Border ruffian

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Border ruffians invading Kansas, by F. O. C. Darley.

During the events leading to the American Civil War, border ruffians was the derogatory name for proslavery raiders from the slave state of Missouri, who crossed into Kansas Territory to induce violence that peaked from 1854 to 1858 to force the acceptance of slavery.

Origin[]

Border ruffians going into Kansas
Ferrying Missouri voters to the Kansas shore, by Gilbert Gaul.
Border ruffians marching on Lawrence, Kansas
Two unidentified border ruffians with swords

The 1913 edition of Webster's Dictionary defines a ruffian as a scoundrel, rascal, or unprincipled, deceitful, brutal and unreliable person,[1] reflecting the 19th century understanding of this word.

Among the first to use the term border ruffian in connection with the slavery issue in Kansas was the Herald of Freedom, a newspaper published in Lawrence, Kansas. On October 8, 1857 the paper reported the following,

Gov. Reeder soon after the 30th of March visited Washington, hoping to induce Pres. Pierce to disregard the election. On his way there he stopped at his old home, Easton, Pa., and told the story of Kansas' wrongs, in a speech to his old neighbors. In this he designated the invaders as "Border Ruffians," and said they were led by their chiefs, David R. Atchison and B. F. Stringfellow.[2]

Armed with revolvers and Bowie knives, border ruffians forcefully interfered in the Kansas row over slavery.[3][4] A correspondent for the London Times while visiting Kansas in 1856 reported many occurrences of the so-called bowie-knife voting in Kansas when voters were heckled and harassed by Border Ruffians.[5] In response, the New England Emigrant Aid Company shipped Sharps rifles to the Kansas Territory in crates labeled as bibles and books.[6][7]

At that time, many of the settlers in Kansas opposed slavery. However, slavery advocates were determined to have their way regardless. When elections were held, bands of armed border ruffians seized polling places, prevented Free-State men from voting, and cast votes themselves illegally, since they were Missourians.[8][9]

Border ruffians operated from Missouri. It was said that they voted and shot in Kansas, but slept in Missouri.[10] They not only interfered in territorial elections, but also committed outrages on Free-State settlers and destroyed their property. This violence gave the origin of the phrase "Bleeding Kansas". However, political killings and violence were exercised by both warring sides.[11][12][13]

The federal government did not interfere to stop the violence.[14] Hence, such ignominious episodes as sacking of Lawrence, Kansas, in May 1856 became possible. U.S. Senator David Rice Atchison (D-Missouri) personally incited the assembling mob,

Gentlemen, Officers & Soldiers! This is the most glorious day of my life! This is the day I am a border ruffian! ... Spring like your bloodhounds at home upon that d--d accursed abolition hole; break through every thing that may oppose your never flinching courage! Yess, ruffians, draw your revolvers & bowie knives, & cool them in the heart's blood of all those d--d dogs, that dare defend that d--d breathing hole of hell.[15][16]

Border ruffians contributed to the growing sectional tensions, and helped bring on the American Civil War.[17]

Leaders and followers[]

Border ruffians did not constitute an organized group. They never had meetings, and no one ever directed any message to them as a body.

Border ruffians were driven by the rhetoric of leaders such as David Rice Atchison, Benjamin Franklin Stringfellow, John H. Stringfellow, editor of the proslavery newspaper Squatter Sovereign (Atchison, Kansas) and Speaker of the House in the First Kansas Territorial Legislature, the so-called Bogus Legislature.[18] Rev. Thomas Johnson, a Methodist preacher,[19] Samuel J. Jones, and Daniel Woodson, a proslavery newspaper editor,[20] among others.[21][page needed] In particular, Atchison called Northerners "negro thieves" and "abolitionist tyrants". He encouraged Missourians to defend their institution "with the bayonet and with blood" and, if necessary, "to kill every God-damned abolitionist in the district."[22]

Notably, only a few of the ordinary border ruffians actually owned slaves; most were too poor. What motivated them was hatred of Yankees and abolitionists, and fear of free Blacks living nearby. Kansas slavery was small-scale and operated mainly at the household level.[23] Most of the Kansans, according to historian David M. Potter, were concerned primarily about land titles. He pointed out that, "the great anomaly of 'Bleeding Kansas' is that the slavery issue reached a condition of intolerable tension and violence ... in an area where a majority of the inhabitants apparently did not care very much one way or the other about slavery."[24]

According to Frank W. Blackmar's encyclopedia of Kansan history, the rank-and-file among border ruffians took pride in both how they were called and what they were doing,

While the main objects of the Border Ruffian chiefs were the overthrow and destruction of free-state men and the establishment of slavery in Kansas, the ruffian border bands delighted in raiding towns, ransacking houses, stealing horses, and doing whatever they could that was annoying, exciting and rough. The towns and country along the eastern tier of counties were raided with uncomfortable frequency. Free-state men holding claims were driven from them, elections were molested and crimes of violence committed. When the crash came between north and south many of these men became bushwhackers or guerrillas.[25]

