User:Deisenbe/sandbox/Lane Debates

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Lane Debates on Slavery
DateFebruary 1834
Duration18 evenings
VenueLane Theological Seminary
LocationWalnut Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio
Coordinates39°7′48.62″N 84°29′17.84″W / 39.1301722°N 84.4882889°W / 39.1301722; -84.4882889
TypeDebate
ThemeAbolitionism (immediately freeing all slaves) vs. colonization (gradually sending free blacks to Africa)
CauseThe 1830s rejection of colonization
Organised byTheodore Weld

The Lane Debates on Slavery were held over 18 evenings in February of 1834, at the Lane Theological Seminary, in Cincinnati, Ohio. The announced topics were:

These "debates" — they have also been described[who?] as a revival show — are the beginning of abolitionism (immediatism) as a significant political movement in the United States. For the first time it got national publicity, and was presented as the answer to the increaingly obvious shortcomings of the colonization program. The "debates" were full of first-person accounts of the horrors of slavery, and the argument that God wants us to stop sinning this way, immediately. John Rankin attended the debates,[5] as did Harriett Beecher [Stowe],[6]: 171  daughter of Lane's president, Lyman Beecher, and future spouse of Lane professor Calvin Stowe. Rankin and Harriet Beecher knew each other personally; they may have met at these debates.

The outcome was the complete victory of abolitionism over colonization among those in attendence. Turning an incident into an affair, the trustees barred further discussion of abolition, which led to a mass walkout by the students. These Lane Rebels, as they were later called, enrolled in the new Oberlin Collegiate Institute, turning it into an anti-slavery center.

The debates and the students' walkout were well publicized, and influenced the nation's thinking about slavery, creating support for abolition.[6]: 170 

Background[edit]

The abolition–colonization controversy[edit]

An inquiry into the character and tendency of the American colonization, and American anti-slavery societies https://archive.org/details/inquiryintocha00jayw/page/n6/mode/2up review https://www.newspapers.com/image/34584378/?terms=William%2Bjay "What to do with the Negro population has almost always been a question before the American people."[7]

Part of "the negro problem", as it was seen in the antebellum United States, was the question of what to do with former slaves that had become free. Since the eighteenth century Quakers and others had preached the sinfulness of slave ownership, and the number of freedmen and freed women was rising and showed every sign that it would continue to grow. The freed slaves married and had children, so the number of free people of color (Blacks born free) was rising even faster. Some owners freed their slaves in their wills. Philanthropic societies and individuals raised or donated funds to purchase slaves' freedom; freedmen sometimes were able to purchase the freedom of family members, and James Bradley (former slave) is an example of an enslaved man who was able to purchase his own body (his freedom). In some Northern cities there were more than a handful of escaped slaves. In Boston, the most anti-slavery major city in the country, there were over a thousand.

The status of these free blacks, in both the South and the North, was anything but comfortable. They were not citizens and in most states could not vote. They had no access to the courts or protection by the police. In no state could their children attend the public schools, even though they paid taxes to support the schools. The were subject to discriminatory treatment in everyday life that makes the Jim Crow period look good.

The original "remedy" for this problem was to help them go "back to Africa". The British had been doing this, in Sierra Leone, moving there former American slaves that had gained their freedom by escaping to British lines during the American Revolution, and who found Nova Scotia, where the British took many of them, too cold. (See Black Nova Scotians.) The British also took to Sierra Leone slaves captured from slaving ships, being smuggled illegally across the Atlantic to North America. A well-to-do African-American shipowner, Paul Cuffe, had transported some former slaves to Sierra Leone.

However, Sierra Leone, economically, was in no position to welcome former slaves from the United States.[8]: 467  The American Colonization Society was formed to help found a new, American colony of freed blacks. Although there was some talk of locating it in the American territories of the midwest — a sort of reservation for Blacks[8]: 466  — the decision was made to follow the English example and start an African colony. The closest available land was what became the Republic of Maryland and later Liberia.

The rejection of colonization[edit]

The colonization project got off to a good start, with various governmental and private donations and the participation of distinguished individuals: U.S. Presidents Jefferson, Monroe, and Madison; Senator Henry Clay, who presided over its first meeting; as well as most of the future white abolitionists. The problem had been solved, and in an honorable way. The former slaves would fare better in Africa, among other blacks.

This happy situation quickly started to unravel. First of all, thr disease rates were ghastly, the highest since accurate record-keeping began. Over 50% of the colonists died of malaria and other diseases.

