, made
perfect on the other side of the river, where there is a
rest remaining for all the children of God. My
brother, Abraham D. Shadd, and my sister
Amelia, join their love and condolence with mine to
you all, hoping that the virtues of your father may be a
guiding star to you all, until you meet him again in
that happy place, where parting will be no more,
forever.
|
Your humble
friend,
ELIZABETH J. WILLIAMS |
From the learned and the unlearned, from those in high
places and from those in humble stations, many
testimonials reached the family, respecting this great
friend of the slave, but it is doubtful, whether a
single epistle from any one, was more affectingly
appreciated by the bereaved family, than the epistle
just quoted from Elizabeth J. Williams.
The Slave’s most eloquent advocate, Wendell
Phillips, in the “National Standard,” of February 4,
1871, in honor of the departed, bore the following
pertinent testimony to his great worth in the cause of
Liberty.
“ I should not dare to trust my memory for the number
of fugitive slaves this brave old friend has helped to
safety and freedom - nearly three thousand, I believe.
What a rich life to look back on! How skilful and
adroit he was, in eluding the hunters! How patient
in waiting days and weeks, keeping the poor fugitives
hidden meanwhile, till it was safe to venture on the
highway! What whole-hearted devotion, what
unselfish giving of time, means, and everything else to
this work of brotherly love! What house in
Delaware, so honorable in history, as that where hunted
men fled, and were sure to find refuge. It was the
North Star to many a fainting heart. This century
has grand scenes to show and boast of among its fellows.
But few transcend that auction-block where the sheriff
was selling all Garrett’s goods for the crime (!)
of giving a breakfast to a family of fugitive slaves.
As the“ sale closed, the officer turns to Garrett,
saying: ‘Thomas, I hope you’ll never be caught at
this again.’
“ ‘Friend,’ was the reply, ‘I haven’t a dollar in the
world, but if thee knows a fugitive who needs a
breakfast, send him to me.’
“Over such a scene, Luther and Howard and
Clarkson clapped their hands.
“Such a speech redeems the long infamy of the State.
It is endurable, the having of such a blot as Delaware
in our history, when it has once been the home of such a
man. Remember well the just pride with which he
told me, that after that sale, pro-slavery as Wilmington
was, he could have a discount at the bank as readily as
any man in the city. Though the laws
[pg. 635]
robbed him, his fellow-citizens could not but respect
and trust him, love and honor him.
“The city has never had, we believe, a man die in it
worthy of a statue. We advise it to seize this
opportunity to honor itself and perpetuate the good name
of its worthiest citizen, by immortalizing some street,
spot, shaft or building with his name.
“Brave, generous, high-scaled, sturdy, outspoken friend
of all that needed aid or sympathy, farewell for these
scenes! In times to come, when friend less men and
hated ideas need champions, God grant them as
gallant and successful ones as you have been, and may
the State you honored grow worthy of you.
Likewise in the “National Standard,” the editor,
Aaron M. Powell, who attended the funeral, paid
the following glowing tribute to the moral,
religious, and anti-slavery character of the slave’s
friend:
On the 24th inst., Thomas Garrett, in
his eighty-second year, passed on to the higher
life. A week previous we had visited him in
his sick chamber, and, on leaving him felt that he
must go hence ere long. He was the same
strong, resolute man in spirit to the last. He
looked forward to the welcome change with perfect
serenity and peace of mind. And well he might,
for he had indeed fought the good fight and been
faithful unto the end.