The presence of violent bands of both Kansan and Missourian combatants made it difficult for settlers on the Kansas–Missouri border to remain neutral.[8]

Liberty, the fair maid of Kansas – in the hands of the "border ruffians", c. 1856

History[]

The history of border ruffians is woven into the historical context of Bleeding Kansas, or the border war, a series of violent civil confrontations in Kansas in 1854-1859.[26] Kansas Territory was created by the Kansas–Nebraska Act of 1854. The Act repealed the previous Federal prohibition on slavery in that area. Instead, the locally elected territorial legislature was to decide on the slavery issue.[8]

The first territorial census, taken in January-February of 1855, counted 8601 people; 2905 were deemed eligible to vote; there were 192 enslaved in the Territory.[27][page needed][28]

After the Kansas–Nebraska Act repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and allowed Kansans to vote on slavery, the opponents from both sides of the slavery debate started to recruit settlers to increase support of their causes.

Immigration to Kansas[]

Pro-slavery immigrants, aided by the , and anti-slavery settlers, assisted by the New England Emigrant Aid Company, established their own proslavery (i.e., Atchison, Leavenworth) and Free-State (i.e., Lawrence, Topeka) territorial enclaves.[29][30][31] This circumstance resulted in a deep partisan divide in regard to the slavery question among settlers and their civic and business leaders. Then extremists on both side resorted to arms. On the pro-slavery side violence was committed by the so-called border ruffians and on the free-state side by the so-called jayhawkers.[25][32][33][34]

On November 29, 1854, border ruffians elected a pro-slavery territorial representative to Congress, John W. Whitfield. It was determined after a Congressional investigation that 60% of the votes were illegal.[24]

On March 30, 1855, border ruffians elected a pro-slavery Territorial Legislature, which introduced harsh penalties for speaking against slavery.[35] It was called the Bogus Legislature by Free-Staters due to the fact that border ruffians arrived en masse and there were twice as many votes cast than there were eligible voters in the Territory. Failure to ensure fair elections led to establishment of two territorial governments in Kansas, one pro-slavery and another Free State, each claiming to be the only legitimate government of the entire Territory.[24]

Despite all border ruffians' attempts to push anti-slavery settlers out of the Territory, far more Free-State immigrants moved to Kansas than pro-slavery.[citation needed] In 1857, the pro-slavery faction in Kansas proposed the Lecompton Constitution for the future state of Kansas. It tried to get the Lecompton Constitution adopted with additional fraud and violence, but by then there were too many Free-Staters there and the U.S. Congress refused to confirm it.[9]

Border ruffians also engaged in general violence against Free-State settlements. They burned farms and sometimes murdered Free-State men. Most notoriously, border ruffians twice attacked Lawrence, the Free-State capital of the Kansas Territory. On December 1, 1855, a small army of border ruffians laid siege to Lawrence, but were driven off. This became the nearly bloodless climax to the "Wakarusa War".

On May 21, 1856, an even larger force of border ruffians and pro-slavery Kansans captured Lawrence, which they sacked.[8]

Free-State settlers struck back. Anti-slavery Kansan irregulars, led by Charles R. Jennison, James Montgomery, and James H. Lane, among others, and known as jayhawkers, attacked proslavery settlers and suspected border ruffian sympathizers.[36] Most notoriously, abolitionist John Brown killed five proslavery men at Pottawatomie.[8][37] In revenge, a band of border ruffians, led by John W. Reid, sacked the village of Osawatomie, Kansas after the Battle of Osawatomie.[38]

Aid to the Free-State cause[]

T. W. Higginson, a minister, was instrumental in turning the Massachusetts State Kansas Aid Committee, a former subsidiary of the New England Emigrant Aid Company, into a nationally known organization.[39] It worked to recruit abolitionist settlers, raised funds for them to migrate to Kansas, and equipped them with rifles to use against border ruffians.[40] In 1856 it acquired 200 Sharps rifles for $4,947.88 that were shipped to Kansas via Iowa and ended in John Brown's hands.[41] In September 1858, it invested $3,800 in 190 Sharps rifles for Kansas.[42] Abolitionist Henry W. Beecher pronounced that,

Sharps rifle was a truly moral agency, and that there was more moral power in one of those instruments, so far as the slaveholders of Kansas were concerned, than in a hundred Bibles. You might just as well ... read the Bible to Buffaloes as those fellows who follow Atchison and Stringfellow; but they have a supreme respect for the logic that is embodied in Sharps rifles.[41]

It was documented that in 1855-1856 various aid organizations from free states spent at least $43,074.26 on rifles, muskets, revolvers, and ammunition, including one cannon, destined for Kansas.[41]