Particularly telling to Gerrit Smith, the abolitionist philanthropist, was that the American Colonization allowed the sale of alcohol (and other nasties, like chewing tobacco) in the colonies which became Liberia. He comments on it in the Society's African Repository magazine. Smith was for temperance, which was the only respectable position. That blacks in Africa were allowed to import liquor from the United States (which they in turn sold to the natives, along with "military stores"[9]) revealed the venality of the white members of the American Colonization Society: its goal was to get rid of the blacks, and they sure didn't want them up north.

Weld organizes "debates"[edit]

When Weld arrived at Lane in 1833, he found "not a single immediate abolitionist".[10]: 77 

Weld read William Garrison's new abolitionist newspaper The Liberator, begun in 1831, and his Thoughts on African Colonization, which appeared in 1832. These had a great influence at the other Ohio College, Western Reserve College, leading to Beriah Green's four published sermons,[11] and his relocation under pressure to Gale's school, the Oneida Institute, far more sympathetic than Lane to abolitionism. What Garrison desired, and he convinced Green, was "immediatism": immediate, complete, and uncompensated freeing of all slaves.

Over a period of several months Weld convinced nearly all of the students individually of the superiority of the abolitionist view.[10]: 77–78 

The idea of spreading abolitionism by holding public "debates" on it was "suggested and promoted by Arthur Tappan, who was the most generous benefactor of the seminary".[12]

Lesick Lane Rebels 77 says it was Weld's idea.

"Weld had no intention of holding a debate on the pros and cons of antislavery."[10]: 77  "There was little opposition, little conflict, and consequently little debate."[13]: 41 n. 39  In his correspondence Weld informs friends that he is trying to get the anti-slavery (immediatist) argument and evidence out to as many people as possible. Nevertheless, what was announced was debates, on two points.

Beecher was a colonizationist,[14]Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). Professor Stowe spoke at a Colonization Society meeting on June 9, 1834.[15] According to H. B. Stanton, "a flourishing Colonization Society has existed among us almost from the foundation of the institution";[2]: 3  however, it only appears in the American Colonization Society's journal, the African Repository and Colonial Journal, in 1834. There were similar groups at Western Reserve and other colleges.

Of the gross inconsistency, (not to

use a harsher term,) of Colonizationists on this subject, the proceedings of a Colonization meeting in Cincinnati, Octo- ber 31st, 1834, afford a striking example. On motion of the Rev. Dr. Beecher, the following Resolution was unani- mously adopted: " Resolved, that the establishment of co- lonies in Africa, by the selection of colored persons who are moral, industrious, and temperate, is eminently cal- culated of itself to advance the cause of civilization and religion among the benighted native population of that continent ; as well as to afford facilities to the various Missionary Societies for the prosecution of their pious designs."

https://archive.org/details/inquiryintocha00jayw/page/68/mode/2up/search/Cincinnati

The debates[edit]

Notable people present[edit]

"The President, and the members of the faculty, with one exception [Bates], were present during parts of the discussion."[2]: 3 

The stated topics of the debates[edit]

The two specific questions addressed were:

  • "Ought the people of the slaveholding states abolish slavery immediately?", and
  • "Are the doctrines, tendencies, and measures of the American Colonization Society, and the influence of its principal supporters, such as render it worthy of the patronage of the Christian public?"[4][3]

Each question was debated for two and a half hours a night for nine nights.

The debates were not transcribed, and there was no attempt afterwards, as there would be later with Pennsylvania Hall, to collect the texts which were written out — not all were — and make a booklet of them. However, there are excerpts in newspapers and books.

Participants[edit]

According to Stanton, "eleven of our number were born and brought up in slave States, seven of whom were sons of slaveholders [Allan, Thome], and one of them was himself a slaveholder, till recently [Birney? Thompson?]; one of us [Bradley] had been a slave, and had bought his freedom, "with a great sum," which his own hands had earned; ten others had lived more or less in slave States, besides several who had travelled in the midst of slavery [Weld], making inquiries and searching after truth." One (Cox?) was an agent of the Colonization Society, though the debates ended without anyone talking in defense of colonization and against abolition. The group claimed they had full knowledge of the colonization project from "all the numbers of the [American Colonization Society's publication] African Repository, from its commencement, nearly all the Annual Reports of the Colonization Society, and the prominent documents of the Anti-Slavery Society.... Our kind friends in the city, furnished us with Colonization pamphlets in profusion. Dr. Shane, a young gentleman of Cincinnati, who had been out to Liberia, with a load of emigrants, as an agent of the Colonization Society, furnished us with a long statement concerning the colony."[2]: 3  (On Shane's reports on Liberia, see [2] and [3].)