He was most widely known for his services to fugitive
slaves. Twenty-five hundred and forty-five he
had preserved a record of; and he had assisted
somewhat more than two hundred prior to the
commencement of the record. Picture to the
mind’s eye this remarkable procession of nearly
three thousand men, women and children fleeing from
Slavery, and finding in this brave, large-hearted
man, a friend equal to their needs in so critical an
emergency! No wonder he was feared by the
slave-holders, not alone of his own State, but of
the whole South. If their human chattels once
reached his outpost, there was indeed little hope of
their reclamation. The friend and helper of
fugitives from Slavery, truly their Moses, he
was more than this, he was the discriminating,
outspoken, uncompromising opponent of Slavery
itself. He was one of the strongest pillars
and one of the most efficient working-members of the
American Anti-slavery Society. He was an
abolitionist of the most radical and pronounced
character, though a resident of a slave State, and
through all the period wherein to be an abolitionist
was to put in jeopardy, not only reputation and
property, but life itself. Though he rarely
addressed public meetings, his presence imparted
much strength to others, was “weighty” in the best
Quaker sense. He was of the lure type of
character, represented by Francis Jackson
and James Mott.
Thomas Garrett was a member of the Society of
Friends, and as such,
[pg. 636]
served by the striking contrast of his own life and
character, with the average of the society, to exemplify
to the world the real, genuine Quakerism. It is
not at all to the credit of his fellow-members, that it
must be said of them, that when he was hearing the cross
and doing the work for which he is now so universally
honored, they, many of them, were not only not in
sympathy with him, but would undoubtedly, if they had
had the requisite vitality and courage, have cut him off
from their denominational fellow ship. He was a
sincere, earnest believer in the cardinal point of
Quakerism, the Divine presence in the human soul - this
furnishes the key to his action through life. This
divine attribute he regarded not as the birth-right of
Friends alone, not of one race, sex or class, but of all
mankind. Therefore was he an abolitionist;
therefore was he interested in the cause of the Indians;
therefore was he enlisted in the cause of equal rights
for women; therefore was he a friend of temperance, of
oppressed and needy working men and women, world-wide in
the scope of his philanthropic sympathy, and broadly
catholic, and comprehensive in his views of religious
life and duty. He was the soul of honor in
business. His experience, when deprived at sixty,
of every dollar of his property for having obeyed God
rather than man, in assisting fugitives from Slavery,
and the promptness with which his friends came forward
with proffered co-operation, furnishes a lesson which
all should ponder well. He had little respect for,
or patience with shams of any kind, in religious,
political or social life.
As we looked upon Thomas Garrett’s calm,
serene face, mature in a ripe old age, still shadowing
forth kindliness of heart, firmness of purpose,
discriminating intelligence, conscientious, manly
uprightness, death never seemed more beautiful:
"Why, what is Death but Life
In other forms of being? Life without
The coarser attributes of men, the dull
And momently decaying frame which holds
The ethereal spirit in, and binds it down
To brotherhood with brutes! There's no
Such thing as Death; what's so-called is but
The beginning of a new existence, a fresh
Segment of the eternal round of charge." |
A. M. P.
Another warm admirer of this Great
Lover of humanity, in a letter to George W. Stone thus
alludes to his life and death:
|
|
TAUNTON, MASS., June
25th, 1871 |
DEAR
STONE: - Your telegram announcing the death of that old
soldier and saint, and my good friend, Thos. Garrett,
reached me last evening at ten o'clock.
My first impulse was to start for Wilmington, and be
present at his funeral; but when I considered my work here, and
my engagements for the next four days, I found it impossible to
go.
[pg. 637]
I will be
there in spirit, and bow my inmost soul before the All Loving One,
his Father and ours, in humble thankfulness, that I ever knew him,
and had the privilege of enjoying his friendship and witnessing his
devotion to the interest of every good cause of benevolence and
Reform.
I could write you many things of interest which I heard
from him, and which I have noted on my memory and heart; but I
cannot now. I think he was one of the remarkable men of the
times, in faith, in holy boldness, in fearless devotion to the
right, in uncompromising integrity, in unselfish benevolence, in
love to God and man, and in unceasing, life-long efforts to
do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God.
We shall not soon look upon his like again.
If I was present at his funeral, I should take it as a
privilege to pronounce his name, and say, as I never said before, “
Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord; even so saith the
Spirit; for they rest from their labors, and their works do follow
them.”
