Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH)

 - Class of 1883

Page 29 of 184

 

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1883 Edition, Page 29 of 184
Page 29 of 184



Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1883 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

.CHAPTER 11. I SLAVERY ANECDOTES. .,QXTi -ear T is the object of this chapter to sketch in a very hasty Way V K ,,-- some ofthe incidents which form a part of the anti-slavery , history of Oberlin. These incidents have been so numerous ggthat We here are apt to think of them as commonplace, yet to Q 51 the genera.l reading public they must be most interesting. At the start We desire to acknowledge the courtesy of Mr. Sabram Cox, Rev. George Clark, Deacon Peck, Mr. Munger, Mrs. Horace Taylor, President Fairchild and others, to Whom We .are indebted for the material for this chapter. Mr. Sabraln Cox, upon Whom a call was made, is an elderly colored man of rare .intelligence and noble qualities of mind. He was at work for Mr. Lovejoy, at the time of the famous f or infamousj assassination of the latter, in Alden, near St. Louis.. He was then only a boy, but was the only person who dared haul from the river in an express wagon the -sunken printing press, upon which Mr. Lovejoy had printed his anti- slavery paper. 'As he drove through the' streets with a coil fin in which to place the body of his beloved friend and patron, he was hissed by the mob, and only escaped death by reason of his tender years. In the early history of Oberlin he played a promi- nent part, and his name will occur frequently in these sketches. -x- as ' No man in Oberlin could be trusted on the slave question. An old Southerner once said that no matter how pious or reliable Ober- linites might be in other matters, they would be Hlike horse thieves when it came to a nigger? To betray a negro would have been to lose the respect of the community, and insure lasting disgrace and odium. A , M k AL Reference has already been made to the origin of the Oberlin .anti-slavery sentiment, and the strange but characteristic Way in Which the hostility of the college as an institution became pledged to the moral crime of trafiicking in n1en's bodies. In the early times, it will be remembered that Oberlin wasthe only point in the North where anti-slavery sentiments prevailed. It thus became

Page 28 text:

Q I PIONEER REMINISCENCES. 21 was once presented with a beautiful cloak, he refused, however, to Wear it, preferring to part with it that the poor might not suffer for clothing. A notice, which would seem very-strange should it appearin these days when Oberlin students are constantly sending boxes oi' clothing to the needy of other places, Was printed in the Oberlin Evangelist for 1840. MAID on 1NDrGEN'r STUDENTS. The Oberlin Board of Education would respectfully suggest to their patrons that articles of clothing are of great value to the in- digent students under their care. There is constant demand for all kinds, especially for socks, shirts, bosoms, and collars, fulled or broad cloth, and also such articles as are suitable for the Warm season. The two latter kinds may Well be sent before being made up. Dona- tions in money are also earnestly solicited. tThe Lord loveth a cheerful giver., L. BURNELL, Acting Agentf' 96 79 96 To illustrate the privations endured in the early days an old set- tler tells us of having paid out his last dollar one Winter for t'shorts Hour and carrying it home on his back through snow knee- deep. Having helped his Wife to prepare some of it in the shape of griddle cakes they discovered, at the last moment, that there was no grease. The old saying: t4When poor, grease your griddle with corn cobs, came to their aid,-and the experiment proved a success. A king never enjoyed his banquet more than these pioneers did those cakes. V In those same days for endurance the gentlemenis pants were often made out of cotton bed-ticking. Clearing up land was the oc- cupation for the winter days. Economy, diligence, sobriety and faithfulness were lessons cheerfully learned, and which have never been forgotten. A Q



Page 30 text:

SLAVERY ANEGDOTES. 23 from the first a sort of junction or focus for the converging lines of the Underground Railwayw from the South. From the town fugi- tives were transferred secretly to Cleveland, Black River, Vermil- lion, Huron, and Sandusky, and put aboard boats bound for Canada. The writer was shown a large cave between here and Black River, where it is said that fugitive slaves were concealed, thus constituting literally an underground depot. For the truth of this assertion we can not vouch. -JE lk ik I To show the complete isolation of Oberlin sentiment, it is only necessary to say that there was not the least sympathy felt toward the place by any of the neighboring towns. The little colony was quite alone in the advocacy of anti-slavery. The towns in the vicinity were ready at any time to assist the slave-holders. Often they held indignation meetings, and discussed measures for putting Oberlin down. Anonymous communications were sent in threaten- ing to burn the town, and for years an armed patrol had to be kept to guard it. Students were egged, stoned, sometimes seriously hurt, for the sole crime of hailing from Oberlin. One eminent evangelist, a man noted for his Christian love, told the writer that the legs of his horse were once cut in to the bone, for the simple reason that the animal had the misfortune of belonging to an Oberlinite. Yet these persecutors who were themselves so intolerant were punishing a dumb brute because he chanced to belong to a community which they fancied to be oifensive because of intolerance. -M .S+ 9? Another instance is related of the way in which the early anti- slavery enthusiasts from Lane Seminary were treated. Rev. Amos Dresser, one of the 'trebelsf' now of Franklin, Nebraska, was selling Bibles in the streets of Nashville, Tennesee, when some one inquisi- tively peeped into his buggy, and found that the books were wrapped up in old copies of the Philanthropist. He was thereupon arrested, tried, sentenced in due form of law, and treated to twenty lashes upon his bare back in the Public Square in Nashville! Does not such an outrage make the blood boil at the mere recital to-day? , 64- 5 Z -XA The students of to-day can scarcelyimagine what it must have been to live in Oberlin in those days. What a tremendous sensa- tion it would'take now-a-days to rouse two or three hundred stu- dent sat midnight and start them off on foot in a pursuit of slave- holders for miles, a pursuit involving weariness, often danger, and offering only the compensation afforded by the triumph of moral

Suggestions in the Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) collection:

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1890 Edition, Page 1

1890

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1891 Edition, Page 1

1891

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 1

1892

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1893 Edition, Page 1

1893

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1894 Edition, Page 1

1894

Oberlin College - Hi-O-Hi Yearbook (Oberlin, OH) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 1

1897


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