  • 1 was an agent [2]: 3  Cox said he was agent, was he there?

The first 9 evenings[edit]

The first 9 of the 18 evenings were devoted to the first topic, whether slavery should be ended in the United States immediately.[2]: 4 

  • According to Stanton's report, "The first speaker occupied nearly two evenings, in preseenting facts concerning slavery and immediate emancipation, gathered from various authentic documents."[2]: 3  According to Lawrence Lesick, this was William T. Allan, "heir to a slave inheritance", who spoke for "nearly three nights".[10]: 80 

Facts communicated by Mr. Augustus Wattles, of Lane Seminary, to the Editor of the Western Recorder

The debate was opened by Mr. , of Alabama. He commenced by asking this question — " What is slavery ?" "Before we con prescribe a remedy," said he "we must understand the disease. We must know what we are attempting to cure, before we give the medicine." I was rejoiced to hear such a beginning from the son of a slave-holder; for I had longed to learn the true condition of the slave. And I had no doubt but that the feeling of the abolitionists on the subject of slavery, "was the poetry of philanthropy,"* [footnote: *Rev. Dr. Hawks.] and that "nine-tenths of the horrors of slavery were imaginary."† [footnote: †Hon. T. Freylinghuysen, at the New-York Colonization meeting.]

Mr. ——— proceeded to give us facts illustrating slavery, and its effects on the social and political relations; facts illustrating the kind disposition of the slaves, and their gratitude for favors. He ridiculed the idea of its being dangerous to emancipate them immediately; then referred us to facts in point, and closed by giving no his heartyassent to the doctrines of immediate emancipation, as defined by the Emancipator, viz:

"By immediate emancipation we do not mean that the slaves shall be turned loose upon the nation, to roam as vagabonds or aliens; nor, that they shall be instantly invested with all political rights and privileges; but we mean, that instead of being under the unlimited control of a few irresponsible masters, tney shall really receive the protection of law: that the power which is now vested in every slave-holder to rob them of their just dues, to drive them into the fields like beasts, to lacerate their bodies, to sell the husband from the wile, the wife from the husband, and children from their parents, shall instantly cease: that the slaves shall be employed as free laborers, fairly compensated, and protected in their earnings: that they shall be placed under a benevolent and disinterested supervision, which shall secure to them the right to obtain secular and religious knowledge, to worship God according to the dictates of their consciences, to accumulate wealth, and to seek an intellectual and moral elevation."

When speaking of the cruelties practised upon the slave, he said—

{quote

— "At our house it is so common to hear their screams from u neighbouring plantation, that we thsk nothing of it. The overseer of this plantation told me one day, he laid a young woman over a log, and beat her so severely that she was soon after delivered of a dead child. A bricklayer, a neighbor of ours, owned a very smart young negro man, who ran away, but was caught. When his master got him home, he stripped him naked, tied him up by his hands, in plain sight ami hearing of the academy and the public green, so high that his feet could not touch the ground; then tied them together, and put a long board hot wren his legs, to keep him steady. After preparing him in this way, he took a paddle, bored it full of holes, and commenced beating him with it. He continued it leisurely all day. At night his flesh was literally pounded to a jelly. It was two weeks before he was able to walk. No one took any notice of it: no one thought any wrong was done." on this paragraph also anti-slavery record https://archive.org/details/antislaveryreco03socigoog/page/n36/mode/2up/search/Lane

He stated many more facts of a similar kind. It will be recollected that he was attempting to give a fair expos[é] of slavery. And (said he) lest any one should think that in general the slaves are well treated, and these are the exceptiona, let me be distinctly understood :— Cruelty is the rule, and kindness the exception." This was assented to, and corroborated by all from the slave-holding states.[19]}}


  • "Conclusions and inferences were then drawn from these facts, and arguments founded upon them favourable to immediate abolition, during the two next evenings."[2]: 3 
  • "Nearly four of the remaining five evenings were devoted to the recital of facts, in regard to slavery, slaves, and slaveholders, gathered, not from written documents, but from careful personal observation and experience. Nearly half of the seventeen speakers, on the evenings last alluded to, were the sons of slaveholders; one had been a slaveholder himself; one had till recently been a slave; and the residue were residents of, or had recently travelled or lived in[,] slave States."[2]: 3 