Do, at once, see his children and Clarkson
Taylor, and give them my condolence, no, my congratulation, and
assure them that they have a rich legacy in his noble life, and he
has a glorious reward in the bosom of God.
Peace to his memory! Noble old man, so pure and
peaceful, and yet so strong, firm, and fearless, so gentle, tender,
and truthful, afraid and ashamed of nothing but sin, and in love and
labor with every good work.
I could write on and fill many pages. But he
desired no eulogy, and needs none. He lives, and will live for
ever in many hearts and in the heaven of heavens above.
T. ISRAEL.
If it were necessary we might continue to
introduce scores of editorials, communications, epistles, etc., all
breathing a similar spirit of respect for the rare worth of this
wonderful man, but space forbids. In conclusion, there fore,
with a view of presenting him in the light of his own interesting
letters, written when absorbed in his peculiar work, from a large
number on file the following are submitted:
|
|
WILMINGTON,
11th mo. 21st, 1855. |
ESTEEMED FRIEND, WM. STILL: - Thine of this
date, inquiring for the twenty-one, and how they
have been disposed of, has just been received.
I can only answer by saying, when I parted with them
yesterday forenoon, I gave the wife of the person,
in whose house they were, money to pay her expenses
to Philadelphia, and back in the cars to pilot, the
four women to thy place. I gave her husband
money to pay a pilot to start yesterday with the ten
men, divided in two gangs; also a letter for thee.
I hope they have arrived safe ere this. I had
to leave town soon after noon yesterday to attend a
brother ill with an attack of apoplexy, and to-day I
have been very much engaged. The place they
stayed here is a considerable distance off. I
will make inquiry to-morrow morning, and in case an
other disposition
[pg. 638]
has been made of them than the above I will write thee.
I should think they have stopped to-day, in consequence
of the rain, and most likely will arrive safe to-morrow.
In haste, thy friend,
THOS GARRETT
Although having "to attend a brother, ill with an
attack of apoplexy," Garrett took time
to attend to the interest of the "twenty-one," as
the above letter indicates. How many other men
in the United States, under similar circumstances,
would have been thus faithful?
On another occasion deeply concerned for A FORWARDER OF
SLAVES, he wrote this:
|
|
WILMINGTON,
12th mo. 26th, 1855. |
ESTEEMED FRIEND, WM. STILL: - The bearer of
this, George Wilmer, is a slave, whose
residence is in Maryland. He is a true man,
and a forwarder of slaves. Has passed some
twenty-five within four months. He is desirous
of finding some of his relations, Wm. Mann
and Thomas Carmichael, they passed here about
a month since. If thee can give him any
information where they can be found thee will much
oblige him, and run no risk of their safety in so
doing. I remain, as ever, thy sincere friend,
"Four able-bodied men," form the subject of the
subjoined correspondence:
|
|
WILMINGTON,
11th mo. 4th, 1856. |
ESTEEMED
FRIENDS, J. Miller McKim and William Still: -
Captain F., has arrived here this day, with four able-bodied
men. One is an engineer, and has been engaged in sawing
lumber, a second, a god house-carpenter, a third a blacksmith, and
the fourth a farm hand. They are now five hundred miles from
their home in Carolina, and would be glad to get situations, without
going far from here. I will keep them till to-morrow.
Please inform me whether three knows of a suitable place in the
country where the mechanics can find employment at their trades for
the winter; let me hear to-morrow, and oblige your friend,
THOMAS GARRETT.
"What has
become of Harriet Tubman?" (agent of the Underground Rail
Road), is made a subject of special inquiry in the following note:
|
|
WILMINGTON,
3d mo. 27th, 1857. |
ESTEEMED
FRIEND, WILLIAM STILL: - I have been very anxious for some
time past, to hear what has become of Harriet Tubman.
The last I heard of her, she was in the State of New York, on her
way to Canada with some friends, last fall. Has thee seen, or
heard anything of her lately? It would be a sorrowful fact, if
such a hero as she, should be lost from the Underground Rail Road.
