A Plea for Captain John Brown / Read to the citizens of Concord, Massachusetts on Sunday evening, October thirtieth, eighteen fifty-nine
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About This Book
A public address seeks to correct popular misstatements and to defend a man condemned for his armed anti-slavery actions, asking listeners to feel sympathy and admiration for him and his companions. It summarizes his background, his refusal of ordinary military life except for wars of liberty, and his instrumental support of anti-slavery forces in a contested western territory. The speaker emphasizes the subject’s strict moral code, Puritan-derived discipline, Spartan habits, and prayerful camp rules, and praises his practical prudence and tactics—including deceptive surveying trips to gather intelligence—arguing that his courage confronted the nation when it erred.
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