Two black men were however seized, taken into the
Prairie and put to the torture. A physician by
the name of Parrott from Tennessee, and another from
New England by the name of Anson Jones, were present
on this occasion. The latter gentleman is now
the Texan minister plenipotentiary to the United States,
and resides at Washington. The unfortunate slaves
being stripped, and all things arranged, the torture
commenced by whipping upon their bare backs.
Six athletic men were employed in this scene of inhumanity,
the names of some of whom I well remember. There
was one of the name of Brown, and one or two of the
name of Patton. Those six executioners were successively
employed in cutting up the bodies of these defenceless
slaves, who persisted to the last in the avowal of
their innocence. The bloody whip was however kept
in motion till savage barbarity itself was glutted.
When this was accomplished, the bleeding victims were
re-conveyed to the inclosure of the mansion house
where they were deposited for a few moments. ’The
dying groans however incommoding the ladies, they
were taken to a back shed where one of them soon expired.’[13]
The life of the other slave was for a time despaired
of, but after hanging over the grave for months, he
at length so far recovered as to walk about and labor
at light work. These facts cannot be controverted.
They were disclosed under the solemnity of an oath,
at Columbia, in a court of justice. I was present,
and shall never forget them. The testimony of
Drs. Parrott and Jones was most appalling. I
seem to hear the death-groans of that murdered man.
His cries for mercy and protestations of innocence
fell upon adamantine hearts. The facts above
stated, and others in relation to this scene of cruelty
came to light in the following manner. The master
of the murdered man commenced legal process against
the actors in this tragedy for the recovery of
the value of the chattel, as one would institute
a suit for a horse or an ox that had been unlawfully
killed. It was a suit for the recovery of damages
merely. No indictment was even dreamed
of. Among the witnesses brought upon the stand
in the progress of this cause were the physicians,
Parrott and Jones above named. The part which
they were called to act in this affair was, it is
said, to examine the pulse of the victims during the
process of torture. But they were mistaken
as to the quantum of torture which a human being can
undergo and not die under it. Can it be believed
that one of these physicians was born and educated
in the land of the pilgrims? Yes, in my own native
New England. It is even so! The stone-like
apathy manifested at the trial of the above cause,
and the screams and the death-groans of an innocent
man, as developed by the testimony of the witnesses,
can never be obliterated from my memory. They
form an era in my life, a point to which I look back
with horror.
[Footnote 13: The words of Dr. Parrott, a witness on the trial hereafter referred to.]