James Bradley[edit]

    • Although not planned as such, the centerpiece of the debates, according to those who attended, were the two hours of James Bradley. He was a former slave who had managed to save enough to purchase his freedom. Anxious for education, the first educational institution he came to after crossing into the free state of Ohio was the Lane Seminary. Although in his own words he was "so ignorant, that I suppose it will take me two years to get up with the lowest class in the institution", he was treated well by the students. "In all respects I am treated just as kindly, and as much like a brother by the students, as if my skins was white, and my education as good as their own. Thanks to the Lord, prejudice against color does not exist in Lane Seminary."[20]

James Bradley, the emancipated slave above alluded to, addressed us nearly two hours; and I wish his speech could have been heard by every opponent of immediate emancipation — to wit: first, that "it would be unsafe to the community"; second, that "the condition of the emancipated negroes would be worse than it now is — that they are incompetent to provide for themselves — that they would become paupers and vagrants, and would rather steal than work for wages." This shrewd and intelligent black cut up these white objections by the roots, and withered and scorched them under the sun of sarcastic argumentation for nearly an hour, to which the assembly responded in repeated and spontaneeus roars of laughter, which were heartily joined in by both Colonizalionists and Abolitionists. Do not understand me as saying, that his speech was devoid of argument. No. It contained sound logic, enforced by apt illustrations. I wish the slanderers of negro intellect could have witnessed this unpremeditated effort.... He is now a beloved and respected member of this institution.

Now, Mr. Editor, can slaves take care of themselves if emancipated? I answer the question in the language employed by brother Bradley on the above occasion. "They have to lake care of, and support themselves now, and their master, and his family into the bargain; and this being so, it would be strange if they cculd not provide for themselves, when disencumbered from this load." He said the great desire of the slaves was — "liberty and education." And shall this heaven-born desire be trampled in the dust by a free and Christian nation?[2]: 4 [21]

Thompson[edit]

    • "Mr. Henry P. Thompson, a native and still a resident of Nicholasville, Kentucky, made the following statement at a public meeting in Lane Seminary, Ohio, in 1833 [1834]. He was at that time a slaveholder."

      Cruelties, said he, are so common, I hardly know what to relate. But one fact occurs to me just at this time, that happened in the village where I live. The circumstances are these. A colored man, a slave, ran away. As he was crossing Kentucky river, a white man, who suspected him, attempted to stop him. The negro resisted.The white man procured help, and finally succeeded in securing him. He then wreaked his vengeance on him for resisting — flogging him till he was not able to walk. They then put him on a horse, and came on with him ten miles to Nicholasville. When they entered the village, it was noticed that he sat upon his horse like a drunken man. It was a very hot day; and whilst they were taking some refreshment, the negro sat down upon the ground, under the shade. When they ordered him to go, he made several efforts before he could get up; and when he attempted to mount the horse, his strength was entirely insufficient. One of the men struck him, and with an oath ordered him to get on the horse without any more fuss. The negro staggered back a few steps, fell down, and died. I do not know that any notice was ever taken of it.[22]: 87 

    • "Rev. Coleman S. Hodges, a resident of western Virginia, gave the following testimony at the same meeting":

      I have frequently seen the mistress of a family in Virginia, with whom I was well acquainted, beat the woman who performed the kitchen work, with a stick two feet and a half long, and nearly as thick as my wrist ; striking her over the head, and across the small of the back, as she was bent over at her work, with as much spite as you would a snake, and for what I should consider no offence at all. There lived in this same family a young man, a slave, who was in the habit of running away. He returned one time after a week’s absence. The master took him into the barn, stripped him entirely naked, tied him up by his hands so high that he could not reach the floor, tied his feet together, and put a small rail between his legs, so that he could not avoid the blows, and commenced whipping him. He told me that he gave him five hundred lashes. At any rate, he was covered with wounds from head to foot. Not a place as big as my hand but what was cut. Such things as these are perfectly common all over Virginia ; at least so far as I am acquainted. Generally, planters avoid punishing their slaves before strangers.[22]: 87–88 

    • "Mr. Calvin H. Tate, of Missouri, whose father and brother were slaveholders, related the following at the same meeting. The plantation on which it occurred, was in the immediate neighborhood of his father's."

