The Vigilance Committee of 1856 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 72 pages of information about The Vigilance Committee of 1856.

The Vigilance Committee of 1856 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 72 pages of information about The Vigilance Committee of 1856.

Title:  The Vigilance Committee of ’56

Author:  James O’Meara

Release Date:  November, 2003 [Etext #4642] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on February 20, 2002]

Edition:  10

Language:  English

Character set encoding:  ASCII

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The Vigilance Committee of ’56.

By a Pioneer California Journalist
[James O’Meara]

Many accounts of the Vigilance Committee of San Francisco have been published, but all of them, so far as I have seen, were from the pen of members of that organization, or else from persons who favored it.  As a consequence their accounts of it were either partial, to a greater or less degree, or imperfect otherwise; and much has been omitted as well as misstated and misrepresented otherwise.  I was not a member of the Vigilance Committee, nor was I a member of the opposing organization, known as the Law and Order body, of which General Sherman was the head and Volney E. Howard next in rank.  I have never been in favor of mob or lynch-law in any form, and, therefore, had neither sympathy with nor disposition to join the Vigilance Committee.  And while I was earnestly in support of Law and Order, I did not feel that I could better subserve that cause by joining the organization formed at that time, for the avowed purpose of maintaining the one and enforcing the other.  I had many friends on each side, and I also knew many in each organization who were unworthy of fellowship in any good or honorable cause or association; and some of these bore prominent rank in each organization.  As was said of the Regulators of Texas, who directed their energies chiefly against horse thieves and robbers, that some of the worst and most guilty of them hastened to join the band, in order to save themselves from arrest and the rope or bullet, likewise were there some prominent in the Vigilance Committee of 1856, who undoubtedly joined it for similar reasons — to escape the terrors of the organization; and the Executive Committee was not exempt from these infamous characters.

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The Vigilance Committee of 1856 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.