■ill um AND A PEEP AT EADICAL RULE IN MISSISSIPPI. By'James d. lynch, author op tub roems, " k0i5eut k. lee; oe, nerves of the so0ti! ;" "tue ku-klux tiubunal," etc. ■ ^.z;-, 1879. _^^Jl NEW YORK: E, J. HALE k SON, PUBLISHERS, No. 1" Mur.n.vY Stkeet. 1079. Entered, according to Act of Congrces, in the year 1879, by the jicople of Kemper County, MissiBsiiH)!, in tlic office of tlio Librarian of Congress, at Wasliiugtou, 1). C. PREFACE. The object of this work is to present a true history of the deplorable events that occurred in Kemper Couutj^, Mississippi, during the rule of the radical party, and re- sulting from it, and which have been so persistently and maliciously exaggerated and misrepresented for the pur- poses of calumny ; and to show that, in regard to these events, the people of that county have been more " sinned against than sinning." In treating of these circumstances, the author has neces- sarily been led to a view of the whole field of official cor- ruption, which spread itself from the Capitol all round to the borders of the State, and which was extended, jjlanted and cultivated by means of the infamous process called "reconstruction," which was originated and enforced by the hatred of the then all dominant party that wielded the power of the Federal Government ; and from this survey it will be manifest that the terrible state of affairs that existed in Kemper County, and so assiduously ascribed to the depravity of its citizens, was but a prominent out- growth of that harvest of crime sown by the hand of radicalism all over the State. The author has not permitted himself to be actuated by C PREFACE. any partisan impulse or personal prejiulicc. lie had m personal acquaintance whatever with the individuals whose characters and careers form the main features of this work ; and he has had no ends to subserve in its production save those of justice and truth. In the promotion and vindi- cation of these he lias availed liimself of every reliable BOurce and means he could command. lie has obtained the facts enunciated in this Avork from the records of the State and of Kemper County, and from the i)ersonal state- ments of witnesses, upon whose knowledge and candor he could implicitly relyj and wherever there were any doubts connected with an act, they have been assigned to the benefit of the parties charged. lie was conscious of the fact that he was dealing Avith the characters and deeds of those whose voice of defence was forever hushed, and he has turned a deaf car to every breath of report. But from the grave comes the voice that brings the greatest terror to vice and the most eloquent admonition to virtue, and to reflecting minds this legend will have significance : The ancient l'gyi)(ian.s subjected the bodies of their dead to trial and imaginary ])iuiishnu'nt. For this purpose a solemn trilmnal was instituted, before wliieh the dead were bronght, and the \ irtues and vices of the deceased disclosed and weighed, and if the scales were fouml to (lip to the. side of vice, the body was sentenced to some dese- ciating foniialily; and it is saiiloted the carpet bagger to the negro heart. Being well versed in every feature and pecu- liarity of tiie negro chai'acter, tlu\y formed tlie conhden- tial medium through wiiicii the jealousy, ignimmce and superstition of tlie one weie blended with the cunning- and rai)acity of the other. But the causes that, f<»r tlu' most part, i)roduced that class called scalawags, had llieir oiigin deep down in the depths of human depravity. In some instances it arose from a spirit of resentment for some political defeat, and in some it sprang fiom a desire to gratify some old grudge agaiust; their neighbors, or from the dictates of that envy so often fonnd nestling in the bosom of inferiority; but the mosr. l)rolitic cause of all was the spirit of cupidity, the desire of plunder and self enrichment, ior which the unsettled state of society offered an ample opportunity, but which could bo perpetuated only by kee[)ing' np a state of ])ublic excite- ment by means of race issues, and by continually fanning- the prejudices and hatred existing- in the minds of the masses of the Northern people against the white people of the South. Having thus severed themselves from every claim npou the respect of their fellow citizens, they found a congenb- companion in the i)erson of the carpet bagger, who in tui*- found in them ellicient and indispensable tools for 1*. operations. To this combination the radical part}^ ow^ed itn existence at the South. It was planted, and fostered thery by the cupidity of the carpet bagger, the depravity of tn. scalawag, aiul the ignorance, jealousy and sui>er8tition ot 12 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. tlie n(';L?ro, all uikUt tlio protection and supervision of the military power of the Federal government, which was kept in motion bj' the enforcement acts of Congress. Under the rule of the radical party composed of these elements, began a system of olticial robbery and corruption tlironghout the South unparalleled in the history' of any civilized people, in the endurance of which the patience of the Southern people could only have been sustained by that high sense of honor which characterized their conduct throughout the great struggle, aud impelled them to a strict observance of faith in abiding the terms of their surrender. Ijut the clouds that hung over them like a ])all grew darker and thicker, until the last ray of hope seemed to be forever liidden from their view, and driven almost to the brink of despair, they seized upon every opj)ortunity of concili- ation, for the protection of their i)roperty, which they saw continually vanishing beneath the tread of the tax gatherer, whose frequent rounds were necessary to satisfy the multitudinous demands of the State and county ofifi- cials, many of which were heretofore urdvuown to their laws. But the imi>udence of these exactions added indignity to their spoliation, encouraged by the ever tiireatening atti- tude of the Federal government, and the constant mobility of the Federal army, which was kept always in readiness to lly to their aid upon the least cry of rebellion or intimi- dation they chose to nuike ; the cari)et bagger and the scalawag walked the lords of the hind, while the filthiest and most degraded negro was taught to believe himself superior to any Southern white man who was not a radical. JJut the importance and demands of the carpet bagger in- at a^aiii : '' Uiilbi-tiinately, these new and arbitrary political eoiulitioiis, iaii)Oseil upon both raees by the will oi' Con<,a'ess, were disturbed by the pres- ence of a class of luiscrupuloats, needy and rapacious ad- venturers, who came down to (ill the ])olitical oflices to which prejudice against the Soutliern wliites on the part of those who held i)ower in the Federal government, and tlio absolute ignorance and incompetence of the negroes, pre- vented those whites from being ai)pointed, .... and by means (A' low arts the negroes of the State of Missis- sippi have been banded together in an unthinking mass, under the lead and blind control of a handful of Isorthern strangers, with here and theie a native white man." They savr th»' ignoranl Afiican and the refuse of the Koi-th perched in tlie seats once occupied only by their purest and most talented citizens, while these same citizens "Were now in many instances disfr.mchised and not allowed to raise their voic(^ ; while their Ibnner slaves, with idiotic grins ami clamorous hurrahs, bustled up to the ballot box Avith a ticket placed in tlieir hanj)ed and untrodden on her pas- tures ami (commons, winle any attemi)t \.o convict a crimi- nal was suri' to fail belbre a negro jury. KEMriiK COU.XTY VINDICATED. 15 Wliat people is tlicre. on eartlj who would not have- re- sorted to every legitimate means in their power to remedy such a state of attairs ? And yet, beeause they made a successfnl effort and redeemed their State from snch bar- barons rule, the cry of fraud and intimidation was niised throughout the radical party, the army invoked, a remand to military rule threatened, congressional inquisitions in- augurated, the private correspondence of individuals seized and made public, the privacy of domestic relations invaded for the pur])Oseof finding some infringement upon the con- stitutional amendments or infraction of the reconstruction laws, as an excuse to reinstate the old order of things, which was necessary to maintain the radical party in power. No sooner had the great change in the condition of things by the success of the Democratic party been inaugu- rated, than the carpet bagger, his occupation being now gone, fled the haunts of his former vice, and disappeared almost entirely from the Southern States as suddenly as lie had made his advent ; while the scalawag, possess- ing less mobility, in many instances, clung to a forlorn hope, and, in 1S77, in some counties in the State, made another effort to baud the negroes together in their old state of hostility to the whites; and as there was no longer any possibility of obtaining Federal military aid, those who had the boldness to undertake the task, must necessarily resort to other means by which to etfect their purpose;. "What these means were will form a dark feature in the fol- lowing pages, among which were instigations to riot, by imposing upon the ignorance of the negro, the assassina- tion in some instances of leading Democrats, or some other act that would bring theni to the notice of the radical ad- ministration ; so that if they slumld fail to be elected by the negro vote to the office to which they aspired, they would be sure to receive some appoint nu-nt from the hands of tlse W;!shington authorities suitable to and commen- surate with tlieir services to the party in control of tho Federal a [(point men ts. IG KLCMl'EPt COUNTY VINDIOA.TED. The state of ^Mississi])})! had been, since tlic eleetioii of ]S75, as thorous'lily Democratic as it had before that been radical. The negroes had abandoned entirely their hostile attitude to the white people, and had reestablished the jnost cordial relations with their former owners. The whole State had bej^iin to put on the robes of a new prosperity, laws were promptly and imi)artially executed without dis- erimiuation of race, color or former condition. The feelinjjs of i)eace and good will reigned supreme throughout the State; and the native citizen who could have the hardi- liood to attempt to disturb this state of things, and again kindle the fires of discord and of race prejudices, and rein- state the reign of barbarism, must have been a man whose heart was not only callous to ever^' sentiment of virtue, but Avanting in every purpose that aims at the welfare of liumanity. I\Iississip))i was the peculiar object of Xorthern hatred. She had been proscribed as a leading State in the war. The ])romptness with w liicli she entered the struggle, and the con- stancy with wliich sli(». adhered to the Southern cause, had iVom the first, drawn upon her the most i)oisoned arrows of vengeance; and no (U'i»tlis of ])rostration, no degree of degradation, or measuix^, of jienance, could in the eyes of the Northern masses atone for the part she acted, or satisfy the insatiable spirit of revenge which the heart of the North harbored against her. A deliberate policy had de- voted her to utter ruin, ami it was this that dictated the harsh proceedings inaugurated against her citizens, upon the slightest charges, in the Federal courts, under the name of ku-klux trials, and it was this proscription that caused her to be(;ome so completely under the control of the car[)et bagger. They were encouraged by the assurance of receiv- ing military aid whenever needed to protect them in any- thing they might do. But if there had been no scalawags, if the while i)eo|»le of the South had presented a solid front tollic tide of opprcssixc measures that was rolled ui)()n lliem, tlie career oC the carpet bagger would have been confined to, and endetl with, military occupation. KEMPER COUNTY VINDTDATED. ' 17 It was the consciousness of (bis fact tliat rendered tlio scalawags the peculiar object of contempt, which was only modified, sometimes, by old bonds of personal friend.slii[), and in some instances by their respectable connections and antecedents; but tliey were for the luost part individuals who were known to have always lacked most, or all of the virtues that constitute an honorable man or good citizen, which rendered them fit subjects to play the despicable role of spies upon every circle of society into which their connections might procure them admission. But if the carpet bagger lived easily, he died hard. It was to him like the jdunge from the Tarpeian rock, to be so suddenly deprived of his crown and emoluments of office; and it is no wonder that he should vent his spleen upon the heads of those who so ruthless!