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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Collection Reference Number | GLC03598 |
From Archive Folder | Documents Relating to 1858 |
Title | Thomas Ewing Jr. to Thomas Ewing, Sr. |
Date | 7 January 1858 |
Author | Ewing, Thomas, Jr. (1827-1896) |
Document Type | Correspondence |
Content Description | Writes to his father that he has been very busy with politics. Gives his eyewitness account of the fraudulent Kansas elections of 4 January 1858. "We have warrants for the arrest of illegal voters & for judges of the Election at Kickapoo & Delaware but only caught two - the others fled ... I was at Kickapoo all day Monday, & saw more than I ever heard before of election frauds. Boys 15 years of age voted, men voted two or three times in an hour, about 50 Missourians voted, in all there were not over 450 votes put in, & yet the judges reported at the close of the polls 905 votes!" Discusses the free states response to the pro-slavery Lecompton Constitution. "If the pro-slavery men have carried the day, & we are admitted under the Lecompton Constitution, I apprehend Civil War. Calhoun is now in danger of death at the hands of the mob... " Part of page four is cross-written. |
Subjects | Politics Forgery and Fraud Election Government and Civics Law Prisoner African American History Abolition State Constitution Civil War Mobs and Riots Rebellion Slavery American Statesmen |
People | Ewing, Thomas, Jr. (1827-1896) Ewing, Thomas (1789-1871) Calhoun, John Caldwell (1833-1859) |
Place written | Leavenworth, Kansas |
Theme | Children & Family |
Sub-collection | The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859 |
Additional Information | Thomas Ewing Jr. was the adoptive step-brother of William T. Sherman. Thomas Ewing Sr. was an Ohio Senator and U. S. Secretary of the Treasury. He raised Sherman as his own son after Sherman's father died in 1829. Ewing Jr. was an ardent anti-slavery man. His observations on the election fraud in Kansas were later instrumental in blocking the admission of Kansas into the Union as a slave state. See his article "The Struggle for Freedom in Kansas," in Cosmopolitan Magazine, May 1894. John Calhoun was the first surveyor-general of Kansas. On Aug. 4, 1854, he was commissioned surveyor-general of the territories of Kansas and Nebraska. Calhoun was pro-slavery and later entered into politics in those territories. He served as president of the Lecompton constitutional convention, and mostly to his efforts, submitted a modified constitution to the people. |
Copyright | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History |
Module | Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859 |