I have just received a letter from Ireland, making inquiry
respecting her. If thee gets this in time, and knows anything
respecting her, please drop me a line by mail to-morrow, and I will
get it next morning if not sooner, and oblige thy friend.
[pg. 639]
I have heard
nothing from the eighth man from Dover, but trust he is safe.
THOMAS GARRETT.
On being
informed that Harriet was “all right,” the following extract
from a subsequent letter, expresses his satisfaction over the good
news, and at the same time, indicates his sympathy for a “poor
traveler,” who had fallen a victim to the cold weather, and being
severely frost-bitten, had died of lock-jaw, as related on page 52.
“I was truly glad to learn that Harriet
Tubman was still in good health and ready for action, but I
think there will be more danger at present than heretofore, there is
so much excitement below in consequence of the escape of those eight
slaves. I was truly sorry to hear of the fate of that
poor fellow who had periled so much for liberty. I was in
hopes from what thee told me, that he would recover with the loss
perhaps of some of his toes.
THOMAS GARRETT.
In the
next letter, an interesting anecdote is related of an encounter on
the Underground Rail Road, between the fugitives and several
Irishmen, and how one of the old countrymen was shot in the
forehead, etc., which G. thought would make such opponents to
the Road "more cautious."
|
|
WILMINGTON,
11th mo., 5th, 1857 |
ESTEEMED FRIEND, WILLIAM STILL: - I have just
written a note for the bearer to William Murphy
Chester, who will direct him on to thy care; he
left hsi home about a week since. I hear in
the lower part of this State, he met with a friend
to pilot him some twenty-five miles last night.
We learn that one party of those last week were
attacked with clubs by several Irishmen, and that
one of them was shot in the forehead, the ball
entering to the skull bone, and passing under the
skin partly round the head. My informant says
he is likely to recover, but it will leave an ugly
mark it is thought, as long as he lives. We
have not been able to learn, whether the party was
on the look out for them, or whether they were
rowdies out on a Hallow-eve frolic; but be it which
it may, I presume they will be more cautious
hereafter how they trifle with such. Desiring
thee prosperity and happiness, I remain thy friend,
THOMAS GARRETT.
FOUR OF GOD'S POOR.
The following letter shows the fearless manner in
which he attended to the duties of his station:
|
|
WILMINGTON, 9th mo. 6th,
1857. |
RESPECTED
FRIEND, WM. STILL: - This evening I send to thy
care four of God's poor. Severn Johnson, a
true man, will go with them to-night by rail road to thy house.
I have given Johnson five dollars, which will pay all
expenses, and leave each twenty-five cents. We are
indebted to Captain F-t-n for those. May success
attend them in their efforts to maintain
[pg. 640]
themselves. Please send word by Johnson
whether or no, those seven arrived safe I wrote thee of
ten days since. My wife and self were at Longwood
to-day, had a pleasant ride and good meeting. We
are, as ever, thy friend,
THOMAS GARRETT.
Quite a
satisfactory account is given in the letter below of the "Irishman
who was shot in the forehead;" also of one of the same kin, who in
meddling with Underground Rail Road passengers, got his arm broken
in two places, etc.
|
|
WILMINGTON, 11th mo.
14th, 1857. |
ESTEEMED FRIEND, WM. STILL:
- Thy favor of a few days since came to hand,
giving quite a satisfactory account of the large company.
I find in the melee near this town, one of the Irishmen
got his arm broken in two places. The one shot in the
forehead is badly marked, but not dangerously injured. I
learn to-day that the carriage in that company, owning to fast
driving with such a heavy load, is badly broken, and the poor
horse was badly injured; it has not been able to do anything
since.
Please say to my friend, Rebecca Hart, that I
have heretofore kept clear of persuading, or even advising
slaves to leave their masters till they had fully made up their
minds to leave, knowing as I do there is great risk in so doing,
and if betrayed once would be a serious injury to the cause
hereafter. I had spoken to one colored man to try to see
him, but he was not willing to risk it. If he has any
desire to get away, he can, during one night, be fore they miss
him, get out of the reach of danger. Booth has
moved into New Castle, and left the two boys on the farm.
