There was the same reckless administration of punishment that still characterizes these Mountain people. A tory appeared in the road one day near the home of Colonel William Campbell, of the “Backwater settlement.” The Colonel at once gives him chase; after a brief absence he returns to his home, and his wife eagerly asks “What did you do with him?”
“Oh, we hung him, Betty, that’s all.”
These early settlers did not immediately plant churches and school-houses, as the settlers of New England did. Still they were not altogether illiterate. A public document still in existence has the signature of 112 out of 114 of their number who signed the paper, two only making their X.
In 1779, the first Court House was built at Jonesboro. At about the same date, the author informs us, “The school mistress was to be found at nearly every cross-road in the older settlements. She occupied a small log-house, generally about sixteen feet square, and often without floor or windows.” The author might have added that she, or one like her, occupies the same school-house to-day.
In 1779, the first “church-house” was erected, and Rev. Tidence Lane became the “first settled minister beyond the Alleghenies.”
To those of our readers who have recently followed the missionary work of the A.M.A. in this Mountain region, these books will be of great interest.
Chas. J. Ryder.
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We have received from Rev. Austin Willey, author of “The history of the anti-slavery cause in the state and nation,” a gift of one hundred copies of the book for gratuitous distribution among our workers in the South. We gave a brief review and a warm commendation of the volume in the American missionary for June, 1886, and we renew our endorsement, and tender our thanks to the author for his benefaction. Our field workers will be interested in this candid sketch of the early anti-slavery struggle, and we believe that many of our white friends in the South will be glad to read in the light of these quiet days the sayings and doings of a class of people whom they then misunderstood.
The book may be had of B. Thurston, Portland, Me., or of C.T. Dillingham, 678 Broadway, N.Y. Price, 1.50, postpaid.
The reference to Father Willey and his book is suggestive. He is one of the “old, original” abolitionists. Men who were once denounced and are now scarcely honored, for lo! to the amazement and amusement of some of us, we find that everybody was an abolitionist and always had been, that everybody learned to hate slavery on the mother’s lap, and was always opposed to it! We who in those early days were treated as outcasts by “gentlemen of property and standing,” and mobbed by the rabble at their bidding, are led to wonder what has become of all those who thus disagreed with us! One marked exception occurs to us. A prominent professor in a theological seminary, when the question was put to him ten years ago: “Professor, when did you become an Abolitionist?” replied, with a merry twinkle in his eye: “When it became popular.” We have found few, however, who are so frank or so witty.