      A young woman, who was generally very badly treated, after receiving a more severe whipping than usual, ran away. In a few days she came back, and was sent into the field to work. At this time the garment next her skin was stiff like a scab, from the running of the sores made by the whipping. Towards night, she told her m master that she was sick, and wished to go to the house. She went, and as soon as she reached it, laid down on the floor exhausted. The mistress asked her what the matter was? She made no reply. She asked again; but received no answer. "I'll see," said she, "if I can't make you speak." So taking the tongs, she heated them red hot, and put them upon the bottoms of her feet ; then upon her legs and body; and, finally, in a rage, took hold of her throat. This had the desired effect. The poor girl faintly whispered, "Oh, misse, don't — I am most gone", and expired.[22]: 88 

  • "From their testimony, the following facts and premises were established, to wit":

    That slaves long for freedom; that it is a subject of very frequent conversation among them; that they know their masters have no right to hold them in slavery; that they keenly feel the wrong, the insult and the degradation which are heaped upon them by the whites; they feel interest comparatively in their master's affairs, because they know he is their opressor; they are indolent, because they can earn is their own; they pretend to be more ignorant and stupid than they really are, so as to avoid responsibility, and to shun the lash for any real or alleged disobedience to orders....[2]: 3–4 

Arguments addressing the first question in favor of the immediate abolition of slavery included:

  • Slaves long for freedom.
  • When inspired with a promise of freedom, slaves will toil with incredible alacrity and faithfulness.
  • No matter how kind their master is, slaves are dissatisfied and would rather be his hired servants than his slaves.
  • Blacks are abundantly able to take care of and provide for themselves.
  • Blacks would be kind and docile if immediately emancipated.


  • "At the close of the ninth evening, the vote was taken on the first question, when every individual voted in the affirmative except four or five, who excused themselves from voting at all, on the ground that they had not made up their opinion. Every friend of the cause rendered a hearty tribute of thanksgiving to God, for the glorious issue [result of the discussion]."[2]: 4 

The second 9 evenings[edit]

In response to the second question, Reverend Dr. Samuel H. Cox, who had served as an agent for the Colonization Society, testified that his view of the Society's plan changed when he realized that no blacks, despite the claims of those who ventured to speak for them, would ever consent to be removed from their native country and transplanted to a foreign land. He reasoned, therefore, that the plan could only be enacted by a "national society of kidnappers."[23]

At the end of the debate, many of the participants concluded not only that slavery was a sin, but also that the policy of the American Colonization Society to send blacks to Africa was wrong. As a result, these students formed an antislavery society and began organizing activities and outreach work among the black population of Cincinnati. They intended to attain the emancipation of blacks, not by rebellion or force, but by "approaching the minds of slave holders with the truth, in the spirit of the Gospel."[24]

Formation of an anti-slavery society at Lane[edit]

After the debate, an anti-slavery society was set up at Lane. "William T. Allan, of Alabama, President; Marius R. Robinson," of Tennessee, Vice President; Andrew Benton, of Missouri, Recording Secretary; James A. Thome, of Kentucky, Treasurer; C. S. Hodges, of Virginia, Auditor. Managers—George Whipple, of New-York; James Bradley, of Guinea; Abner S. Ross, of New-Jersey; James M. Allan, of Alabama; Theodore D. Weld, of New-York; H. Lyman, of Louisiana; H. B. Stanton, of New-York; James Steele, of New-York."[25]

Work among and for the African Americans of Cincinnati[edit]

Contrary to general belief, it was not the debate that provoked a negative reaction. Rather, it was the students' interactions and work for the African Americans of Cincinnati that was found unacceptable.

"In Cinfinnati, four or give flourishing schools have been established by the dtudents of Lane seminary" https://archive.org/details/antislaveryreco03socigoog/page/n42/mode/2up/search/Lane anti-slavery record

see Title: Report on the condition of the people of color in the state of Ohio : from the proceedings of the Ohio Anti-Slavery Convention, held at Putnam, on the 22d, 23d, and 24th of April, 1835.