}' deprived him of his occupation, and invoke his powers of falsification by which he first deprived the poor negro of his ballot and then of his money. He lets us hear from him occasionally through the infamous slanders and falsehoods which ho from time to time still concocts about the Southern jieople for the purpose of gratifying his revenge and appeasing his ravenous longings for an opportunity of once moro thrusting his pilfering fingers into their pockets. Conspicuous among these is one James M. Wells, formerly a deputy revenue collector in Mississippi. This individual has wiitten a book entitled the " Chisolni Massacre ; or. Home Rule in Mississippi," meaning, of course, a rule in which the amiable carpet bagger does not share, in which he has seen proper to asperse the good l)eople of Kemper County with the vilest slanders, and through them the people of the State of Mississippi, and of the whole South. It is the main object of this work to reply to the slanders perpetrated by that individual, and to present to the world in behalf of the people of Kemper County and JNIissis- sippi, a true statement of the transactions which he has so whiniugly and flippantly falsified. Were it not for the gravity and importance of the occurrences npon which he 18 KEMPER COITNTY VINDICATED. lias built Ills slanderous effusions, and their widespread report, neither the ])eople of Kemper County nor the writer Avould liavc any desire to attempt a rel'utation of eharjies couched in such sliallow terms, (clothed in sucli i)arty colored robes, and whose baseness is so lucidly manifest. The people of Kemi)er Ci)unty bore a full share of the conse(pu'nces and results of the rule and ruin jiolicy iiiaui;urated by the radical party throughout the State of ]Mississii)pi. i This county, prior (o the war, liad been, in a great meas- ure, exempt from those violent ])oliticaJ excitements and personal disturbances which so often shock society in other! localities, and esiHH'ially in many of the Xorthern States, Avhere labor and railroad riots, often attended by the most,, lieinons crimes, are so rife, and where spirituaHstic in- tiuences, free loveism and " no hell" doctrines produce their diabolical results. To say that there were no crimes committed, would be to upset all the experience of mankind and deny the frailties of human nature; but it may be positively assert- ed that the criminal records of this county, i)rior to and during the war, will com])are favorably with those of any other community, notwithstanding its comparison to the "dark and bloody ground" so llippantly made by the craven carpet bagger. It is a wonder that the descriptive Wells did not invoke the smoke of the burning witches of Xew England, or the lille of the Ivansas s(puitter, or the burning of the Catholic eonxcnts in 15osion, to give expression to his slanderous ])uri)ose. 15ut he need not even to have gone beyond the scope of ladical rule in the South to lunc found comparisons sufli- (•icntl\' apt to give the desired vividness to his description, for any eomiiarison to ilhistrate the rompt, or an utter disregard for every sentiment of virtue could suggest. William Wallace Chisolm, whose crimes and their ter- rible retribution will form the chief import of the following l)ages, was, it seems, a native of Georgia, but who, for a long time prior to the war and the events about to be de- scribed, had been a citizen of Kemi>er County, Missisfsippi, and a very obscure citizen. Possessed of neither education uor wealth, he labored under the further misfortune of possessing a disgustingly coarse and profane nature. This lie perhaps inherited from his fatlier, who, in addition, was a man of uotoriously dissipated habits. At the death of his father, Chisolm came into possessiou of his little farm, a very dilaiiidated piece of projierty iu the Southcru por- tiou of Kemjier County, where he continued to reside. At this time there lived in the same neighborhood au old mau by the name of McRea, who was a very popuhir man and iDOSsessed great political influence over his neighbors. He was au old line whig, and so had been Chisolm's father. This circumstance had created a friendshi]) between them •which the old man now extended to the son, and, through his influence, young Chisolm was chosen, in 1858, as justice of the peace. This of&ce, however, was, at that time, of but little importance. The jurisdiction of a justice ex- tended, in criminal matters, only to the trial and punishment of petit misdemeanors and to an investigation and commit- ment in other crimes ; in civil cases it extended only to those suits which involved the amount of fifty dollars and lili KEMl'iCK COUNTY VINDICATED. less, a!ul ill no (;;ise couM irs juduinoiitvS and executions reach real i)i()])("rt.v ; lieiici'tlie emoluments were small, and lew persons who liad any aspirations or other means of livelihood could he iiidnreij to hold the office. While in this ol)s(Mir(^ jjosition and in a se(;luded corner of tlie county, yoaui;- Caisolm had hut little opi>ortunity to develop tliosi'dcpiMN'cd instincts uiiich afterward rendered him so conspicuous in the annals of infamy. This otlice he held until 18;')'), duiln;;' which time his wih; taught school and aidi'd in tlie supjx)!'! of the family. Jiut when the tocsin of secession sounded, and liie tiile of revolution swept ov(>r the land, Ciiisoliu leaped lustily into the mad- dened euiicnt ; he even outswam llie tide, hel])ed to clear its (diannels, and nndikc its swellinji' Hoods. He made seces- sion si)ee(;hes, aiid there arc hundfeds to-day in Kemper (■ounty who well remend)er the tierce expressions of his thirst for " Yankee blood." This he never denied, yet hisj liliaiit I)io,i;ra])l!ei', the car[)et bagi;er, J. M. "Wells, has tho mendacity to say : " Fn all thi'se years Judu'c ("hisolm was a ])ronounced ITnion man, of wlii^' pi-o<'li\ities, and an unconii)romisiii!:j enemy of the i)arly which precipitated and hurled head- h>nj;' u])on the country ihe terrible consequences of the rcbcUion. A\'jicu the t'ule of secessiiui swept over Missis- sip])! liuc a dc\i)uiin_u_/^r»(r," [lit; here slijjhtly missed the stereoty])ed jihrase and introduination oi' Jhiad and Jhtnir.] "he, with thousands of olhei's li!;e himscll', who shuddered at the thou.niit, in an nn;;'inutU'd inomeul, lhron;;li /'>•(■<• and intiinuJaihn, cast a vote favoring- tli(^ disruption of the LTnion — an act which it is known he rei^retted all tin; I'cmainder of his lif(>.'' So lancli ^Vclls says of (Miisohn. Xow let us see wliitt Chisohn says of inmself in this respect. In his testimony Ix'fore Ihc Snix-ominillee <^n Privileges and IClections, as to tiic denial of \\'.v. elect i\'e fianchisc in the State of Missis sippi, at t he elections of ISTa and 187({, AVashin_i;1on, 1). ('., February b!, 1.S77, on pa.i;(^ 71") of the report, he said : "Question by Mr. Teller: Were you in tlie Confederate .service ? K15MPE11 COUxNTY VINDICATED. 2'S " Chisolm : I was in tlio service — in the militia some; my sympatliics were wit-li the South." Again, before the ]Mi8sissii)|)i Investigating Committee, at Jacksoii, on June 23, 187(j, lie testified as follows : Question by Senator Bayard, page 773 of the report : "Did you perform any military service ? " A. Yes, sir; I was 0:1 the post there and picked u]) the conscripts in De Kalb, and then I was out witli the militia one tiuie ; I was wherever they calhul me, but T was ]);>r- ticnlar not to be called very far otT if 1 could avoid it. That has nothing to do with this. My i)eo]>le had all gone to the war. It was not that I didn't believe in the cause of the South and was not interested in it. I voted for seces- sion, though my brothers none of them voted for it. I have several brothers in the county, and they went and fought, but I didn't." This discrepancy will, at the outset, show the iacility of this man. Wells, in the fabrication of falsehood ui»on whiidi to build his rickety cditice of slander against tlie people of Kemper County : '•Like ono who liaviog, unto Truth, Made a sinner of his memory To credit his owu lie." By means of this open and avowed devotion to the Southern cause, or rather in consequence of his vehement protestations in this respect, at a time, too, when the minds of the Southern people were distracted by the contemi)la- tion of what would be the consequences of the election of Lincoln, and through the intluence of John W. Gully, his complicity in wh.ose death formed the culmination of his criminal career, Chisolm was, in ISGO, elected judge of tlie Probate Court of Kemper County. This was a very iin- l^ortant position, as that court had exclusive jurisdiction of all matters pertaining to guardians and wards, the settle- ment of estates and all kindred matters; but the country having been soon involved in a war of national life or death, there was but little business transacted before the court, and his opi)ortuuities yet dallied in the future, so 21 KEMPEE COUNTY VINDICATED. that during tliis lime, if liis coiulnct was not unobjcctiou- ablo, it was, at least, uii noticeable. At tbo expiration of liis term of oflice, in 18(31, he was again, throngh the instrumentality of his friend John W. (JruUy, elected to this same office, which he held until he was forced to resign in 18G7 ; but immediately after the close of the war, his depraved nature being no longer under the restraints of circumstances, he at once con- nected himself with the radical party, and became its champion and leader in the county. It was now that that extended held of operations was opened to him which he soon strewed with the skeletons of his crimes and misde- meanors. The first act of this panorama of guilt was performed in the spring of 1807. lie was, at that lime, as we have seen, judge of the I'robate Court of Kemper County — a court which, from the very nature of its functions, was invested by the law with ])cculiar sanctity; and it presumed their exercise to be robed in the i)urest vesture of virtue and morality. I Tliis benclj had heretofore been occupied by Uiosc wlu)se ermine was Avorn and transmitted without soil, or llie least slain of the breath of scandal. lUit what elVect these pure and nndeliled precedents and virtuous examples, inter- woven with the dignity and s;K;red obligations of this oftice, juoduced ui)on the ollicial character of this man, nniy be deduced from the following disgusting details, lor lull ex- position of which the sworn testimony of witnesses, in- cluding that of Chisolm himself, is invoked and introduced ; jiiid in this connection it may be stated, once for all, that llie writer would scorn the idea of charging otlences u[)on any one living or dead that are not warranted by facts of record, or based upon information on which he can im- pli(;itly rely; and where their foundation is only circum- stantial, ho will simply spread the circumstances belbre the reader, with such observations, on his part, as their nature and import m:iy inspire. On the termination of the war there were some indi\id- KEarPER COUInTY VINDICATED. 25 uals ill Mississippi, as well as in the other States of the South, who, by oaths of uniform and unshaken loyalty to the Uiiiou, sought to obtain compensation from the govern- ment for property destroj'ed, or alleged to have been de- stroyed, by the Federal army. At this time there lived in Kemper County an aged man, whose name was Perry Moore, and who died on the 8th of February, lSu7. The name of this old man, on account of the character he bore of strict integrity and his unpre- tending deportment, was now selected by Chisolm as a suitable cat's paw with which to accomplish his nefarious purp-ose of defrauding the United States Government of a large amount of money for the destruction of cotton, con- cerning which, he forged an affidavit purporting to be that of Perry Moore, who was then dead ; and he was only thwarted in the consummation of this fraud through the stanch integrity and alertness of Mr. Geo. L. Welsh, who was at that time ]irobate clerk, a highly respected gentle- man, and now the popular sheriff of the county. It will be observed that Chisolm had gathered well the mantle of probability around his design. He had selected the name of an innocent old man who had lived in an ob- scure corner of the county, and Avho had recently died ; but subsidiary to this, it was necessary to exercise the caution of keeping these papers from the hands and the eyes of his clerk, who was the legal and usual repository and cus- todian of all papers connected with this court, and who in this case was required to certify to the signature of the jndge in order to give the proper legal effect to the in- strument. This could oidy be obviated by another for- gery, which, no doubt, would have been perpetrated had not the clerk, by some means, become cognizant of the spurious affidavit, upon which he denmndcd it of Chisolm, who immediately gave it up to the clerk, and on being charged by him with the fact, he promptly admitted the Jbrgery ; thereupon Mr. Welsh also demanded his resigna- tion, to which he also consented. The following documen- tary evidence of this infamous transaction si)eaks for itself : (Perry Moore was dead when this affidavit was made.) 20 kemper county vindicated. " The State of ^Mississippi, ) Kemper County. ] "Before mo, W. AV. Oliisolm, jud,ii:e of pi'obate, in and for said county, i)ersonalIy came Perry ]\[oore, to me well laiowu as a just and reliable citizen in said countN'. m'Iio after being by me duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he was with the United States forces under the command of General Sherman, in the County of Lau- derdale, in eighteen hundred and sixty-four (18G4), in said State of ]Mississipi)i, on or about the 20th day of February of said year, on the road leading from Marion Station to nillsboro, in Scott County, Mississip[)i ; and he, the afore- said, saw at one White's Gin, on said road, the said United States forces put fire to and burn one hundred and eighty- four (ISl) bales of lint cotton, belonging to Piobcrt J. 3Ioseby. They, the United States forces, stated, and told me it was by order of General Sherman. " PERRY MOORE. " Sworn to and subscribed before me, this ) 2d day of Pebruary, A. D. 18G7. ] "W. W. Chisolm, Probate Jud(/cJ^ the fraud acknowledged. " I certify that the foregoing is a true coi)y of the original palmers, and that the name subscribed thereto puri)orliiig to be the gcnuiiu; signature of Perry Moore is a base for- gery, and so admit t<>d to me by \V. W. Chisolm. At the time 1 arrested tin.', said papers in his hands, said Chisolm was at that time Judge of the Probate Court of Kem[)er County, and I was clerk of said court. "GEO. L. WELSH. "Daid in money every doMar to tiie I'nll amount of warrants 1 was entitled to receive from the county for any services as i)robate judge to the time the office would expire by law. J will always make that kind of a trade, especially when the warrants Avere only worth twenty-live cents on the dollar. Welsh's friends paid me the money, thinking at the time Welsh would get one of the crowd in office, so as to steal out of estates then in progress of being passed on by the court." Thus, by his own confession, the crime of bribery was added to that of forgery. But no sooner did he discover Ins self crimination than the prolific baseness of his nature invoked falsehood to parry the effect of his own written words. AVhen this letter was produced b^' Mr. ]\[oney, ui)on Chisolm's examination before the Congressional Inves- tigating Committee, in Washington, the latter resorted to the Ibllowing prevarication and linal confession. i^. By Mr. Money: Did yon write that letter? (Handing him the one above.) Chisolm : No, sir. 1 did not write it. Q. Is that your comi)osition ? A. I do not know that it is. Q. Is this your signature to it 1 A. Well, sir. Some time during the canvass over in Le Flore County, 1 believe. Q. Let me have a categorical answer. I wish to know if you wrote this letter, and if this is your signature 'f A. 1 do not think I wrote it. I know i did not write it. (^>. Is it a copy of one you wrote? A. I never wiote either. I never wrote any at all. (^ r.y .Mr. Teller: What did you mean to ask him — whether that is his signature or not ? i\Ir. Money : That is one thing. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 31 (Jbisolm (looking at it) : Tliat looks very much like it, with pencil. Q. I desire you to read it first, and then say if you wrote it'/ A. I know I did not write it. Q. Nor have it written ? A. I know I did not write tliat letter or have it written. Q. Did you write anything of this kind ? A. No, sir ; nor did I dictate it. Q. Did you not procure it to be written ? A. I did not. Mr. j\Ioney : I will ask to have some witnesses sub. poenaed who will prove the signature. Chisolm : I acknowledge the signature. I state that I thiuk that is my signature. By Mr. Teller : Is there any explanation you want to make of this ? A. Yes, sir. In my speech at Greenwood, I stated about this way : In speaking of this fellow, Welsh, and his crowd that was hounding after me after I had left home. I Avas nominated about a month before I left home, and not a word was breathed about me until I had gone away ; and Col. Money went and got some ante helium papers thinking they would keep me out of the canvass. I had to come back home and get papers to reply to that. The charges had all been once answered to Governor Alcorn. Welsh's friends said to me that I ought to resign my ofhce ; that I was elected by the white people and took sides with the negroes ; and that I ought to resign my ofiice, and insisted on my resigning my ofiice. I stated to them that I did not l)ropose to resign my ofiice. I had been elected for a cer- tain period, and that I was ready to perform the services; and, as any other man who had been hired to do labor, I was entitled to my wages. They came back to me and told me that if I would recommend Mr. Gully for the probato judge's place, XhQ.y would make my wages good if I would resign. 1 would not state to them what I would do on that subject at all. I wrote to General Ord, who was then 33 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. coinmaiuling; tlie district, and asl^ed liijii if he would ap- l)oiiit Judge Jolin Mcltea, of my town, upon my leconr luondatiou. He answered me that he would. They returned back to me, and I told them : ' You are luakin^i a great Aiss about my impo.sing- uj)on the i)Cople, about my being a Kadical, ami about the Democrats electing me. Now, if you will make good the salary due me up to the time I was elected by the people — I have m)t failed to do any of the- duties of the ofhce — 1 am perfectly willing to get out of your Avay.' I said that in a speech. They agreed to it. I then asked General Ord to ai)i)<)int John ]\IcKea, and he did. And thus were treachery and perlidy added to forgery, bribery aud i)erjury. IJut it is uecessary to return to the foigery. At the March term, 18G8, of the Circuit Court of Kemper Couut}', Jordan Moore, a son, and Addisou "Ward, a son-in- law, of Perry Moore, and both of whom were perfectly iamiliar with his handwriting, together with ]Mr. Welsh, on an examination aud thorough inspection of the paper, stated on their oaths to the grand jury that the signature to the alUdavit, purporting to have been signed by Perry JMooi-e, Avas not his signature, and that it was a forgery. Yet this Jury failed tolhid a bill of indictment against the forger. J5ut at the subsequent term of the court, 8ep!.ember, l.StiS, upon the sworn statiMuents of thes(!sanu^ witnesses, before a Jury characterized by the district attorney as ha\ing been more than ordinarily intelligent, a bill of indictnu'iit was found and framed against W. W. Chisolm lor lorgery. At this time the oflicc of sherilf of Jvem[)er County was held by 11. A. Hopper, a radical, and known friend of Chisolm, and who had been appointed to that position by the military governor oi" the State. All the county offices were in the haiuls of the same i>arty, and it is evident that the selection of the grand Jury for the March term was made with a view of shielding Chisolm irom an indicttnent for his forgery. This fact is sufficiently disclosed by the character of that jury. And how this jury, under their KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 33 solemn oaths, could refuse to find a bill of indictment against Cbisolm npou the testimony of young Moore, Ad- dison Ward and Geo. L. Welsli, as given herewith, is in- scrutable to any view outside of the pale of perjury. They had been gathered for the occasion, and well did they sus- tain the estimate of baseness which their very selection had placed upon them. In the appointment of grand jurors for the next term of the court, and in fact, in the election of the board of police, which had the selection of the grand jurors, this same influence was brought to bear, and for the same pur- pose, yet not with the same success, for the suspicions of the people were now thoroughly aroused, and the district attorney, a gentleman of integrity and sagacity, exerted himself strenuously in the cause of justice. Consequently, at the ensuing term of the court, a grand jmy of even un- usual intelbgence and probity was impanelled, and which, ni)on the same evidence, found a bill of indictment against Chisolm for forgery. Efforts had also been made to pre- vent the session of the court. The clerk, doubtless for this ])urpose, resigned his office at the opening. The records were iucomi)lete, and the papers scattered in con- fusion. Nevertheless the court appointed a temporary clerk, and the session was effectuated, and as there was no clerk except by temporary apiiointment, the court ordered the presentments of the grand jury to be placed in the custody of the sheriff for safe keeinng. This sheriff, as has been said, was H. A. no]>per, a crony of Chisolm, and what became of the indictment against the latter will be seen hereafter. The following presents the action of the grand jury in reference to the matter under discussion : sworn statement of the district attorney. The State of Mississippi, ) Kemper County. ( Before me, F. M. Poole, clerk of the circuit court, personally appeared Thomas H. Woods, citizen of said 3 3't KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. comity, wlu) liiiving been sworn in due form of law, de- jioses and says : First — That at the September term, 1SG8, of the circuit Court of said county and State, affiant was district attor- ney for the sixtli Judicial district (in which said county was embraced), and was present at said term, and attended upon the deliberation of the grand Jury, and gave to that body such assistance as by law lio was required to do, and with his (afliant's) hand drew the indictments found and preferred by said grand jury at said term of said court. Second — That among other indictments found by said grand jury, prepared and framed by this affiant, presented in open court at said term of said court, was ouo sub- stantially charging W. W. Chisolm with falsely and fraud- ulently and knowingly uttering and publishing a certain l)aper, puri)orting to have been signed by one Perry Moore, touching the loss of a largo lot of cotton, alleged, in said paper, to have been the property of one llobert J. Moseby, which said cotton Avas, in said paper, charged to have l)een destroyed by the army commanded by Gen- eral Sherman, in the winter of 18G3-4. Third — Tiiat U])on the adjournment of the court, there be- ing a vacancy in the office of clerk of the circuit court, the furniture, records and papers belonging to that office were, by order of the court, placed in the care and custody of the then sheriff, jMr. II. A. Hopper; that between said September term, 1868, and the next March term, 1801), affiant was informed by said shcrift" that his office had been violently opened and entered, and all indictments found at the Sc])tembcr term, 18158, stolen and carried olf. Since allinnt lias had no further information touching said in- dictment or its whereabouts. Fourth — That the grand juiy of the State, at the Sep- tember term, 1808, was composed of the best men of the County of Kem])er, and of men of more than ordinary intel- ligence and unim])eachable integrity. Fifth — That, (»wiiig to various causes, there has beeu no KEMPEU COUNTY "VINDICATED. 35 terni of tlie circuit court bekl in .said couuty since said September term, 1808 THOMAS H. WOODS. Sworu to and subscribed before me, ) June, 1870. j F. M. Toole, [seal. J Cleric. STATEMENT BY JUDGE FOOTE. The indictment aj^ainst W. W. Chisobn, referred to above, was presented by tha .i^raud Jury of Kemper County when I was the presiding' jiHlL;e. Tlie facts as to the indictment are substantially correct. H. W. FOOTE. Al^^FIDAVlTS OF TWO MEMBERS OF THE GRAND JURY. State of IMississirri, [ Kemper County. j Before me, William Ezelle, an acting justice of the peace in and for said county and State, personally appeared, James TTaughey and W. I>. Locket, who, having been first sworn in due form of law, dei)ose and say, and each and every one of them deposes and says: First — Tiiat they were members of the grand jury for the Couuty of Kemper, in said State, at the September term, 18G8, of the circuit court, in the then sixth judicial district, Hon. H. W. Foote being the presiding judge. hecond — That at the September term, 1808, the said grand jury, after patient and thorough examination, found and presented in open court an indictment against W. W. Chisolm, charging said Chisolm, in substance, with the crime of having falsely and knowingly uttered and put in circulation a paper purporting to have been signed by one Perry Moore, touching the alleged burning of a large lot of cotton, said to be the property of one It. J. Moscby, by the army ot General Sherman, in the winter of 1863-4. T/M/YZ~That, in the finding and presentation of said indictment against said Chisolm, affiants say for them- 30 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. selves aud uudertakc to say for tlicir fellow grand jurors, tluit the proceeding- was had, under the functions of their oaths, as the deliberate conviction of their best judgment; and that no other conclusion upon view of the said papers so charged to have been falsely uttered and i)ublished, v>ith the accompanying testimony, laid before said grand jury, could have been arrived at with clear conscience. JAMES nAUGHEY, W. B. LOCKET. Sworn to and subscribed before ) me, this June 7, 1870. j William Ezelle, [l. s.] Justice of Peace, hi and for, etc. This indictment, thus found by the grand jury and for- mally presented to the court, and committed by the court to the hands of the sheriff for safe Ivceping until another clerk of the court could be chosen, suddenly disappeared aud ceased to be among the things inease — by whom, when and in what manner will periiaps never be known, except to those Avho peri)etrated the theft, and to Ilim whose eye alone can i)cnetrate tlie depths of radical infamy. Ilop[»er, the mdical sherilfiu whose custody it was placed, said that his- office was forcibly entered, his safe forced open, and the i);iper stolen, but the writer has this day carefully examined that safe. It is Herring's well known and reliable patent, in perfect condition, aud not one mark or trace of a burglarious attempt can be seen on any por- tion of it; but it seems that this transparent explanation ■was accepted by the court which, in Kemper County, was perfectly under the control of Chisolm and his clan. It should be observed, that the term of the court at which this indictment was reported by the sheritV to have been stolen, was tlie last term ])ri()r to tiie usurpation of the State goxrrnment by the militaiy autIioriti(>s, which continued two or three years, "o od. And on page 219 he presents the names of the su'pervisors for this and the succeeding year, and their politics, as follows : T. N. Bethany TJepubliean. T). McNeil liepublican. G. E. Priddy Independent. "\V3L EzKLLE Eepubliean. lloziE Elore liepublican. Aiul tluis it will be seen that the board to which he here alludes, and characterizes as intensely Democratic, was composed of one independent and fonr Eepublicans. But this fa(;ile carpet ba.q;i^er, as will constantly be seen, finds no dilliculty in .Qi"»i>'fi" 'ii'.v feature or any complexion to a fact that may be necessary to accomplish or conceal his j)urpose of slander ; and, as it suited him best that this board should be intensely J)emocratic when examining and rejecting the warrant, so it was necessary that it should be strongly liepublican when given its true feature as above. Yet, i)erhaps Wells forgot that he was uncovering one lie to hide another, or he may have thought the distance of two hundred i):iges of jungled and disconnected assertions would confusi^ the mind of his readers and hide the truths of his falsehoods, us he had so often succeeded in hiding those of his deeds while ])articipating in these viilanies which he now invokes the ingenuity of slander to shift to lh(^ shoulders of others. Again, in reguid to tliis wurrant, he says : " One reason assigned for its rejection by the board was, that it was taken by Judge Chisolm at a discount, and that he now sought to turn it over in settlement for taxes at its face" This was certainly an unusual manifestation of regard for ! KEJIPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 43 honesty by a radical board of supervisors ; so much so, as within itself to create grave suspicious of its truth with all who have any knowledge of the general character of their proceedings. Mr. John A.Mauese, tbc gentleman Wells here refers to, a man of stanch and well known integrity, informs the writer that the statement in regard to him has not the least foundation in fact ; and as to the alleged declara- tion of tlie district attorney, Capt. Woods, tlie record shows that he was counsel for Gully in tbe action insti- tuted by Chisolm on this warraat, having been en- gaged as such prior to his election as attorney for the district; that in this case, a judgment was obtained in the circuit court against Gully by default, and that the Supreme Court of Mississippi set the judgment aside, when Gully filed his plea in justification of the warrant, and that then Chisolm agreed for it to be settled ; for he himself had caused it to be rejected by the radical board in order to harass Gully. The whole matter was brought before the board of super- visors. The statement of the amount the clerk made at the time the account was allowed, and the statement of Capt. Woods, were all spread before the board, and the account allowed to Chisolm. FROM THE RECORD. Proceedings of the board of supervisors, March 13, 187C, E. Edwards, president ; E. Griggs, J. C. Carpenter, John 11. Davis, T. II. Hampton. It appears that at the September term, 18G7, of the cir- cuit court of Kemper, the ofticers of said court, the district attorney and the judge, made and allowed to John W. Gully, then sheriff of Kemper County, $188, for payment of guards of the jail of said county, heretofore employed and paid by him; and it further appears that said John W. Gully subsequently indorsed said order to J. A. Manese, and that J, A. Manese paid said order to AV. W. Chisolm, then sheriff and tax collector of Kemper County ; and it 44 KE3irEU C;OUNTY VINDICATED. fiirtlier appears that said jiuards were eini)loyed by said John W. (jully, tlieii sheriti'of Kemper County, aud paid I by bill), aud tbat said allowauce was properly made to said i Jobu W. Gully ; but that, owiu.i;- to some mi.sapi)reheusiou ou the part of the treasurer of the Couuty of Kem[)er, auy allowauce for said order of $188 has hitherto beeu deuied aud refused to said W. W. Chisolm, sheritf and tax collec- tor, in his settlements with said treasurer. It is by the ' board of supervisors now ordered that, on the surrender of said order for $188, by the said W. W. Chisolm, to the cleric of the board of supervisors, said clerk do issue to said \V. AV. Chisolm a warrant to the treasurer of the County of Kemper for 8188, to be paid in any funds that may be in i said treasury, in due time. Yet Wells says this matter remained unsettled up to the i time of Gully's death, and he was killed on the liUth of April, 1877. Here looms up another peak in this carpet bijgycr's mountain of iiu'udacity. And again he says : " That for three years followiiiu' that of 18.'}i>, this man (Gully) collected a sum of mom-y dih' IVom the county to the Mobile tS: Ohio Eailroad CompanS; amouutiui;- to §.'},000, and which up to the year 1870, at least, had not been given to that corporation, while tho receipts for the money paid to Gully can be seen to-day" (1877). Uow about the matter that day (1877) 1 Why did he not say, and why did not the Mobile & Ohio Jxailroad Company bring suit ou Gully's bond ? tSimply because there was no occasion for it, and the whole thing is the product of a slanderer's brain. THE ACRE TAX. One of the most iiiranu)us acts of the radical legislaturo of Kemper County was the order commanding a special tax to be levied upon land ; in regard to which Wells is again i)ermitted to make his statement, lie says : " IJefore the administration of John E. Chisolm, under the super- KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 45 \ isioii of a Democratic board of supervisors, a tax was levied upon the county, which was known as the ' acre tax,' and against which there appeared, at the time of the levy, no special objection; but when Judge Chisolm under- toolc to collect the tax there went up a terrible cry against the law, which was characterized as a great ' radical Steal; " And the writer will add that if he docs not sliovv- it to to have been a "radical steal" indeed, he will readily admit the forfeiture of all claim to the confidence of the reader. It will have been observed that John E.. Chisolm was ap- pointed and entered upon the duties of the shrievalty on the 14th day of October, 1869. And we have seen from Wells' own showing (page 249), that the police board of Kemper County during the year 1809 was entirely Republican — four radicals and one so called independent — it being the identi- eal board mentioned heretofore, and which rejected the warrant. The following order establishing this tax is copied from the minutes of the board of police of Kemper County, [November term, 18G9 : " Ordered by the board, that a special tax be levied of one cent per acre on lands worth one dollar and under; over one and under three, two cents per acre ; and all over three dollars three cents per acre, for repairing bridges, building bridges, repairing court house and jail. T. N. BETHANY, President. So it will be seen that this infamous tax was ordered by a board, called Democratic by Wells, of which every mem- ber save one was an avowed and active radical, and mere puppets and pimps of W. W. Chisolm, who was at that time the radical high i:>riest of the county, deputy sheriff, and, as he says, " running the office and collecting the taxes." But we will here let him speak for himself. Before the 4() ke:mper county vindicated. Coii.uvossioiml lMVC8ti,£i'atii).2: Coniinitteo, at Washington, February 14, 1877, page 757, Chisolin says : "There was ^ a tax levied in 1801), by a Democratic board of siii)ervisors of tlic county, for county purposes, levied upon land — upon the acres of laud — one cent gi\'en in u]ion laud at such a price, tV'O cents upon land given at auotlier price, and, three cents upon land given in at the highest price." Q. Per acre ? A. Yes. Tlie tax books were turned over to nie, or rather to my brother. I was doing tlie collecting and was run-i uing the oftic^e. It was before my disabilities were removed,! and a luimber of gentlemen asked me what I thought about the levy. I told them that it was not my business to decide any legal question ; it was simply a matter for them to enjoin the sheriif about, or else to pay the tax;; that the board of sui)ervisors left no discretion with ine. i; had to collect the tax, or else I had to be enjoined. A' majority of the land holders of the county enjoinereineditatcd and \\cll conceived swindle. In regard to this matter the following cir umstance has been related to the writer by ^Mr, J. W. ]\Iaury, of Wa- lialalc, who was afterward the Democratic candidate for slu'iillin opiiosition to Chisolm. Mr. !Maury says: "My special tax, levied under that order of the county board of snpei\isors, was $150, and when 1 i)aid my other KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 47 (axes I told tbe slieriff, W. W. Cliisolm, that I was unwill- iii.L;' to pay that part known as tlie istol in bis baud, and Judge Mcllea bad bis in bis sheath. As McEea advanced Gully backed, neither speak- ing a word until be reached bis own store door, v/heu bo readied out a double barrelled gun, dropping bis pistol. McEea's fatber bad followed, and was just behind the judge. When Gully raised bis gun McEea said, ' You are not coming it right, sir,' wben Gully fired. j\IcEea kept advancing, and Gully fired the other barrel. Then McEea said, ' Now I'll get you !' and rushed forward. "Both barrels of Gully's gun took effect in McEea's face and breast. When Gully fired the last barrel he ran into bis store and sbut the door after him, and in through the store into the back room and sbut tbat door. Ey the time ]\lcEea got to the door be was so blhided witb blood tbat be could sec notbiug. Ue pushed the door open and fired every round of bis pistol iu the store, playing sad havoc witb dry goods, but failing" to bit Gully. But Gully's gun happened to be loaded witb squirrel shot." Kow, if this statement of Wells be true, taken witb all its attempted garnishments and its contradictions, the writer, as a lawyer, will undertake to say, tbat there could not be a plainer case of an assault with intent to kill found in all tbe ^'olunies of the law, than was this aftair on the part of McEea. He sees a man, with whom be is not friendly, walking innocently down the street, singing a clieerful song indi- cative of good will toward all the world. lie tells bis companions to wait until be can " see that man." He draws bis pistol and advances upon bis intended Yictim, wbo, 63 KE:vrPER countv vindicated. unarmed, find at tlie mercy of his foe, or, as Wells lids it, armed and drawn, walks backwaixl to bis store, seeks refuge in liis castle, vigorously i)ursued by his armed as- sailant, iinds a shot gun there loaded with small shot, turns on his pursuer while in the door of his house, and fires once, tv.ice. Yet his bloodthirsty foe still advances. Still he retreats into an inner room, when his determined pursuer and deadly assailant bombards his house to drive him from the sanctity of his sacred retreat. The shot were small; were in truth what are called bird shot, and in three days McIIea is again on the street. The reader is now, perhaps, jirepared for his arrest and trial for an assault with intent to kill ; but he will be disappointed. The whole machinery of the county was now in the hands of the radicals, and if jNIcRea liad killed John "\V. Gully, the law could not have reached him through the dense mass of cor- ruption that lay between him and its vindicatory arm. " The case," says Wells, " \vas never presented to the grand jury until after McEea's death, and then no indictment icas found.'''' The following statement of Capt. Woods, who witnessed the affair, may be relied upon : "Early one morning I was sitting with John W. Gully on the door steps of his store. Mcllea came uj) nuittering to himself, with his eyes fixed on Gully. I then observed that i\rcliea was intoxicated. I got up and took hold of jMcKea ami endeavored to carry him awaj', and succeeded in getting him to walk with me a short distance. On look- ing back I saw Gully with a gun which he had procured from some place beyond his store, and was returning with it in the direction of his store. I motioned him back with my hand. At this time McEea also saw Gully, and, with Ins pistol in his hand, which lie had drawn when ho first came up to where Gully and I were sitting, attempted to advance upon Gully. I tried to restrain him from going, l)ut he would not permit mc to do so. I then said : ' Well, go then.' I Avalked aside, as I knew, or rather expected, wliut was about to transpire, and I did not wish to sec it. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 53 I then saw McRea's father for the first time ai:)proacli and endeavor to perisuade his son oft'. Immediately after this I heard the liriiig-, and I saw McRea, with bloodj' face, ad- vancing toward Gnlly's store, and firing his pistol into the store," McKea was but sliglitly wounded on this occasion. lie died not man}' months after with consumption, — a disease of which, as the writer is informed, nearly every member of his familj^ has died. Yet, Wells says, the bird shot pepper- ing brought it on. So much for this attempt to assassinate Gully, and its failure, and the ludicrous effort of ^yells to render it sub- servient to his puri)ose, like " a slave, whose gall coins slander like a mint." Let us now return to the operations of Chisolra, and his man Eush. Wo have already seen the very apparent pur- pose for which he was inducted into the office of deputy sheriff under Chisohn, and the personal feud existing be- tween him and Gullj^, Avithout any further prosecution on the part of the latter, save such as the carrier tongue of mischief communicated to and Iro between them, in pur- suance of the purpose to be wrought. Some time during the month of August, 1870, Ensh sent Gully word that he would attack him on sight. Gully knew very well what this meant, and he was not a man to hide himself under such circumstances. Yet, it will be observed, that in all the difficulties which his Democratic prominence iiuuirred, and which radical vengeance devised, in not a single in- stance has he been shown to be the aggressor. His jdace of business was in De Kalb, but his residence was about two miles distant, to which he repaired every evening: and, on the evening he received the foregoing mes- sage, he started home at his usual hour in company with his brother Sam Gully and a Dr. Smith, but took the pre- caution to take his gun along. The otlier two Avere uu- ■ armed ; and as the three rode along the street leading in the direction of Gully's residence, and just as they were passing the last storehouse of the village, Eush, who had 54 KEMPER COUNTY VLNDICATED. been waiting for Gully, suddenly approached them with his gun raised in his hand, and cocked, calling upon Gully to .stop, that he wished to settle Nvith him then and there; and while he was in the act of discharging- its contents at John Gully, Sam Gully rushed between them and seized Kush's gun by the muzzle, wliich exploded at the same time, shooting Sam Gully in the thigh. John Gully, who, in the meantime, had rode beyond the corner a few steps off, now turned as soon as he saw his brother shot, and fired two shots at Hush, one of which took effect, and Hush fell to the ground. Gully then immediately turned his at- tention to his wounded brother, who was mortally wounded, the arteries of his leg having been torn away, lie lin- gered but a few hours and died. This was the second open attempt to assassinate the devoted Gully. A man deliberately sends him a message to prepare for death, waylays him, rushes upon him with cocked gun from a covert alley, while he is quietly seeking the bosom of his family, and in an avowed assault with in- tent to kill, slays an unarmed and innocent man who is attempting to parry the deadly muzzle aimed at the lieart of his brother ! T ask the lawyer reader if this was not murder, by every l>rinciplo, precept and piecedent of law? Yet Ifusli was iMought to trial and acipiitted by a court, sheriif, clerk and jury, all ])repared ami packed ibr the occasion. The crime of murder is deiined as follows under the laws of ^Mississippi. Eevised code, sec. 2,G28. Code of 1857, art. 1(55, page GOO: "The killing of a human being without the authority of law, by any means, or in any manner, sliall be nuirder in the following cases: When done with the deliberate design to effect the death of the l)er.son killed, or any human being. " AVhen done in the commission of an act eminently dan- gerous toothei's, and evincing a depraved heart, regardless of Inwnan life, altliougli without any ])remeditated design to elfect the death of any particular iiulividual. "^^'hen done without any design to elleet death, by any KEISIFJIU COUNTY VINDICATED. 55 I)erson engaged in tlic commission of tlie crime of rape, bnrglury, arson, or robbery, or in an attempt to commit sncli felonies." Tiie crime of manslaugliter is described as follows: lievised code of Mississippi, 1857 and 1S71, art. 170, page GOi : '' The killing of a human being, without malice, by the act, procurement, or culpable negligence of another, Avhilc such other is engaged in the perpetration of any felony, except rape, burglary, arson, or robbery, or while such other is attempting to commit any felony besides such as are above enumerated and excepted, shall be deemed man- slaughter ; or the killing of a human being, without malice, by the act, procurement or culpable negligence of another ■while such other is engaged in the perpetration of any crime or misdemeanor not amounting to felony, or in the attempt to perpetrate any crime or misdemeanor, in cases Avhere such killing would be murder at common law, shall be deemed manslaughter." The reader will readily perceive under which description the ofl'ence just described falls. The act was done with a deliberate and avowed design of effecting the death of a human being, although other than the victim. And there was no attempt to deny these circumstances on the trial ; and notwithstanding the difii- culty at that time of obtaining an indictment of any char- acter against a radical, the district attorney succeeded in procuring the following bill for manslaughter to be found : against liush : CIRCUIT COURT. State of Mississipri, ) tvt 7 m -.or... Kemper County. \ November Term, 1870. The grand jurors of the State of Mississippi, elected, em- panelled, sworn and cliarged to "inquire in and for the body of the County of Kemper," upon their oath present that B, F. Eush, lately, to wit : On the tliird day of Septem- ber, 1870, in the County of Kemper aforesaid, in and upon one S. K. Gully, unlawfully and feloniously an assault 56 KEMPER COUNTY VINDKJATEU. (lid make, and liiin, the said S. K. Gully, then and there, did unlawfully and feloniously kill and slay. The cause, after numerous continuances, at the instance of the defendant, came on for trial at the March term of the court, 1873. As we liave seen, the whole judicial machinery at this time was in the hands of the radical party; conse- quently, the whole trial was looked u]»on as a mere mockery of law, aiul no disa])i>ointment or surprise was occasioned by the result. And it is merely for the ])uri)ose of showing- the IxMit of the proceedin,^>;, the impossibility at this time of bringiiii;- any radical to punishment in the County of Kemper, that these records are introduced. The following charges were asked for on the i)art of the State and refused by the court: "If the Jury sliall believe from the evidence that Eush, the defendant, entertained no malice toward S. K. Oully, and even had no rpiarrel or contest with him at the time Gull.v is alleged to have been killed, and that he accidentally killed Gully in doing or attem])ting to do any felony or misdemeanor, yet he is guilty as charged, and the jury ought so to find.