Search articles from thousands of Examiners
Write for us
New York Education and Schools This Day in History Examiner
This Day in History Examiner

On This Day: Lovejoy became a martyr for the abolitionist cause

November 7, 6:58 AMThis Day in History ExaminerPatricia Hysell
3 comments Print Email RSS Subscribe

Subscribe


Get alerts when there is a new article from the This Day in History Examiner. Read Examiner.com's terms of use.
Email Address


  Include other special offers from Examiner.com
Terms of Use

Wood engraving of the pro-slavery mob burning down Winthrop Sargent Gilman's warehouse.
Wood engraving of the pro-slavery mob burning down Winthrop Sargent Gilman's warehouse.
unknown artist

November 7, 1837: Elijah Parish Lovejoy dies at the age of 34 while defending his property. His father was a Congregationalist minister in Maine. Elijah graduated first in his class from Waterville College, now Colby College. After graduation he moved first to Illinois, then looking westward, he went to St. Louis, Missouri in 1827. He became the editor of an anti-Jacksonian newspaper and opened a school. He came under the influence of the Revivalist movement and with a renewed interest in religion, he decided to become a minister. He went to Princeton Theological Seminary and was ordained a Presbyterian preacher. He then returned to St. Louis.

Once again in Missouri, Rev. Lovejoy set up a church and opened a weekly religious newspaper, the St. Louis Observer. He wrote scathing editorials critical of slavery and other churches. He was run out of town in May 1836 after lambasting Judge Luke E. Lawless. The judge had failed to charge a mob who had lynched a free black man. Lovejoy moved across the Mississippi River to Alton, Illinois. He again opened a newspaper, the Alton Observer. He continued to voice strong anti-slavery sentiments.

His printing press was destroyed by pro-slavery mobs – three times. His fourth printing press was housed in Winthrop S. Gilman's brick warehouse. Once again, an angry mob approached. Lovejoy and his supporters waited inside the warehouse and met the pro-slavery mob. Shots were exchanged. Some men brought a ladder to the warehouse wall and tried to climb in order to set the roof on fire. They were blocked so made a second attempt. Lovejoy emerged from the building and was immediately fired upon. He was hit with five shotgun blasts and died on the spot.

Lovejoy is considered a martyr of the abolitionist movement and the first to die for "Freedom of the Press." His alma mater, Colby College, established the Lovejoy Award in 1952. The award was enacted to fulfill three purposes: First, to preserve the memory of Lovejoy who "died bravely rather than forsake his editorial principles." Second, to encourage honest reporting, editing, and interpretive writing with fearlessness and freedom. Lastly, to promote cooperation between journalism and a college dedicated to academic freedom.

+++
"Elijah Parish Lovejoy – 'a Martyr on the Altar of American Liberty' - 1802-1837" – headline from the
Alton Observer

"Inside the warehouse was Elijah Parish Lovejoy, a Presbyterian minister and editor of the
Alton Observer. He and 20 of his supporters were standing guard over a newly arrived printing press from the Ohio Anti-Slavery Society." – from the Alton Observer

"The press Lovejoy died defending was carried to a window and thrown out onto the river bank. It was broken into pieces that were scattered in the Mississippi River." – from the
Alton Observer

"Members of the crowd from the night before, feeling no shame at what they had done, laughed and jeered as the funeral wagon moved slowly down the street toward Lovejoy's home. Lovejoy was buried on November 9, 1837, his 35th birthday." – from the
Alton Observer

More About: people · politics · crime · November

Comments

Name:


Comments:
characters left

NOTE: Do Not Alter These Fields:

Recent Articles

Saturday, November 21, 2009
November 21, 1942: The Alaska Highway's completion is celebrated at Soldier's Summit. On February 6, 1942, the threat of invasion of the US …
Friday, November 20, 2009
November 20, 1992: Part (100 rooms) of Windsor Castle burns. The castle has ≈ 484,000 square feet of floor space. It is the largest inhabited …

Things to see and do

Big Apple Circus
21 Nov 2009 - 12 pm
Lincoln Center – Damrosch Park
More special event »
Night at the Museum
American Museum of Natural History
Walking Tour: Experience Chinatown
Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA)