Slain abolitionist had friends, sympathizers in Quincy

Elijah Lovejoy's Quincy friends and colleagues lobbied for him to begin a newspaper in that city after his third printing press was destroyed in Alton.
The antislavery editor remained in this slave-trading area, and was killed in 1837 while defending his fourth press. A martyr to our First Amendment's freedom of the press, Lovejoy's wide network of support expanded after his death.
Lovejoy's murder did not frighten his family into obscurity, and the crime became a catalyst for a national upswing in the freedom movement. The Lovejoys forged on, communicating with abolitionists in Quincy and across the country.
David Nelson in Quincy was a mentor and inspiration for Elijah's antislavery devotion, and other abolitionists here maintained contact. The antislavery network was becoming more organized, and fugitive slaves were ushered to Canada with more frequency.
Owen and Joseph Lovejoy had been living in Alton with Elijah, assisting him with his antislavery paper, the Alton Observer. After Elijah's death, abolition continued to be their mission.
Lovejoy's mother, Elizabeth, moved to Princeton with her son Owen soon after Elijah's death. Elizabeth helped organize the Princeton Female Anti-Slavery Society in 1838. Their main objective was to make clothes for fugitives fleeing to Canada. She also traveled around the region, and wrote letters to abolitionists across the nation. Elijah's wife, Celia, moved to Quincy for a time and became a member of the Congregational Church. Elizabeth visited her daughter-in-law here in 1839. It is likely she also visited her nephew Jabez Lovejoy, who had moved to Columbus. A letter from Quincy to her other children in Princeton has not survived, but a return letter from Princeton confirms Elizabeth's Quincy visit.
Owen wrote that they "were all surprised, and disappointed, at receiving a letter from you dated at Quincy."
They had been expecting one from farther north, and he wondered why she had taken the Mississippi and not the Illinois River?
Her daughter Sybil added: "You have given us the slip sure enough … we were so disappointed to think you are in the state and we could not see you."
They explained it was impossible for them to visit Quincy, but hoped to see their mother at the Illinois Anti-Slavery Society's Anniversary in a few months.
In 1843, Elizabeth sent a box of clothing and five dollars to Amelia Work in Quincy, to be used for fugitive slaves passing through to Canada. Amelia's husband, Alanson Work, was a mechanic at Quincy's Mission Institute, a school and haven for abolitionists who aligned with its founder, Dr. David Nelson. Alanson Work and two institute students (James Burr and George Thompson) were arrested and imprisoned in 1841 for trying to help some Missouri slaves run away to Canada via Quincy. They were caught by slaveholding farmers on the Missouri side of the Mississippi River, and spent several years in a state prison.
Galesburg abolitionist R.S. Bergen sent Owen Lovejoy a letter in November 1843 explaining that new Illinois routes would be needed soon (for the Underground Railroad). He wrote: "The route from Quincy now has become so public that there are many watching it, and some change must take place. I expect to go on the route from Rochester (in Sangamon County) to Quincy soon, and distribute clothing and trade."
Former Quincyan Asa Turner wrote to John Lovejoy in 1845 from Denmark, Iowa. The founder of Quincy's First Congregational Church moved to Iowa seven years earlier and continued fighting slavery there. He wrote that he wanted to start a family newspaper that was "orthodox on the subject of slavery, but not make anti-slavery the prominent object." He and other abolitionists thought that approach would increase their subscriptions and reach a wider audience.
In 1846, Fidelia Coburn sent Elizabeth Lovejoy a letter from a Canada settlement for fugitive slaves, the "Queen's Bush" in Ontario. Maine native Coburn opened a school for fugitive slaves there with former Mission Institute students Elias and Elizabeth Kirkland, who were married in Quincy before moving to Canada as missionaries.
In the letter, Coburn thanked Lovejoy for boxes of clothing sent from Illinois and updated her on their progress. There were about 500 families of former slaves trying to lay a foundation for future homes. "Yes, they hope before long to be free-holders; God grant they may," Coburn wrote. The Maine natives maintained correspondence from Canada to Illinois for years.
The 1850' brought more frustration to the U.S. abolition movement. Antislavery President Zachary Taylor lived for only six months into his term, and some abolitionists, including Frederick Douglass, believed he was assassinated by poisoning. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 also was passed as part of the Compromise of 1850, which required all citizens to help Southern slaveholders recapture their human property. In 1854 the Kansas-Nebraska Act passed Congress, repealing the Missouri Compromise and opening millions of acres to possible slavery, but that did not dishearten American abolitionists.
In the summer of 1855, Owen Lovejoy of Princeton, Ohio, Congressman Joshua Giddings, Zebina Eastman of Chicago, and another Midwestern abolitionist, Ichabod Codding, campaigned throughout Illinois, trying to garner support for their cause and lay groundwork for Republican victory in the 1856 election. The men had been called "traitors to their country" and "itinerant spouters of treason" by some Illinois newspapers. In July they spoke at a political meeting in Quincy.
Owen Lovejoy wrote to Abraham Lincoln after the meeting, hoping for support in planning a new Illinois State Anti-Slavery Convention for autumn 1855.
Lincoln wrote back that "not even you are more anxious to prevent the extension of slavery than I," but he was still reluctant to completely abandon the Whig party and risk a new one.
Antislavery sentiment in Illinois and much of the North soon changed the political landscape; however, with Lovejoy elected to Congress in 1856 and fellow Republican Lincoln winning the presidency in 1860. The destruction of slavery and a Civil War changed the United States forever, and the Lovejoy family played important roles in keeping alive the ideals of freedom.
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:
Burlingame, Michael. "Abe Lincoln: A Life," Vol. 1. John Hopkins University Press, 2008.
Deters, Ruth. "The Underground Railroad Ran Through My House!" Eleven Oaks Publishing, 2008.
Giles, Gary, Jerry Moore, Marsha Mullins, Virginia Spurlin, and Ginny Stinson. Lovejoy Letters. (Transcription Project for History 435, Texas Tech University, 1974).
Simon, Paul. "Freedom's Champion: Elijah Lovejoy." Southern Illinois University Press, 1994.