*' Whar. Crimiiuil Law, vol. 2, page 934. "If the jury shall believe from the evidence that liush, the defendant, entered into the conllict in which (Jully lost his life, armed with a deadly wca])on, not intending to use it, but only resorted to it in the heat of conllict, whereby Gidly's death ensued, then he is guilty of manslaughter, and the Jury ought so to lind." (Jreen v. State, Morris' State cases, 7S5. The following charges were given by tlie court lor the defendant: " That, before the jury in this case can find a verdict of guilty against the defendant, B. F. Hush, they must be satislied from the evidence before them, beyonet bagger V\ ells, lie says, in his book, page 42 : " The evidence elicited before the grand jury vras to the etiect tliat a shot from IJnsh'.s gnu, at the time, could not have inflicted the wound that caused Gully's death. Notwithstanding this fact, an indictment was found; but it is believed to this day, by all who have gone into an im[)ar- tial iuvestigatiou of the subject, that John Gully, in shoot- ing at Eush, accidentally shot and killed his owu brother." It is indeed strange that this ^'- impartial investigation'^ was not made on the trial of the case, by Eush or his coun- sel, and the resulting fact brought out in the pleadings ; for, in any other age, in any other country, and before any other court of justice, it surely would have saved him from the gallows. yoon after Eusli recovered Irom his wounds he charged a. young man, iramed Williams, li\ing in ]3e Kaib, with dis- turbing liis domestic relations, n[»(>n which the young man tied to Ins father's residence, a few ndles distant; but Eush gathered up his clan and iollov^'ed him. Tiiey attacked the house, but young Williams fought witJi such des])eration, wounding several of the party, one of whom was a negro and another H. A. IIoi)per, the ex-sberiff of the county, and the one from whose office was stolen the indictment against Chisolm, that the Williams residence has since that time been known by the martial name of Fort AVilliams. On the night of the attack upon the Yv'illiams residence, liush was accompanied by II. A. Uopper, ex-sheriff; John Hill, Chisolm's deputy ; George Jack, a negro ; and the old Scotchman, McClelland, whose name will again ai)pear in a prominent role in this work. The manner of attack was as follows, as related in substance by the father of Wil- liams, who now resides a few miles from De Kalb : "About midnight, a negro, named George Jack, presented liimself at the door of the AViiliams residence with an anonymous note, addressed to young Williams, and pur- ])ortir.g to be a summons requiring him to be at De Kalb, without failure, early on the following morning. A brother of W illiams, on reading this note, asked the negro what it 60 KEMrEE COUNTY VINDICATED. meant, and what he came there for, at the same time ad- vancinnf to tlic door. At this moment Kusli, Avho was slandinq; Just outside of the door witli a irun in his hand, cried out, 'Close up!' when immediately the report of a g:m\ was heard on the other side and in rear of the house. Young- Williams then seized a gun and took his position at a window, whence he fired at some one just beyond the fence of the back yard. At this the firinj^ became i;eneral around the house. Several shots directed at the Hash of Williams's gun entered the window at which he was stand- ing. In the meantime his sister rushed to the door, and made a narrow escape, thirteen buckshot having entered the facing of the door within a few inches of her person. At the second or third shot fired by young Williams, some one cried out with an expression of i)ain, upon which the assailants retired." The result was that two of the attacking party were ■wounded ; and fearing the consequences of the assault, on the next morning, Eush, together Avith Ohisolm and his deputy, Hill, appeared before J. C. Carpenter, a justice of the ])eace, and by atiidavit applied for a warrant to arrest Williams, and desired that it should be antedated, so that it might appear to have been issued on the day preceding and ])rior to the attack. The pui]>ose of this was to obtain some pretence for the assault. This being refused by Car- penter, they applied to another justice of the peace in another beat, who granted the warrant, and antedated it as desired. Chisolm then summoned a posse and pro- ceeded to arrest Williams and another young man, who was alleged to have been ])resent aiding and abetting AVilliajns, during the night of the attack, in offering resist- ence to ])rocess of law in the hands of the deputy sheriff. Young AVilliams (tonld only escai>c the vengeance of his persecutors by flying to Texas. The following is Chisolm's sworn testimony in regard to this affair before the con- gressional comnlitte(^ : "Twill say that 1 never have summoned anylxid^- but Democrats to help me arrest anybody. 1 summoned some KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 01 Democrats to help me arrest a man out there who had shot a deputy sheriff of mine, and they went very cheerfully "with me ; but there was a clamor raised against them by this same crowd of men, and the next day Ave came very near having a general riot in our town on account of it. The deputy sheriff was shot while trying to arrest a man in my county, who had insulted a lady of our town, and when he came back slightly wounded, I raised a posse, all Democrats but one, and went after him, but we never found him. When we came back it was very late at night, and news was brought to the men with me before they got to town, that Mr. Ctu11j% Dr. Fox, and other men in the town had said that they hoped they would get their damned heads shot off" for going with such a man as me, a damned radical, to arrest a gentleman. The next day a boy came running to mj'^ house, and said that I had better go down in town, that there was going to be a general fight. When I got there I found four or five young men who w-ent with me there, with their double barrelled guns, and other men who were in sympathy with them. I asked them v.hat Avas the matter. They said they did not intend to let any man say they were a G — d damned set of low down scoundrels, for going to do w^hat they conceived to be their dutj^, to execute the law. " Q. Who was it that was making a fuss with them ? " A. Gully and Dr. Fox were the leaders of the crowd. I told them that we must have quiet and peace there, but that if anybody had insulted them, and had done any wrong to them, ' I will fight, notwithstanding I am sheriff. I am not sheriff" enough to have you run over us all.' When Dr. Fox saw that I was in town, and a big crowd coming around me, a man brought me a double barrelled shot gun. Fox put his head out of the den they stayed in, and said: 'It is a damned infernal lie! ISTone of us said any- thing about you, or any of those men who went with you yesterday ; and these boys are getting a stir up in this town for nothing.' Said I : 'Fox, while I have my own opinion as to what you said, come out here and declare that pub- 62 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. licly and all will be right.' lie came out aud said : 'The Jiiaii wlio said 1 said aiiylLiiig about you, or tlie ineu who went wiili you yesterday, tells a damned internal lie.' Said I : '13oys, that is satislactory. It does not make any ditier- ence now as to what anybody may tell you, they may i^o to him now.' And then Gully wrote a note stating that he had not said unytliing about it." Here we have, according to his own sworn statement, a shcrif}', the i)eace otiicer ol' the county, encouraging a pend- ing afiray, ami heading a threatened riot. The individuals who composed this so called i)osse, to whom he alludes, and characterizes as beini<" all Democrats save one, and belong- ing to the iirst families in the town, w'crc as follows : John Hill, a radical, mentioned before as the desperado Avhom Cliisolm im])orted and made deputy sheriff to in- timidate, if not to assassinate, John W. Clully ; Charles liosenbaum, a fornnu' deputy of his, and a radical ; J. J\r. lloberts, a radical, and crony of Chisolni ; Henry Uohannan, a radical ; J. F. Grace and A. ]\r. McClelland, i-adicals : Ben liush, a radical, and former deputy sherilf under Chisolm, the man who kiilcd Sam Gully, and who had jnib- licly charged his own wile with discreditable intinuicy with young "Williams; and Tom J. liam))ton, who was the only Democrat among them, and who was inveigled into the nu)b under the im[)ression that it was a lawlul posse, aud that his summons was a duty which he could not avoid. As to the scene which Cliisolm so glowingly depicts under oath, as occurring in the streets of De Kalb, in which he, as sherilf, with double barrelled gun in hand, headed thest' men, all likewise armed, and promenaded the streets to the intimidation and terror of Gully and Fox, the writer has been able to hnd no conlirmation of it whatever. Yet, be this as it may, the allegation itsell", so audaciously and boastfully made, shows the character of the man, and forms am)ther link in the chain of lawlessness that marked liis cours(>, on all occasions, and stamped every feature el his career. It is certain that m-ither John W. Gidly or Dr. Fox, to KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. Go wliom lie alludes, ever manifested any disposition to cringe to Cliisolm under any circumstances, or to shirk any per- sonal responsibility which he might see proper to saddle upon them, save so far as to avoid, if possible, the difii- culties into which he constantl}^ sought to involve them. Not long after this occurrence, an attempt was made at night to shoot Hush while entering his gate. The shot proceeded from a gun in the hands of some person con- cealed behind the corner of an old church, about fortj^ yards distant. Chisolm seized upon this circumstance as the means of producing another collision between Eush and John W. Gully. Before the Joint Select Committee of Congress, in 1871, appointed for the purpose of gatherijig up outrages throughout the South with which to feed the enforcement acts, and to perpetuate military rule for the benefit of the radical party in the South, Chisolm testiiied in reference to this affair as follows. In answer to a ques- tion as to what he knew about the matter, he said : " I was the first man who got to Eush after he was shot ; was at the court house vvhen I heard the shots. We were trying to secure a person at the time Captain Eush left the court house. I liad seen a great deal of maneuvering go- ing on among men who I regarded as ver}' bad men in the community. Just at dark I told Captain Jvush that I thought he had better look out, that I thought there was going to be another raid in the county 5 that I saw some maneuvering going on that I did not like. " Q. You said you discovered some suspicious movements then, that day? " A. Yes, sir; and I had informed Eush and three others there, that evening, that there was something wrong going on; that the men who concocted bloody schemes before were concocting them again, and I requested three different men to have their guns ready for a night's fight, if it was found necessary to make it. These movements consisted mainly of seeing a number of men collected in the back of Cully's store — a gentleman there whom I think every man in llie coiiuty regards as one who does not care an^ thing 01 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. about liaving the law executed. There were several men there from out iu the country, two of them brothers of tliis man Gully, and several other suspicious characters. There Avas one other man iu town whom I did not know at all. "Q. Why did you suspect these men of hostility toward Eush? "A. I suspected them of hostility' toward any man who was opposed to lawlessness, and rioting, and doing* things illegal and wrong in the county; more especially to Ivush, because he and they were not friendly, as these parties are not friendly to any man who does not agree with them in politics." Whatever nmy be the truth or falsitj' of these statements, it is plain that Chisolm seems never to be barren of the disposition to cast obloquy and imputation upon John W. Gully, and never forgetful of an opportunity of, in some Avay, connecting hiju with every discreditable occurrence. The preceding testimony of Chisolm will, 1 am sure, readily suggest the spirit that actuated the testifier. Tlit^ character of his suspicions, and the reasons he assigns for their existence, bear the stami) of absurdity and the color of purpose upon their face. There is not now, iior has there ever been, the least scin- tilla of evidence to connect any of thcGullys with this ad. It is certain that John W. Gully had nothing to do with i his character forbids such a supposition ; he was not a man to attack his enemy in the dark. This feature of his char- acter is vouched for by all who knew him ; and if any sus- picion rested upon the younger Gully s, it had no other foundation than the i)lausibilit3' ari.sing from a suflicient cause. The innocent blood of a brother, uncle and father will, like that of Abel of old, continue to cry Irom the ground in a voice that cannot fail to reach the dullest ear and the most callous heart of humanity, and if sentiment ])r()ves sui)('rior to vengeance, it is because reason is more ])()\\'('rful than lagc. Unt we must leave this «letestable act wiaj»i)((l ill the clouds of mystery, which none but the perpetrator and the eye of lieaven can penetrate. KEMPETl COUNTY VINDICATED. G5 During- the period we arc now traversiug, tliat is 1870 and 1871, the star of Mississippi that had blazed so bright- ly upon the escutcheons of both the Uuion and the Confed- eracy was obscured by tlie glitter of the military