If Rebecca Hart will write to me, and give me the
name of the boy, and the name of his mother, I will make another
effort. The man I spoke to lives in New Castle, and thinks
the mother of the boy alluded to lives between here and New
Castle. The young men’s association here wants Wendell
Phillips to deliver a lecture on the lost arts, and some
of the rest of us wish him to deliver a lecture on Slavery.
Where will a letter reach him soonest, as I wish to write him on
the subject. I thought he could perhaps deliver two
lectures, two nights in succession. If thee can give the
above information, thee will much oblige -
GARRETT & SON.
In
his business-like transactions, without concealment, he places
matters in such a light that the wayfaring man, though a fool,
need not err, as may here be seen.
|
|
WILMINGTON, 11th mo.
25th, 1857. |
ESTEEMED FRIEND, WM. STILL: - I now send Johnson,
one of our colored men, up with the three men I wrote about.
Johnson has undertook to have them well washed and
cleaned during the day. And I have provided them with some
second-hand clothes, to make them comfortable, a new pair of
shoes and stockings, and shall pay Johnson for taking
care of them. I mention this so that thee may know. Thee
need not
[pg. 641]
advance him any funds. In the present case I shall finish them
with money to pay their fare to Philadelphia, and Johnson home
again. Hoping they will get on safe, I remain thy friend,
THOMAS GARRETT.
FOUR FEMALES ON BOARD.
The fearless
Garrett communicated through the mail, as usual, the
following intelligence:
|
|
WILMINGTON,
8th mo. 25th, 1859. |
ESTEEMED FRIEND, WM. STILL: - The brig Alvena, of
Lewiston, is in the Delaware opposite here, with
four females on board. The colored man who has
them in charge, was employed by the husband of one
of them to bring his wife up. When he arrived
here, he found the man had left. As the vessel
is bound to Red Bank, I have advised him to take
them there in the vessel, and to-morrow take them in
the steamboat to the city, and to the Anti-slavery
office. He says they owe the captain one
dollar and fifty cents for board, and I gave him
three dollars, to pay the captain and take them to
your office. I have a man here, to go on
to-night, that was nearly naked; shall rig him out
pretty comfortably. Poor fellow, he has lost
his left hand, but he says he can take care of
himself. In haste, thy friend,
While Father Abraham was using his utmost
powers to put down the rebellion, in 1864, a young
man who had "been most unrighteously sold for seven
years," desirous of enlisting, sought advice from
the wise and faithful Underground Rail Road manager,
who gave him the following letter, which may be
looked upon in the light of a rare anecdote, as
there is no doubt but that the "professed
non-resistant" in this instance, hoped to see the
poor fellow "snugly fixed in his regimentals"
doing service for "Father Abraham."
|
|
WILMINGTON,
1st mo. 23d, 1864.. |
RESPECTED FRIEND, WILLIAM STILL:
- The bearer of this, Winlock Clark, has lately
been most unrighteously sold for seven years, and is
desirous of enlisting, and becoming one of Uncle Sam's
boys; I have advised him to call on thee so that no land
sharks shall get any bounty for enlisting him; he has a
wife and several children, and whatever bounty the
government or the State allows him, will be of use
to his family. Please write me when he is snugly
fixed in his regimentals, so that I may send word to his
wife. By so doing, thee will much oblige thy
friend, and the friend of humanity,
N. B.
Am I naughty, being a professed non-resistant, to advise this poor
fellow to serve Father Abraham?
We have given so many of these
inimitable Underground Rail Road letters from the pen of the sturdy
old laborer, not only because they will be new to the readers of
this work, but because they so fittingly illustrate his practical
devotion to the Slave, and his cheerfulness - in the face of danger
and difficulty - in a manner that other pens might labor in vain to
describe.
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