Author: Augustus Wattles

Publisher: Gale, Sabin Americana

Description:

Based on Joseph Sabin's famed bi https://archive.org/details/ASPC0005079400/page/n19/mode/2up

reached ny post 7/24/34 https://newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-jul-24-1834-1539998/


Theodore Weld wrote in a letter: "We have established five day schools among the three thousand colored people of Cincinnati; a Lyceum with tri-weekly lectures; evening schools for teaching adults to read; Sabbath schools and Bible classes. We are also trying to establish a reading-room and library for them. I have never seen such eagerness to acquire knowledge, nor such rapidity of acquisition."[26]

The students did "violence to public sentiment reckless of consequences." But was public sentiment right? Was it in accordance with the Gospel? The history of the world shows that public sentiment has been oftener wrong than right. Many of the greatest enormities ever witnessed on earth hare been sanctioned by public sentiment. Rankin answer 3ab

People thought that when Beechum returned, he would undo the trustees' actions.[27]


Actions of the Board of Trustees[edit]

The Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees met on August 20, 1834, and accepted the report from "the Committee appointed by the Executive Committee of the Trustees of the Lane Seminary, to consider the matter recently brought before them, relative to the proceedings among the students on the subject of slavery".[28] The probable negative effect of this on enrollment was soon mentioned.[29]

The Board met early in October, 1834, and accepted the recommendations of the Executive Committee, which had been "extensively published". They added to it "an 'Order' giving power to the Executive Committee to expel any student from the Seminary 'whenever they shall think it necessary so to do'". The new policies went into effect November 15.[30]

In October, classes being in recess, President Beecher was fund-raising in the East.[31][32][33]

"Most of [the students] indulged the hope that the Faculty, especially the venerated head of the institution, Dr. Beecher, would be able to arrest these laws, and prevent their being carried into effect. But finding that Prof. Stowe, on his return, had acquiesced in the decision of the Board, that the Trustees had refused to await the return of President Beecher, and that the laws were formally promulgated, they with one consent almost, resolved on retiring from an institution that had enacted such arbitrary and oppresive statutes. Though a large number of them were separated from each other, and were without any knowledge of the course which other members of the Seminary would pursue, each member of the Anti-Slavery Society had come deliberately to the solemn determination not to surrender a tittle of his principle, but to leave the Seminary — however great the amount of personal sacrifice."[30]

"We learn that Mr. Theodore Weld was aimed at particularly by the 'Order' of the Board of Trustees, giving power to the Executive Committee to expel any student from the Seminary whenever they 'shall think it necessary so to do.' It is said that as soon as the Executive Committee were clothed with this new and extraordinary power, thev called a meeting, and one of them (who was until lately a resident in Georgia) moved that Mr. Weld be expelled from Lane Seminary! The preamble to the resolution stated that he had introduced abolition into the Seminary, had been the moving cause of the incendiary movements, and that the existence of the Seminary would be hazarded by his member[ ]! This motion was opposed with great firmness by the minority of the Board, and the majority were entreated to suspend action on the case until Dr. Beecher's return. So they adjourned for three days, met again, and again adjourned to the 20th for final action. No breach of law was alleged against Mr. Weld, no disrespect of the faculty, nor any thing calling in question his moral character except the mere motion to expel. After the promulgation of the laws, and the students had determined on asking for dismission, Mr. Weld waitewaited upon the Faculty and informed them that as he stood charged with a high misdemeanor before the highest judicatture to which as a student he was amenable, he should not of course be guilty of such indecorum as to apply for a dismission before the court had taken final action on the case, and thus avoiding expulsion by skulking out under cover of a regular and honorable dismission while the Board had measures in progress which aimed at thrusting him out, branded with disgrace. So he was permitted to remain a member of the Seminary, though excused by the Faculty from its duties and exempted from the action of its laws! Afterwards the Board had a meeting, retreated from their ground, and of course left Mr. Weld without impeachment and in fair and honorable standing. As soon as the result was communicated to him, he applied for and received an honorable dismission.[34]

Theodore Weld was aware that the first victim of this policy would be himself. However, he did not withdraw Once it was clear that he would not be expelled, he then resigned.

The trustees soon expressed a determination to prevent all further discussion of the comparative merits of the policy of the Colonization Society, and the doctrine of immediate emancipation, either in the recitation rooms, the rooms of the students, or at the public table; although no objection had previously been made to the free discussion of any subject whatever. During the vacation that followed, in the absence of a majority of the professors, this purpose was framed into a law, or rule, of the seminary, and obedience to it required from all.

The trustees laid down the doctrine that "no associations or societies ought to be allowed in the seminary, except such as have for their immediate object, improvement in the prescribed course of

studies." This was followed by an order in these words : "Ordered that the students be required to discontinue those societies [the anti-slavery and colonization societies] in the seminary."[35]: 227 

"Sixteen students had already arrived to enter the next theological class. Of these eight have refused to enter and will leave. Six have entered, two of them being sons of the President. Besides these, it is known that a large number who were expecting to join the class, have been prevented by the obnoxious laws from going to the Seminary. How many of the students will stay is not yet determined. The theological class last year consisted of forty. Only two of these had entered this term, the fourth day after its commencement. The literary department last year consisted of about sixty. Of these only five had entered."[30]

The event resulted in the dismissal of John Morgan, "professor of mathematics and natural philosophy",[36] and the departure of a group of 40 students and a trustee. It was one of the first significant tests in the United States of academic freedom and the right of students to participate in free discussion. It is the first organized student group in American history. Several of those involved went on to play an important role in the abolitionist movement and the buildup to the American Civil War.

though I can no onger publicly advocate it as the agent of your society, I hope soon to plead its cause in the humbler sphere of personal example, while pursuing my professional studies, in a rising institution at the west, in which manual labor is a DAILY REQUISITION.[37]: 100 

Reaction fron New Hampshire convention, November[edit]

p. 36 of Proceedings of the N.H. anti-slavery convention, held in Concord, on the 11th & 12th of November, 1834. Concord, New Hampshire. 1834.

Sons & Daughters of Thunder[edit]

https://www.cincinnati.com/story/news/2019/03/20/film-portrays-harriet-beecher-stowe-and-lane-seminary-debates-against-slavery/3221563002/

Primary sources[edit]

"Very few of the reflecting minds in the nonslaveholding states, assent to the doctrine of immediate emancipation. The pernicious dogmas of Garrison have few advocates; and we hesitate not to say, that the experiment of announcing them ex cathedra, under the sanction of a college, will meet the decided and prompt rebuke of public sentiment, even on this side of the Ohio. However slavery may be disapproved of here, there are few who are prepared to procure its extermination by a sudden disruption of the social ties and civil institutions of our country; and still fewer who are willing to be tutored into the arcana of political economy by the students of a theological seminary." (p. 270)

"The idea of perverting seminaries of learning into political debating clubs is preposterous." (p. 272)

to look at[edit]

https://web.archive.org/web/20181025235123/http://www2.oberlin.edu/external/EOG/LaneDebates/Resources.html

commentary by garrison 11/22/1834 https://www.newspapers.com/clip/43467482/commentary_on_lane_seminary_situation/

References[edit]