epaulet, her mantle of sovereignty was trailed in the dust, and her political vesture was parted between the soldier, the negro and the carpet bagger. It was during this time that a military force was stationed at Lauderdale, on the Mobile & Ohio Eailroad, close to Kemper County, and the reader will now, perhaps, be pre- pared for an era of quietude in that county, but it is only necessary to refer again to the book of J. M. Wells to have our hopes and expectations again dashed to the ground. He says : " From late in 1809 to 1871 — less than two years— some thirty-five negroes were known to have been killed by the ku-klux ; while whippings took place almost nightly." If this be true, and there bo no limitn tion upon the trial of military offenders, I would respectfully call the attention of the President of the United States and that of the general of the army to the fact, and would respectfully suggest that the officers in command of this Lauderdale garrison be at once placed upon trial and cashiered or shot for such grave, aggravated and high handedderelictiouof duty, as to allow thirty-five negroes to be killed by the ku-klux under their very noses, while their records and reports show but one, a single instance of a citizen of Kemper County having been tried for negro killing. John E. Chisolm, brother of W. W., was at this time the sheriff and jieace officer ofthe county, while W. W. Chisolm was his deputy, and was, as he testified before the investi- gating committee, "running the office." There shonld certainly be some severe penalty in waiting for officers wlio, upon the word of a crony, are thus shown to have been guilty of such culpable misfeasance and nonfeasance. But here Wells again comes to the rescue. He stiys : " By the untiring i)erseverance of Judge Chisolm and a low associates, the military were enabled to raid heavily and 5 66 KEMPEll COUNTY VINDICATED. more sncccssfiilly upon the l;l;in, uiuliminLcrsof tlieni were arrestetl, while others lied lor sai'et^' and sought new fields of glory in more hospitable eliines. IMany of thc^ men ap- prehended, siiys Judge Chisoliu in his testimony, told hy whom they had been encouraged to perform these acts of lawlessness, l-'oremost among tlie names given in this connection were those of Joim \V. Gull^' and Dr. Fox." jS'otwithstanding all this bugaboo of thirty-five liumnu beings having been liuinche, in nearly evei-y case, the lesuli of the niisrul(>. inaugiiialed by the radicals. 1 will (race A\'ells once mon*. through the dre:ir wilds ot" his imagiiKiry murders of this period, Mid then discard his bloody Jictions and concocted rei)orts as no less wearisome and disgusting to the WTilcr than he feels assured they will be to the reader. KEMPEIi COUNTY VINDICATED. G7 It is said that oa one occasion wlieu Ilercules Avas atteiul- ing- bis herds among the jnountains of Thrace, they began to disappear one by one in a mysterious manner. Ilercules endeavored to track them, and by that means to ascertain the direction in which they had wandered or had been driven oH'; and yet he could lind no trace of an off going track, ne discovered, it is true, a suspicious looking cave, but then the tracks were all leading away from it. But he finally discovered that this cave was the abode of the thief, and that the latter had carried off the stolen cattle b^" the tail, in order to prevcut their being tracked. In this same manner Wells has endeavored to parry attention from any opening in his mountain of men- dacit}'. lie has drawn all his falsehoods after him by the tail. His chapter of crimes in Kemper County finds no support in the records of the courts, nor in the knowledge of the oldest inhabitants of the county. " Yet, whether true or basest lie, Ilis party must have food or die." The following proceedings before the military commis- sion, held at Lauderdale, in the winter and spriug of 1870, will give a pretty good idea of the quality of the food used, and the manner of its preparation : In this connection Wells quotes from the testimony of E. C. Powers, once Kew England governor of Mississippi, and which he in- vokes as utterly unimpeachable, when it is well known in Mississippi, vvhere he now resides, that during the whole radical career in this State, in which he was a prominent actor. Powers fully and unreservedly participated in every scheme, of whatever nature, calculated to advance the in- terest of his party or himself; and that he, in unison and complicity with all others of his party in Mississii)pi, looked to the process of the "outrage mill" as an unfail- ing source of support, and his conduct has never v/ari'anted his veracity being deemed any more indubitable than that of his political associates. And here, it may not be improper to relate a circum- 6S KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. stance that occurred at Do Kalb durijig a political canvass in M'liicli this same Powers was i^layin^- a conspicuous part. It was while W. W. Chisolin was sheriff of Kemper County. Powers was uiakin.i? a speech, represented to liave been ex- tremely violent and incendiary in its character, in whieli he was takinij: occasion to tell the negroes that the jJ)eiiK)ci-ats had and wouhl continue to steal from them everything- they jnade ; that that was a common complaint and a universal fact 5 whereui)on John W. Gully, Avho was present, said to Powers that if that assertion was based upon negro testi- mony, then negro testimony should be as available on one side as on the other, and that he had it from good au- thority that the negroes on his (Powers') place had refused to pay their taxes on the ground that he (Powers) had robbed them of everything they made, and that he ought to pay tlicir taxes. This interruption was made in a mild and res]>ectful manner; wlien W. W. Cliisolm, who was then slierilf, and a candidate for re-election, ran out of the court house and up to the speaker's stand, with liis ]>istol in his hand, exclaim- ing, "By (r — d, John (jirully shan't talk to Governor Powers in that way," and seeing a negro with a gun slariding by, lie placed his hand on liis shoulder, saying, "That is right, old iV'llow, stand up to us; and should they kill me, by G — d, don't you let any one of them escape ! I have got ten thousand dollars saved for my wile, and, by G — d, I would just as soon die as not!" This circumstance has been related to the writer, and vouched for by many of the ]nost respectable men in the county, who were present at the time. P)Ut I will leave this question of veracity with W Extract I. A military commission is hereby appointed to meet at the post of Lauderdale, Mississippi, a-t 10 o'clock a. m., ou the 17th instant, or as soon thereafter as practicable, for the trial of such prisoners as may be pro^^erly brought before it. detail for the commission. 1. Captain J. F. Eandlett, TJ. S. army. 2. First Lieutenant W. H. Vinal, Sixteenth Infantry. 3. Brevet Major G. Yan Blucher, U. S. army. 4. First Lieutenant E. C. Gaskill, U. S. army. 5. First Lieutenant William Qninton, U. S. army. C. Brevet Major Placidus Ord, U. S. arm^^. 7. First Lieutenant J. S. Appletou, U. S. army. First Lieutenant William J. Daws, Judge Advocate. The commission will sit without regard to hours. By command of Brevet Major General Abies. (Signed.) Williajvi Atwood, Aide-de-camp, Acting Assistant Adjutant General. By subsequent special orders, the following members have been relieved : Captain J. F. Bandlett, Brevet Major Placidus Ord, First Lieutenant William H. Vinal. Headquarters Fourth Military District, ) Department of Mississippi, [• Jackson, Mississippi, October 7, 1869. ) Special Orders) fx-tt^att No. 217. ( jKJviitAoi. II. Captain Eeuben Eobbins is hereby relieved from duty at the post of Vicksburg, Mississippi, and detailed as a 70 KE:\irER COUNTY VINDICATED. mcnibor of tlio military oomniission instituted at Lauder- dale, 3Ii.s8issii)i)i, by S])ecial orders Ino. 108, i)aragrapli II., current series, Iroiu these lieadcjiiarters. IJy conunand of 13KEVET ]\L\..jon General Ames. (Signed.) ^VILLI^3I Atwood, Aide-de-camp, Actintj Assistant Adjutant General. A true copy, "Willi A:\r Daws, First Lieutenant U. 8. Army. Charges and specifications preferred against Dick Evans, Kiley llickerbothani, James Fulton, ITarvey JJrown, John Lovine, Amos Humphries, Thouuvs Kuntz and ]\Iichael Kuntz, citizens. charge first— murder. Specification. — Tn this, that Dick Evans, Kiley ITicker- bothani, James Fulton, Harvey Brown, John Lovine, Amos numphries, Thomas Kuntz and 31ichael Kuntz, citizens of Winston County, in the State of Mississij^ju, eonsi)iring Avith other evil disi)osed ])ersons heietofore, to wit: On or about the sixteeiitli day of Juiu', in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-nine, in said County of Winston, State of ]Mississii)pi, diil make an assault u])on one Alexander Triplett, otherwise called Alexander Duncan. They, the said Dick Evans, Kiley llickerbotham, James l^'ulton, Ilarvey Krown, John Lovine, Amos Ilum- ])hries, Thomas JCuntz and 3licliael Kuntz, did then ami there, feloniously, wilfully, and of their malice aforethought, kill and murder. ciiai;ge si:cond— assault avitii intent to kill. Specification. — In this, that they, Dick l*'vans, Kil(>y llick- erbotham, James Fulton, IIar\'ey Krown, John Lovine, Amos Humphries, Thomas Kuntz ami Michael Kuntz, citi- KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 71 zons of Winston Couuty, in tlio State of Mississippi, con- spiring witli other evil disposed persons lieretoforo, to wit : On or iibout tlie sixteenth day of Jane, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-nine, in said County of AV^inston, State of iMississippi, did feloniously and with malice aforethoug-ht, make an assault with intent to kill upon three persons, to wit: Alexander Triplett, otherwise called Alexander Duncan, Alexander Trii)lett and Lizzie Triplett, of said county and State. CHA.RGE THIRD— ASSAULT AND BATTERY. Specification. — In this, that they, Diclc Evans, Riley Ilick- crbotliam, James Fulton, llarve^^ lirown, John Lovine, Amos Humphries, Thomas Kuutz aud Michael Kuntz, citi- zens of Winston County, in the State of Mississippi, con- spiring- with other evil disposed persons heretofore, to wit : On or about the sixteenth day of June, in the j'ear of our Lord one thousand eight hundred aud sixty-uine, in said County of Winston, State of Mississi[)pi, did then aud there feloniously assault and beat Alexander Triplett, otherwise called Alexander Duncan, Alexander Triplett and Lizzie Triplett, of said county aud State. CHARGE FOURTH— RIOT. specification. — In this, that they, Dick Evans, Riley Ilick- crbotham, James Fulton, Harvey Brown, John Lovine, Amos Humx^hries, Thomas Kuutz and Michael Kuntz, citi- zens of Winston County, State of jMississippi, conspiring- with other evil disposed persons, did on or about the six- teenth day of June, one thousand eight hundred and sixty- nine, in said County of Winston, and State of Mississippi, feloniously, maliciously and with evil intent, disturb the ])eace of the inhabitants, by destroying i)rivate property, to wit: portions of the dwellings of Alexander Triplett and others, injuring and abusing three persons, to wit: the bodies of xVlexander Triplett, otherwise called Alexander Duncan, Alexander Triplett and Lizzie Triplett, and by 72 IvEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. such violout and turbulent conduct, rendering- it unsafe for well disposed persons to remain in said County and State. (Signed.) JAMES F. RANDLETT, Captain TJ. 8. A. Then comes a lon^ line of witnesses, and from the num- ber of Duncans and Trijilctts among tliem, it would seem tbat tliey were mostly for the ])rosecution, and yet these men were all acquitted and released after all the stern for- malities of the military code had been thoroughly exercised upon them. But what will Wells do about the fact, that there was no Gully in this case ? He thought, perhaps, that he had got- ten beyond the reacli of the truth when he misnamed some of the parties in this case, and transferred it from 18G9 to 1871. But in the book written by that individual, neither years, nor months, nor days, nor facts, nor falsehoods, are assigned any particular signilicanco, only when they suit the occasion. He evidently deemed anachronism and in- coherency the most potent allies of falsehood, as being the best calculated to conceal his impossibilities and absurd- ities. The writer is assured by the then ofQccrs of the county that Wells never once examined the records of their offices, and that no one can be ibund in the county of whom he made any inquiry, other than the members of the Chisolm clan. And his geography, too, is as mendacious as his chrono- logy and nomenclature, and adds additional falsehood to his facts, as the following extract from his book will show. He says : " The immediate occasion of this visit of the klan to the ])lantation of ex-Governor Powers, was as follows : Matt ])nnc,an, the colored man whom they sought to kill that night, some two years before had rei)orted to the military, at Camp Lauderdale, the murder of a little brother of his by the same crowd of men. This boy — Piatt's brother — was taken from his cabin, tlrau-n and quartered, and his KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. '■ 73 mangled body tlirown into the Talladega swauip. Matt's offence was that lie had reported this 'little act of j)leas- antry' to tlie authorities." Tt is evident from this, that Wells liad heard of the English crime of high treason, and from it invoked to his aid an expression that for genera- tions has had no i)ractical significance under the English law, yet it has the sound of horror, and that was sufiicient for his puri)osc. Again, it is believed, that there is uot iu the State of Mississii)pi, a river, creek, bottom, or swamp that bears the name " Talladega " There is a town and small stream by that name iu the northern part of the State of Alabama, hundreds of miles from the alleged scene, but none in Mississippi. The very name was un- known to the Indians who inhabited its forests, and the writer, after thorough inquiry, has found this story to have been fashioned by the same mould that has given forma- tion to most of the " terrible killings " of Wells. It would be inconceivable how any one could read the following narrative, so obnoxious to paternal experience and to cveiy sentiment of humanity, without the mingled feelings of scorn and indignation for the author of the concoction. lie says : " George Evans, the young man killed," on this visit of the klan to the plantation of ex-Governor Powers, "had been raised in the county, and was well known by every- body. Two of liis brothers were arrested by the military previous to this, charged with killing a freedman. Evans' body was buried secretly, on his father's