Browsing named entities in James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown. You can also browse the collection for Windsor (Canada) or search for Windsor (Canada) in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 1 document section:

James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Chapter 4: Exodus. (search)
he same despised race, we hear the sobbings of this little group, intermingled with prayers for their benefactor's safety, as they waft across the Lakes to the Southern jail. A Canadian correspondent thus writes: John Brown's colony. Windsor, Upper Canada, Nov, 6, 1859. As every thing relative to Old John Brown is now interesting, I would inform your readers that I have spent a few hours in Windsor, Upper Canada, with seven of the twelve colored Missourians who are now residing in that Windsor, Upper Canada, with seven of the twelve colored Missourians who are now residing in that place. The other five are living about nine miles in the country. These make the twelve persons taken by Brown last January into Canada. As various reports are afloat concerning them, I wish to inform all parties that those living here are very industrious. Two of the seven are men. They team, saw wood, and job round. One, a boy about twelve, helps around generally. Two of the women, who were field hands in Missouri last spring, on arriving at Windsor, hired, for four dollars, an acre of