  1. ^ Chapman, John Jay (1921). William Lloyd Garrison. Boston: Atlantic Monthly Press.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Stanton, H. B. (1834). "Great Debate at Lane Seminary". Debate at the Lane Seminary. Boston: Garrison and Knapp. pp. 3–7.
  3. ^ a b Cincinnati Lane Seminary (1834). Fifth annual report of the trustees of the Cincinnati Lane Seminary: together with the laws of the institution and a catalogue of the officers and students, November, 1834. Cincinnati: Corey & Fairbank. pp. 34–35.
  4. ^ a b Leavenworth, Jesse (May 22, 2003). "Re-Creating 1834 Debates on Abolition". Hartford Courant.
  5. ^ Willey, Larry G. (Fall 1994). "John Rankin, Antislavery Prophet, and the Free Presbyterian Church". American Presbyterians. 72 (3): 15171. JSTOR 23333630.
  6. ^ a b Williams Jr., Donald E. (2014). Prudence Crandall's legacy: the fight for equality in the 1830s, Dred Scott, and Brown v. Board of Education. Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 9780819574701.
  7. ^ Sherwood, Henry Noble (July 1917). "The Formation of the American Colonization Society". Journal of Negro History. 2 (3): 209–228, at p. 209.
  8. ^ a b Egerton, Douglas R. (Winter 1985). "'Its Origin Is Not a Little Curious': A New Look at the American Colonization Society". Journal of the Early Republic. 5 (4): 463–480. doi:10.2307/3123062.
  9. ^ Jay, William (1838). An Inquiry into the Character and Tendency of the American Colonization and American Anti-Slavery Societies. First ed. 1834. (6th ed.). R. G. Williams, for the American Anti-Slavery Society. p. 5.
  10. ^ a b c d e Lesick, Lawrence Thomas (1980). The Lane rebels : evangelicalism and antislavery in antebellum America. Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810813724.
  11. ^ Green, Beriah (1833). Four sermons preached in the chapel of the Western Reserve College : on Lord's Days, November 18th and 25th, and December 2nd and 9th, 1832. Cleveland.
  12. ^ Birney, William (1890). James G. Birney and his times; the genesis of the Republican party with some account of abolition movements in the South before 1828. New York: D. Appleton & Company. p. 136.
  13. ^ Richards, Leonard L. (1970). Gentlemen of property and standing: anti-abolition mobs in Jacksonian America. New York: Oxford University Press. OCLC 923435787.
  14. ^ Beecher, Lyman (November 1834). "Dr. Beecher's Address". African Repository.
  15. ^ Stowe, Calvin Ellis (December 1834). "Professor Stowe on Colonization". African Repository and Colonial Journal. 10 (9): 300–304.
  16. ^ Perry, Mark (2003). "Lift up thy voice: the Grimké family's journey from slaveholders to civil rights leaders". New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780142001035.
  17. ^ Birney, William (1890). James G. Birney and his times; the genesis of the Republican party with some account of abolition movements in the South before 1828. New York: D. Appleton and Company. p. 137.
  18. ^ Lyman, H[untington]. "'Lane Seminary Rebels'" (PDF). In Ballantine, W. G. (ed.). The Oberlin Jubilee 1833–1883. Oberlin, Ohio: E. J. Goodrich. pp. 60–69.
  19. ^ American Anti-Slavery Society (1834). "Facts communicated by Mr. Augustus Wattles, of Lane Seminary, to the Editor of the Western Recorder". First Annual Report of the American Anti-Slavery Society; with the speeches delivered at the anniversary meeting, held in Chatham-Street Chapel, in the city of New York, on the sixth of May, 1834, and by adjournment on the eighth, in the Rev. Dr. Lansing's church; and the minutes of the meetings of the society for business. New York. p. 64.
  20. ^ Bradley, James (1834). "Brief Account of an Emancipated Slave written by Himself, at the request of the editor". In Child, Lydia Maria (ed.). Oasis. (Reprinted in The Emancipator, November 4, 1834.). Boston. pp. 106–112.
  21. ^ Stanton, H. B. (March 29, 1834). "Cheering Intelligence". The Liberator. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
  22. ^ a b c Weld, Theodore; American Anti-Slavery Society (1839). American Slavery As It Is. Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses. New York: American Anti-Slavery Society.
  23. ^ [1][dead link]
  24. ^ Fletcher, Robert Samuel (1943). A history of Oberlin College from its foundation through the civil war. Oberlin College. OCLC 189886.
  25. ^ "Anti-Slavery Society in Lane Seminary". The Liberator. "From the New-York Evangelist". April 5, 1834. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  26. ^ Weld, Theodore D. (1834). "[Letter to Lydia Child]". The Oasis. Boston: Benjamin C. Bacon. p. 112.
  27. ^ "Boston." (William Lloyd Garrison?) (November 8, 1834). "Lane Seminary". The Liberator. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.
  28. ^ "Lane Seminary". The Liberator. From the Cincinnati Gazette. October 4, 1834. p. 2.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  29. ^ "Lane Seminary". The Liberator. From the New-York Evangelist. October 4, 1834. p. 2.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  30. ^ a b c "Lane Seminary, Ohio". The Liberator. From the Emancipator. November 1, 1834. p. 2.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  31. ^ "Lane Seminary (part 1 of 2)". Vermont Chronicle (Bellows Falls, Vermont). October 10, 1834. p. 2.
  32. ^ "Lane Seminary (part 2 of 2)". Vermont Chronicle (Bellows Falls, Vermont). October 10, 1834. p. 3.
  33. ^ "The West". Buffalo Patriot and Commercial Advertiser (Buffalo, New York). October 14, 1834. p. 1.
  34. ^ "Lane Seminary—Again". The Liberator. November 1, 1834. p. 2.
  35. ^ Tappan, Lewis (1870). The Life of Arthur Tappan. New York: Hurd and Houghton.
  36. ^ "Rev. Mr. Phelps' Lectures". The Liberator. January 25, 1834. p. 3.
  37. ^ Weld, Theodore D. (January 28, 1833). First annual report of the Society for Promoting Manual Labor in Literary Institutions, including the report of their general agent, Theodore D. Weld. New York: Society for Promoting Manual Labor in Literary Institutions.
  38. ^ statement of the reasons which induced the students of Lane Seminary, to dissolve their connection with that institution. p. 7.