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James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown 4 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown. You can also browse the collection for Thomas Boerley or search for Thomas Boerley in all documents.

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James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Chapter 8: sword in hand. (search)
Kennedy Farm and the school house; while the remainder were posted as guards at the bridges and at the corners of the streets and the public buildings. Early in the morning Captain Brown sent an order to the Wager House for breakfast for forty-five men his hostages and company. By eight o'clock the number of Virginians thus held was over sixty persons. The first firing after daybreak was by a person named Turner, who fired at the guards as they were ordering two citizens to halt. Mr. Boerley, a grocer, fired the second shot. A bullet from a Sharpe's rifle instantly killed him. A number of Virginians then obtained possession of a room overlooking the Armory gates, and fired at a party of the sentinels. One of the Liberators fell dead,and another — Watson Brown -retired mortally wounded. The panic that these proceedings caused in the town is thus described by a Virginia panegyrist of the people: As the sun rose upon the scene, the reported outrages and the bodies of
James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Chapter 4: State evidence closed. (search)
there; said that the negroes were placed in the watch house with spears in their hands, but showed no disposition to use them; that he saw Phil making port-holes by the Captain's order, but that the other negroes did nothing, and had dropped their weapons some of them being asleep nearly all the time; that John Brown's rifle was always cocked, and that he believed, although he would not swear, that it was the old man himself who shot the marine. Alexander Kelly described the manner of Thomas Boerley's death. He was armed with a gun when killed. George W. Turner, also, was killed as he was levelling his rifle. Albert Grist described his arrest, by a man armed with a spear, on Sunday night, and his detention in the Armory until he was dismissed by Captain Brown, after delivering a message to the conductor of the train. Brown, he said, declared that his object was to free the slaves. I told him there were not many there. He replied: The good Book says we are all free and equal