Camp Point founders committed to a free nation

Camp Point's founding and expansion was not the only mission for early settlers Peter Garrett and Thomas Bailey. The passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 and subsequent threat of U.S. territories becoming slave states mobilized their free-state efforts. They organized public meetings with well-known speakers to spread the word in West-Central Illinois about events over 200 miles west on the Kansas/Missouri border.
On June 7, 1856, the largest political meeting ever organized in the village of Camp Point, Ill., focused on free territory, free speech and free men. Garrett was chairman and Bailey was secretary for this public meeting.
According to the June 14, 1856, Quincy Whig, Abraham Jonas of Quincy was the first speaker. A lawyer and a loyal friend of Abraham Lincoln, Jonas had lived in nearby Columbus when he first settled in the region. He had invited Lincoln to Quincy two years earlier in 1854 to speak against the Kansas-Nebraska Act and campaign for Quincyan Archibald Williams for Congress.
The Rev. Charles Lovejoy of Kansas, a cousin of abolitionist leaders Elijah and Owen Lovejoy, followed Jonas. The preacher and his wife, Julia Lovejoy, were sent to Kansas by the New England Emigrant Co., an organized group of anti-slavery supporters who encouraged Kansas settlement to support the Free-State cause. Julia Lovejoy recorded her Kansas experiences, contributing as a rare female journalist while documenting life on the Kansas border in emotional letters sent to such Eastern newspapers as the New York Evening Post and the Independent Democrat in New Hampshire. Vocal female abolitionists were an exception, but Julia forged on, ignoring critics.
Charles Lovejoy described the treatment of Free State men in Kansas, saying that pro-slavery settlers from Missouri and South Carolina traveled to Kansas to intimidate free-thinking men. The same 1856 Quincy Whig article describing the public meeting quoted Lovejoy's remarks, claiming that settlers were "hunted and shot down, their property plundered, their houses burned, and driven from their homes, merely because they dare to say they are free men, and in favor of free institutions -- these outrages and barbarities receiving the favor and sanction of Frank Pierce," the latter a rather disrespectful reference to President Franklin Pierce.
The Camp Point committee then drafted a series of resolutions giving a written copy to The Quincy Whig to publish in its June 14 issue along with other information about the meeting. These 1856 resolutions accused the government of subverting American principles of liberty, allowing armed posses from other states to "desecrate and trample underfoot the ballot-box, driving judges of elections from their duties thereby depriving free men the rights of suffrage." They also protested President Pierce's dismissal of territorial Gov. Andrew Reeder, who tried to protect citizen rights. Pierce, who signed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, fired Reeder for not using his influence to secure Kansas as a slave state. The United States government was supposed to be protecting its citizens' freedom but was sabotaging it instead.
The resolutions went on to say that the meeting participants viewed the repeal of the Missouri Compromise as the "first open and aggravated violation of plighted faith among the States, and the consequent extension of slavery into Kansas, against the wishes of the legal voters therein, as the primary cause of all the existing difficulties." They considered the slavery question the only issue before the American people, and pledged to only vote for candidates who were fully committed against the extension of slavery.
The June 4, 1856, The Quincy Daily Whig reported that the upcoming meeting said it was to be held "to take into consideration the alarming condition of Kansas, but more particularly the recent outrage committed on their friend and late neighbor, Elder Pardee Butler." Butler's crusade and subsequent treatment was emphasized because he was a good friend of Peter Garrett, had borrowed a wagon from him for his journey to Kansas, and was well-known in the Camp Point community. His only crime in Kansas was exercising the right of free speech.
In his autobiography, Butler praised Garrett for giving so much of his time, money, trouble, and "anxious watching" to the church, and giving his less fortunate neighbors necessary provisions. Garrett's brother-in-law, Dr. Moore, complained that he was spoiling the church by taking such constant care of it.
"Oh well," he said one day, "every church has to have a wheel-horse, (the horse on the team doing the most work) and I might as well be the wheel-horse as anybody." Garrett did not consider his labor a burden and gladly took more responsibility.
After their Western Illinois trip, Charles and Julia Lovejoy went back to their home in Lawrence, Kan., and later that summer on Aug. 25, 1856, Julia wrote to the Independent Democrat in New Hampshire: "We are in the midst of war -- war of the most bloody kind -- a war of extermination. Freedom and slavery are interlocked in a deadly embrace, and death is certain for one or the other party. ... A crisis is just before us, and only God knoweth where it will end."
Her statements would come to full fruition for the entire nation a few years later.
Over the years before the Civil War, Quincy and Adams County hosted many nationally known free-state speakers. Because news traveled slowly from Eastern states to the newly settled Western territory, speakers were invited who were witnesses of these American political conflicts. Adams County citizens were eager to be educated on the issues of the day and held passionate opinions, whether they were abolitionists or Southern sympathizers.
Heather Bangert is involved with several local history projects. She is a member of Friends of the Log Cabins, has given tours at Woodland Cemetery and John Wood Mansion, and is an archaeological field/lab technician.
Sources:
Ankrom, Reg. "The Day Lincoln Came to Quincy." The Herald Whig, March 25, 2015.
Butler, Pardee/Hastings, Rosetta B. "Personal Recollections of Pardee Butler." Standard Publishing Co., 1889.
Cobb, Bradley. "Pardee Butler: The Definitive Collection." Cobb Publishing, Oklahoma, 2014.
Farming Unlimited TV/AG A.M., Julia Louisa Hardy Lovejoy documentary.
Freeman, Joanne B. "The Field of Blood: Violence in Congress and the Road to Civil War." Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 2018.
"Local: Public Meeting." Quincy Daily Whig, June 4, 1856, p. 3.
Mayfield, Linda. "Camp Point -- First a township, then a town." The Herald-Whig, July 6, 2016.
Pierson, Michael D., " ‘A War of Extermination': A Newly Uncovered Letter by Julia Louisa Lovejoy, 1856." Kansas History 16 (Summer 1993): pp. 120-123.
"Public Meeting at Camp Point," Quincy Whig, June 14, 1856, p. 2.