On 9 July 1856, the and the New England Emigrant Aid Company initiated the establishment of the headquartered in Chicago. Thaddeus Hyatt, head of the national committee, began collecting money, arms, provisions, clothing, and agricultural supplies to aid the Free-State cause in Kansas. The goal was to transport five thousand settlers to Kansas Territory giving them a year's worth of supplies.[43]

A distribution depot was set up at Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, where immigrants were furnished not only with horses and wagons and other supplies, but also with arms; they were organized into companies and drilled. The National Kansas Committee spent in 1856-1857 around $100,000 on Free State cause.[41][44]

Outcomes[]

On August 2, 1858 the pro-slavery Lecompton Constitution of 1857 was rejected at the polls, signifying the defeat of border ruffians' cause.[45] On January 29, 1861, President James Buchanan signed the bill that approved the Wyandotte Constitution and Kansas came to the Union as a Free State.[46]

During the Civil War[]

During the American Civil War, the violence on the Kansas-Missouri border not only continued, but escalated tremendously. Many of the former border ruffians became pro-Confederate guerrillas, or bushwhackers. They operated in western Missouri, sometimes raiding into Kansas, and Union forces campaigned to suppress them. Farms on the Missouri-Kansas state line were looted and burned. Suspected guerrillas were killed; in retaliation, bushwhackers murdered Union sympathizers and suspected informers. Confederate guerrilla leaders, such as "Bloody Bill" Anderson, or William Quantrill, were feared in Kansas during the war.[47]

Many of the Union troops fighting bushwackers were former jayhawkers who held deep grudges against border ruffians. Charles R. Jennison recruited the 7th Kansas Cavalry Regiment, which became known as the Jennison's Jayhawkers. In the fall and winter of 1861 and 1862, Jennison's Jayhawkers became infamous for looting and destroying the property of Missourians.[48]

Some of the jayhawkers joined a paramilitary group called the Red Legs. Wearing red gaiters and numbered around 100, Red Legs served as scouts during the punitive expedition of the Union troops in Missouri. Jayhawkers and Red Legs pillaged and burned multiple towns in 1861-1863 in Missouri.[49][50] The destruction of Osceola is depicted in the movie The Outlaw Josey Wales.[51]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Wiktionary: Ruffian
  2. ^ Kansas Bogus Legislature: Benjamin F. Stringfellow
  3. ^ Jason Phillips. Bowie Knives, Concealed Rifles, and Caning Charles Sumner: As the Civil War loomed, weapons — like the recently invented bowie knife and rifles that were shipped to Kansas hidden in crates labeled as bibles — became complex political symbols
  4. ^ Cecil-Fronsman, Bill. 'Death to All Yankees and Traitors in Kansas': The Squatter Sovereign and the Defense of Slavery in Kansas, Kansas History 16 (Spring 1993): 22-33.
  5. ^ Phillips, Jason. Looming Civil War: How Nineteenth-Century Americans Imagined the Future. New York: Oxford University Press, 2018, p. 29
  6. ^ Sharps Carbine, National Museum of American History
  7. ^ Jeremy Prichard. New England Emigrant Aid Company, Civil War on the Western Border: The Missouri-Kansas Conflict, 1855-1865
  8. ^ a b c d e Newlon, Jack, Rob Spooner, and Alicia Spooner. Bleeding Kansas: Mid 1850s – Precursor to the Civil War, in U-S-History.com. Online Highways, 2021
  9. ^ a b "Bleeding Kansas". Fort Scott National Historic Site. paragraph 1. Archived from the original on June 21, 2008. Retrieved November 19, 2007.
  10. ^ Harvey R. Hougen. The Marais des Cygnes Massacre and the Execution of William Griffith, Kansas History Vol. 8, No. 2, Summer 1985, p. 76.
  11. ^ Documented political killings in Bleeding Kansas, Kansas Historical Society
  12. ^ Watts, Dale. How Bloody was Bleeding Kansas? Political Killings in Kansas Territory, 1854-1861, Kansas History, Vol. 18, Summer 1995, pp. 116-129
  13. ^ Welch, G. Murlin. Border Warfare in Southeastern Kansas, 1856-1859. Pleasanton, Kans.: Linn County Publishers, 1977.
  14. ^ Ewy, Marvin. The United States Army in the Kansas Border Troubles, 1855-1856, Kansas Historical Quarterly, Vol. 32, Winter 1966, pp. 385-400.
  15. ^ Territorial Kansas Online - Transcripts, Kansas State Historical Society
  16. ^ Copy of David R. Atchison speech to proslavery forces, Kansas State Historical Society
  17. ^ Monaghan, Jay. Civil War on the Western Border. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1955.
  18. ^ Kansas Bogus Legislature: J. H. Stringfellow, Speaker of the House
  19. ^ Pious Preacher or Radical Hypocrite? The Reverend Thomas Johnson, The New Santa Fe Trailer
  20. ^ Matthew E. Stanley. Woodson, Daniel. Civil War on the Western Border: The Missouri-Kansas Conflict, 1855-1865
  21. ^ Etcheson, Nicole. Bleeding Kansas: Contested Liberty in the Civil War Era. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2004.
  22. ^ "Copy of David R. Atchison speech to proslavery forces - Kansas Memory". www.kansasmemory.org.
  23. ^ Cory, Charles Easterbrook. Slavery in Kansas, Kansas Historical Collection 7 (1901-1902): 229-242.
  24. ^ a b c "Bleeding Kansas", The E Pluribus Unum Project: America in the 1770s, 1850s, and 1920s, Assumption University
  25. ^ a b Kansas: A cyclopedia of state history, embracing events, institutions, industries, counties, cities, towns, prominent persons, etc. ... / with a supplementary volume devoted to selected personal history and reminiscence. Chicago: Standard Pub. Co., 1912.
  26. ^ Goodrich, Thomas. War to the Knife: Bleeding Kansas, 1854-1861. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books, 1998.
  27. ^ Cutler, William G. History of the State of Kansas: Containing a Full Account of Its Growth from an Uninhabited Territory to a Wealthy and Important State; of Its Early Settlements ; Its Rapid Increase in Population; and the Marvelous Development of Its Great Natural Resources. Chicago: A. T. Andreas, 1883.
  28. ^ Kansapedia: Kansas Territory, Kansas Historical Society
  29. ^ Kansas Matters - Appeal to the South, De Bow's Review, Vol 20, Issue 5, May 1, 1856, pp. 635-639.
  30. ^ Barry, Louise. The Emigrant Aid Company Parties of 1854 and The Emigrant Aid Company Parties of 1855, Kansas Historical Quarterly 12 (1943): pp. 115-155, pp. 227-268.
  31. ^ Carruth, William H. New England in Kansas, New England Magazine, Vol. 16, March 1897, pp. 3-21.
  32. ^ Border Ruffians, U.S. History Online Textbook
  33. ^ Phillips, Christopher. ‘The Crime against Missouri’: Slavery, Kansas, and the Cant of Southernness in the Border West, Civil War History, Vol. 48, March 2002, pp. 60-81
  34. ^ Godsey, Flora Rosenquist. The Early Settlement and Raid on the `Upper Neosho', Kansas Historical Collection, 1923-1925, Vol. 16, 1925, pp. 451-463.
  35. ^ "Bogus Legislature". Kansapedia. Kansas Historical Society. 2013 [2011].
  36. ^ Neely, Jeremy. The Border Between Them: Violence and Reconciliation on the Kansas-Missouri Line. Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 2007.
  37. ^ Oates, Stephen B. To Purge This Land With Blood: A Biography of John Brown. New York: Harper and Row, 1970.
  38. ^ Rein, Christopher.Battle of Osawatomie, Civil War on the Western Border: The Missouri-Kansas Conflict, 1854-1865.
  39. ^ Emigrant Aid Organizations: Massachusetts State Kansas Committee, Territorial Kansas
  40. ^ Poole, W. Scott (2005). "Higginson, Thomas Wentworth". In Finkleman, Paul (ed.). Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619–1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass. Oxford. ISBN 978-0195167771.
  41. ^ a b c d W. H. Isely. The Sharps Rifle Episode in Kansas History, The American Historical Review, Vol. 12, No. 3 (Apr., 1907), pp. 546-566.
  42. ^ Massachusetts State Kansas Aid Committee Report, September 1858, West Virginia Archives and History
  43. ^ National Kansas Relief Committee, minutes, Kansas Historical Society
  44. ^ Hinton, Richard Josiah. John Brown And His Men: With Some Account of the Roads They Traveled to Reach Harper's Ferry. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1894, p. 122.
  45. ^ Rawley, James A. Race and Politics: "Bleeding Kansas" and the Coming of the Civil War. Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1969.
  46. ^ O’Bryan, Tony. "Wyandotte Constitution," Civil War on the Western Border: The Missouri-Kansas Conflict, 1854-1865.
  47. ^ Bleeding Kansas & the Missouri Border War
  48. ^ O’Bryan, Tony. "Jayhawkers," Civil War on the Western Border: The Missouri-Kansas Conflict, 1854-1865
  49. ^ O'Bryan, Tony. "Red Legs," Civil War on the Western Border, The Missouri-Kansas Conflict, 1854-1865
  50. ^ Cheatham, Gary L. 'Desperate Characters': The Development and Impact of the Confederate Guerrilla Conflict in Kansas, Kansas History 14 (Autumn 1991): 144-161. Archived
  51. ^ Gilmore, Donald L. The Kansas “Red Legs” as Missouri's Dark Underbelly

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