place, early the next morning, and the report was circulated that he had died suddenly of cholera morbus. His father said that his ileatli was caused from eating too many oysters and sar- ;lines the night before. The kind of which he partook was m healthy, no niatively iree from occurrences of this nature, and its ciintinal docket remarkably light. And aiiotlier district attorney, who scr\ed from ISOG to 1870, .s;-iys that there are but few of the Icillings referred to by ^VeIls, of which he has any knowledge, or ever heard of ))efore. How Wells obtained his information can only be solved by the supposition that he obtained none at all. He cer- tainly never looked at the records of the county ; and although he was here in De Ivalb, ])retendiMg to be waiting on the Chisolm family, he talked with no one but the clan. He v/alked along the street, and no one paid any atten- tion to him ; and the writer has not found a single person who formed his acquaintance, or of whom he asked a single question. And it is apparent that he obtained only sucli insight into affairs as was sufhcient to afford suggestions for his concoctions. I would like to dismiss him entirely, and will do so, at least, for awhile, and return to the career of W. W. Chisolm. In the fall of 1860, as has been before mentioned, W. W. Chisolm was appointed sheriff of Kemper County by J. F. Alcorn, who had just been elected, by the negroes and New Englanders, governor of Mississippi. In this position he saw his Held of operatior.s still expanded, and his oppor- tunities for wreaking his vengeance more frequent and deci- 84 ICEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 8ivc, And one of his first overt acts was, as might be expected, directed against tlie GuUys, as they seemed to be at this time tlie only obstacles to his niibridled career. A man by the name of Kig.nins had a light with and killed another by the name of Floyd. Iliggins was ])romptly arrested by the friends of the deceased, ami as there was no snflicient jail at that time at DeKalb, he was sent to ]\racon, the county seat of the adjoining County of Noxubee, where he remained in jail until his trial. AVhen brought back for trial, there still being no safe jail, he was, as a matter of course, iidrusted to the hands of the sheriff and his ofticers. The friends of Floyd moved the court to have a guard placed over the prisoner, alleging that Chisolm would cer- tainly ])ermit an escape, for the reason that Floyd was a relative of the Gullys. The judge refused to order the guard, upon tlie ground that it was the duty of the sheriff to summon sid'licient strength to guard his i)risoner. In- stead of that, however, he was sent down to the residence of Ben Kush, Avho was Chisolm's deputy, and there a horse was furnished him belonging to the old Scotchman, McCIel- lan (who will hereafter iorm a conspicuous ligure in tliis work), upon which the prisoner Iliggins made his escape, aided, abetted and ])romot('d by Chisolm, the sherill" of the county, and his de])nty liush, and for no other reason than that the person whom he had killed was a friend and rela- tive of the (iullys. It may not be improper, in this jdace, to revert to the personal character of this man, Chisolm, and his family, whose names have been llaniited in the liuic of the world as synonyms of virtue and jinrity. In regard to the an- cestors of Chisolm, who weie Georgians, the writer has been able to learn but little. lie has, however, been in- formed by a gentleman who was raised in the same iieigli- l)orhood, who was a sehool mate of Chisolm, and who is now one of tin; most distinguished physieians in Mississip])i, tliat the Chisolm lamily were low and obscure: and as to the noble family of Mann's, whos(^ i)edigree Wells has KEMPER COUjNTY VINDICATED. 85 traced upon the early oaks of the forests of Florida thror..;;li the wars of the Spanish settlements, and upon the walls of jMoro Castle, all their mighty deeds and heroic patriotism culminates in the character of John W. Mann, the father of Mrs. Chisolm, who, as the writer has been informed by 51 gentleman who knew him well, and who now holds a distinguished position in the judiciary department of Miss- issippi, was a man of low, mean instincts, and a perfect and worthless sot, ignorant and degraded in mind and morals. It is with regret that the writer feels the necessity of condescending to notice the character of obscnre indivi- duals, especially of those who took no part directly in the transactions which form the main features of this Avorlv, but as the Chisolm biographer, Wells, endeavors to set up a false character of the members of this familj' for the ])ur- pose of drawing false and invidious comparisons, and of giving plausibility to his false statements, it is deemed l^roper to introduce, at least one circumstance — one fact beyond all question — as an exposition of the true character of a family from which Wells draws the following inspira- tion : " Whether the theoiy is correct or not, it is one of the in- herent elements of human conjecture to credit and foster the belief that the strong characteristics which may, in any way, distinguish the conduct of individuals, are sure to mark and mould, in some degree, the fortunes of their lineal posterity. Perhaps the bold and venturesome spirit which characterized the lives of their family in generations past, has had its influence in shaping the remarkable life and character of Emily Mann Chisolm." Of the hold and adventurous spirit alluded to, we have only the vague statement of Wells ; but there is one adventure of a mem- ber of this family that bears the most solemn stamp that Lumanity has ever invented for the perpetuation of truth. Before the time of her marriage Mrs. Emily Cliisolm was residing with her uncle, lliram Mann, in the town of Louis- ville, the county. seat of Winston County, Mississippi, and 86 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. concerning: the character of this Mann, 1 have been fur iiished with the ibllowing certified transcript from the re cords of that connty : The State of Mississiri'i, \ Circuit Court, March Term, Winston County. I -^1. J). 1801. The jiiand jnrors of tlie Slate of Mississippi, elected, impanelled, sworn and charged to inqnire for the body of the county of AVinston, upon their oaths i)resent, that Iliram Mann and Michael Burns, late of said county, on the 2od day of Mar(;li, A. D. 1801, in the county aforesaid, one chicken (coniinonly called a hen) of the value of one dollar, of tlie goods and chattels of one W. L. llaker, then and there in the i)Os.session of said W. L. Baker being found, did then and there feloniously take, steal and carry away, against the peace and dignity of the State of Mis- sissippi. S. M. MEEK, District Attorneij. The State of TdississiFrr, ) ^yinston County. ) 1, E. M. llight, clerk of the circuit court of said county and State, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a true and correct copy of the indictment of the State of Mississippi v. Iliram Mann and Michael Burns, as appears on lile in my ollice. Given under my hand and seal of oHice, at Louisville, Mississippi, this the 20th day of July, 1878. It. M. UIGIIT, Circuit Clerl-. From this true bill it will be seen that what comfort this biographer can derive from the connubial honors oi his hero becomes itself an inherent element of conjec- ture. Perha[)S the jdiability of this adventurous spirit renders it capable of varie«l manil'estations.* * Before Iliram Mann could bo arrested upon this indLclment lio sud- denly sold out Ills business, which was the kcepiuy of a small grocery, and loft the county. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 87 Thus it will be seen that if there were any peculiarly vir- tuous proclivities attached to the disj)ositiou of any mem- ber of this family, it was certainl3^ not the gift of iuheri- tance. W. W. Cliisolm was, both by birthright and by na- ture, a man of exceedingly coarse and i>rofaue manners, of a brutal aspect and overbearing disposition toward the ob- ject of his enmity. He possessed in a high degree that savage ambition to rule which delights in strewiug its pathway with monumental marks of the ruin of all opposi- tion. He was a man of implacable hatred and perfectly unscrupulous as to the methods of gratifying his love of revenge, or the means of accomplishing his purposes. The writer is reliably informed that, while probate judge, Chisolm frequently and habitually indulged, on the bench, in the most profane, vulgar and obscene language. A gentleman who was probate clerk states to the author that almost every decision or judicial observation of any length was sure to be welded with " By G — d ! " and " Damn it! " while such expressions formed so large a part of his ordi- nary couA^ersation as to render him disgusting to every l)erson of refinement. But the writer need not adduce any other evidence as to this trait of his character than his own language of record. These and similar expressions were frequently used by him in his testimonj" before the Senatorial Investigating Committee, at Jackson, Mississippi, June, 1870, greatly, no doubt, to the disgust of the grave senators who composed that committee. To this testimony, with its manifestations, admissions and evasions, the writer will have more than one occasion to refer in the ]>rogress of the following i)ages. No sooner had this man become the sheritf of the county, than he determined upon its control in every respect, and tliose who were the least obnoxious to his plans were first reported to the military authorities as being members of the ku-klux-klan. There is no denying the fact that there was a secret or- ganii'.ation pretty generally entered into by the young men 88 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED= of most of the- Soutliorn States imiiiodiatcly after the war, and thv. necessity for sueli an organization was as apparent as the fact of its existence. In many commnnities, and in some counties in Missis- sippi, there were ten bhicks to one white person, ten negroes with savaj;e instincts and brutal ])assions to one white man ; and tlie former, just emerged from tlie quarters of shivery, Avere incited to acts of revenge upon the families of their former masters by the teachings of adventurers and vagabonds, wliom they were taught to regard as the authors of tlieir emancipation. Consequently, a state of affairs was soon established in which neither life, virtue nor property could find safety but from the fear of a sud- den and mysterious retribution. It was this necessity that tirst gave rise to what has been known as the ku-hlux-klan. That its operations were after- ■\vard perverted, and that it in many instances was trans- formed into a political machine, does not by any means criminate its origin or mar the incalculable good which it was producing as the champion of virtue. The ku-khix mask vrill take its i)lace in history by the side of the lance of cliivalry, and it was the very mystery of its ])rocee(lings tliat rendered it so effective in the sup- pression of crime. Jiut its tendency to become political in its nature, and a means of taking private revenge, was reprehensible ; and that it assumed this character in some instances in Kemper County, as well as in other places, is not to be denied. In consequence of thih several negroes were killed, or supposed to have been killed, by mcnibers of the klan in the State of Mississipi)i. ]>ut no sooner did the necessities which provoked the formation of the associations known as ku-klux-klans dis- ai)pear, than the organizations themselves ceased to exist. They were the i>roduct of the fears engendered hy the dangers which, after the war, enveloped Southern society, and ])(Mi('trnl(Ml to the Acry homes and nnrscries of virtue and injuxtence. Tiiese dangei's were much aggravated by the pjesence of a few white men of degraded character, Kli^MPEll COUNTY VINDICATED. SO Avlio being- as it weie, to tlie manner born, could do more to excite and intlanie the Jiaturally unbridled passions of the ignorant and bestial negro than all the iutiuences of the carpet baggers and soldiers combined, at the mere sugges- tion of whose wishes he would not hesitate to violate every hiw of God and man. This association was a great obstruction iu the w^ay of the carpet bagger and scalawag. They abhorred it, and pursued it with the utmost vigor and vengeance. This inir- suit, however, was confined to the path of slanderous and exaggerated leports to the authorities of the Federal gov- ernment. And the radical party, which was now in pos- session of this, was sadly in need of reported outrages to enable it to adopt, and ]n\t iu execution, the enforcement acts by which it hoped to acquire an indefinite lease of power. Consequently, the ears of the Northern people were ever open, and the army ever obedient, to the call for active aid against the hated klan. It was in this way that Chisolm first endeavored to get rid of his exeraies in Kemper County, and to stille the voice of all opposition to his diabolical career. It was well known that it was through his instrumentality that a military- gar- rison was stationed on the borders of Keni})er County, at Lauderdale, and through his instrumentality that many in- nocent citizens were dragged from their homes and sub- jected to the rigors of a military trial, but one of whom was convicted or found guilty of any offence. This con- duct on the part of Chisolm was doubtless the origin of that hostility against him afterward, so unanimously mani- fested in the county. The proceedings of some of these trials have already been given in full. There was one poor fellow, however, Avho was sent by the military authorities to Little Kock, Arkansas, where he was kept closely confined for two years, Avhen a requisition was obtained from the governor for him, and it was then found that there was not the slightest legal ciiarge against him. xVnd when this plan had lailed — when it was found impossible to procure the imprison- 90 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. ineiit of his ciiemiCvS in some distant military prison, or to drive tlieni iroiu tiie coniity by military raids — Cliisohn began to assemble around liim what he usually stj'led "his crowd." These were chielly Jlopper, Gilmer, Kush, llill- Ivosenbauin, and the old 8cotchman, MeClellan ; and to "Which number may be added the name of Walter liiley. The parts enacted by Hopper, Hill, Hush and Itosenbaum, liave already been partially given in connection Avith the killing' of Sam Gully, the safe robbery and the assault on Williams. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 91 CHAPTER lY. At the fall electiou in 1870, Alabama was redeemed from radical rule, and no sooner bad the Democracy become tri- umphant in that State, and the consequent dispersion of the carpet baggers had taken place, than the border counties of Mississippi were the recipients of a large accession of negro I)opulation. The towns especially became places of refuge for hundreds of vagabonds and fugitives from justice. Among these Meridian seemed to be a favorite resort for this class of persons. At that period the authorities of the town were radicals, and generally of the very worst character. William Sturgis, the mayor, was a !N^orthern man, who consorted with negroes to such an extent as to cause him to lose the respect of even many of his own class. lie collected around him the most malignant char- acters of the two races, and fanned the flames of race pre- judice and partisan animosity, until he had succeeded in producing a bitter feeling between the two races, at least on the part of the negroes. And he never lost an oppor- tunitj^ of manifesting in his official capacity his own bitter- ness against the native white people. Among his clan was a man named Price, also a ISTortheru man, and a teacher of a negro school. He came from Ala- bama, where he had officiated as a leader of the loyrJ leagues, and having acquired great influence over the ne- groes, he persuaded many of them to leave the farms on which they had contracted to labor, in Alabama, and go to Meridian. This was for the purpose of promoting his political schemes, and in this he had the full sym[)atljy of the mayor, who desired an increase of the negro population for like purposes. This man was the high priest of the re- ligious features of radicalism. During this state of attairs, and in the spring of 1S71, a negro from Alabama, named Adam Kenuard, went to Meridian and endeavored to carry back some negroes 92 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. "wlio Iiad abanduiieil tlic contracts made witli their ein- plojers. To eflcct tliis, it is said tliat lie represented liiniself to be a deputy slieritl". AYliile operating' among- tlie negroes in ])nrsuance of his mission, he was taken one niglit from the house in which he was hxiging, and severely whij)ped by Trice and others, lie had known Piice well in Alabama, and i)romi)tly recognized him as the chief party to this transaction, although he was disguised. The other parties were all negroes, with wliom he was un- acquainted. The ne>:t liiorning Kennard made complaint to the justice of the peace, and lodged an atlidavit against Price for a violation of the statute of Mississippi, enacted for the i)uinshment of persons M'earing disguises or perpe- trating any crime in disguise. His back bore the marks of a severe castigation. Upon this atlidavit Price was arrested and placed under a bond of $200, to )nakc his appearance for examination, be- fore the same magistrate, on the ensuing Friday. On that day Kennard returned from Alabama, bringing with liim some fifteen or twenty white men, and two colored witnesses to attend this trial of Price. These men announced that they had come with Kennard and the two negro witnesses, for the purpose of protecting them anromeuaded the streets together, and openly declared that if Price was sent to jail on his approaching trial, there would be shooting at once in the court room ; and Price requested his attorneys to be on their guard and keep out of the way, as he did not wish to hurt them. The counsel to whom this warning was given conveyed it to the oppo- site counsel. So general was the feeling of alarm in consequence of the threats and conduct of these parties and the grum ap- pearance of the negroes generally, that some of the leading liepublicans advised Price to leave the town and forfeit his bond, and this he did ; but it was also understood between the counsel that if he did so, no further proceedings should be had in the matter. In pursuance of this understanding, which, however, did not embrace the court, on the trial day of .the cause Price failed to ai)pear, but not so with his friend, Warren Tyler. lie came insolently into court, armed with pistols and with a club axe in his hand. He had also attended all the other occasions on which the case had been continued, and seemed to take extraordinary interest in the conduct and issue of the proceedings. The negroes were very nuich incensed at the idea of Price leaving under these circumstances, and low mutters of dissatisfaction and vague threats were heard from suspicious and grum looking groups collected in various portions of the town. The mayor of the town too, William Sturgis, did not at- tempt to conceal his displeasure at the loss of his friend, Price. He continued assiduously and by evTry means in his power to fan the fires of discontent, until he had suc- ceeded in arousing the most bitter feelings on the part of the blacks. He then applied to the governor for Federal 94 KEMPEIl COUNTY VINDICATED. troops to be qnnrtered in the town. The troops -wore sent, wliich had the elfect of increasing the (Uinf;ei"ous state of feelinj? between tlie races. Upon this, a petition was signed by a large nninber of citizens, inehiding many h-ading JJepnblicans, and dictated in the interest of i)eace ainl the welfare ol" tlie couiniunity, recpiesting Stnrgis to resign the mayoralty. This he i)Os- itively and i)etnlaidly refused to do. The petitioners then asked the governor to remove him i'rom otlice in order to preserve peace. At this Sturgis became very much enraged, and sent several leading negro politicians and personal friends to Jackson to see the governor and counteract the movement for his removal. In this they succeeded. The governor spurned the petition, and the negroes who had, in the interest of Sturgis, thwarted the elforts of the citizens, returned to Meridian on Friday preceding the riot, bringing with them from Jackson, J. Aaron Moore, the noto- rious negro representative from that county and town in the legislature, wlio lelt his seat in order to i)articipate in the triumi)h on the part of the mayor and his negro allies. On the next day, Saturday the 4th of IMarch, they called a negro meeting, which was largely attended, and from the early morniug until the sun was low down the sky, the angry tones of their speakers resounded from the court liouse, while the whooi)s and howls of the excited audience fell with ominous forebodings upon the ears of the alarmed citizens. These s])eeches were said to be highly inllamma- tory and inceiuliary in their character, i)articularly those of J, Aaron Moore, Warren Tyler and ^Villiam Dennis, alias (.'lopton, the imjjort of whoso sjjeeches was that the negroes .should imnu'diately arm and i)rotect themselves against the outrages ])erp('tiated u[)on tiiem, and which they chaiac- t('r;/('d in terms most inllaniinatory to the negro mind. Aaron ^loore, in his speech, ileclared that Sodom aiid (Jomorrah h:id been destroyed by hre, and if they did not mind, jMcridian would be burned up likewise. It was testiliid before. Vac committci' of investigati n, ni)p;)inted KE3IPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 95 by tlie citizens, that Warren Tyler declared in bis speech, among other intlammatory expressions, that the negroes must stand by each other, aiul adopt the policy ot the Indians— when one was killed, they ninst kill in retaliation. Many remarks of a similar character were made during- the meeting. Among other circumstances w'hicli they invoked to in- stil a spirit of violence in the bosom of their audience was the recent conduct of some white men from Alabania. These men, who came over with the negro Keunard, to attend the trial of Price, had immediately, on their ar- rival at Meridian, arrested two or three negroes whom they recognized as criminals, who had committed lar- cenies and other crimes in Alabama, and who were fugi- tives from justice. These they bound and sent back to Alabama. AVhether they did so upon the ground of con- tinued i)nrsuit is not known. It not, their arrest, without authority or requisition, was in violation of law, and highly reprehensible. Ue that as it may, it gave these vicious negro leaders and their white allies additional grounds upon which to found their incendiary appeals. This un^eting contniued until near sunset, and when it then adjourned, the negroes marched out upoii the streets in military order, and with drums and liies sounding, par- aded through the town armed with ])istols and swords buckled around their bodies. This hostile display con- tinued until dark, when, suddenly, amid the din of their angry tramp, and breaking squads, was heard the cry of "Fire!" The alarm, which seems not to have been altogether unexpected, soon s})read throughout the little city, and soon the Hames were seen issuing from a little wooden building adjoining the store house of Sturgis, the mayor, which soon involved the building. The white ])eoi)le hurried up from all parts of the town and made eNei-y effort to stay the conflagration, but it was noticeable that but few of the blacks could be induced to lend a helping hand, which was very much at variance 9G KE^rPER COUNTY VINDICATED. Mitli tlicir kuowu conduct on former occasions of this char- acter, wiien they had cheerfully rendered the mostellicieut aid. And what was even more susi)icious, as to the origin and purijose of this lire, some of the white people, while on their way to the scene, and some, while enga.iied in endeavoring to extinguish the llames, were tired ninm by unknown persons concealed beyond the lurid glare of the fUimes. And no sooner had the alarm of tire been given, than some of the leading negro politicians took every possible step to prevent the negroes from render- ing any assistance. Among them Billy Dennis, alias Clop- ton, played a conspicuous role. lie placed himself in front of those blacks Avho seemed disposed to help, ex- claiming, with bitter oaths, that it was a white man's fire, and it was their property ; let it burn. They have ruled here long enougli. That if they wanted war, let them have it; that now was as good a time as any. And then, after the block had been consumed, and the tire had been arrested, he was heard to address a crowd of negroes who were standing on the street : " Why in the hell don't you go and get your arms; something to shoot with ? What in the hell are you staiuling here for '^ I have no secrets to keep. AYliat I have to say I say openly and above board." lie then turned away, several of tlie crowd following him, and began to fire his ])istol, Avhich he did four or five times, exclaiming at the same time that, " If the G-d d d white people wanted Avar, let them come out! We are as ready now as we will ever be." It is stated that there was a meeting of the Loyal League Club that night, and that the bell tapped at the same time that the crj' of "Fire !" was raised. So abusive and riotous was Clopton's conduct in endeavoring to incite the negroes to violence, and to prevent their assistance in the effort to extinguisli the llames, that the sherilf finally or- dered him In be arrested. During all this time lai-ge bodies of armed negroes were gutting dilierent parts of the town, and when asked tiic KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 97 meaning of this demonstration, they promptly answered that they were going to fight the white people if they "wanted io hgiit, and, in the meantime, frequent and numerous reports of fire arms were heard in all parts of the town. The contiagration was not arrested until one whole block or square of the town was destroyed. Ou Mondiiy inorning the white people held a meeting to consult as to what measures were best to be taken to in- sure the safety of the town, to prevent any further hostile demonstrations on the part of the blacks, and if possible, to allay the bitter feeling engendered by the teachings of Sturgis and Price. They appointed a committee of safety, the duty of which was to consult and co-operate with the officers of the county in the preservation of peace, to act nnder the orders of the sheriff, or to furnish him with reliable and discreet men to aid him in re-establishing a state of security. They also appointed a committee to wait on Governor Alcorn, and ask the removal of Sturgis and other officers of the town and county, whom they recognized as instigators of these difficulties, and they also appointed another com- mittee to investigate the causes and origin of the fire. This committee proceeded to STimmon witnesses and take the testimony of persons of all i)olitics and every color. As the result of a thorough investigation, they reported iu substance: That the testimony all tended to cast the grav- est suspicions upon the mayor, William Sturgis; that they were of the belief, and the testimony justified and i'orced the opinion, that he had procured the destruction of his own property in order to reap tlni insurance, and with a desire to destroy the town, so as, for political effect, to cast odium upon the Democrats. Be this as it may, ou the night after tlie appointing of this committee of investigation, Sturgis fled from the city, and to which he has never returned. But prior to his lca\ ing the town, and on this same day, Monday, March (>, 1871, Aaron Moore, Billy Dennis alias Clopton, and AVarren Tyler, who had been arrested on the night of the 98 KEMPEIl COUNTY VINDICATED. llro, were brought to trial before Judge Bramlette, of tho magistrate's court, cliarged with riotous coudiict aud iuceu- diary language. During' this trial, Sturgis occupied a seat adjaceut to Warren Tyler, aud, to all appearauces, seemed to be advising- and counselling with him. He seemed to take ])eculiar interest in tho, trial; lie wrote (juestions in a blank book, and handed the book to Tyler, who, in examining the witness ^^I'or he managed his own case), ■woidd refer to this book when asking questions. From all this, aud from the fact of his retiring with Tyler at the time tho latter returned into court armed, it may very pro])erly be inferred that he furnished Tyler with the pistol with which he killed Judge Brandette. These pris- oners had all been promptly disarmed by the sheriff, and entered the court room in that state, but while the trial! was going: on, Sturgis (the mayor), together with Aarou INIoore and Warren Tyler, suddenly left the court room, which was uiuisual for prisoners to do unless accompanied by the sheriff or other officer, and on their return it was observed, by many who testilied to the fact, that Tyler wore a pistol on his person. This man was placed upon trial first, and during its progress James A. Brantley was placed ui)on the stand as witness on the part of the State, and in his testimony he stated the language of a con- versation that had talraplier, Wells, says " that he moved iu the first circles of the society where he lived." if there ever was or is a iirst circle of white society in any youtheru community iu which this individual did or could liave moved, it surely must have been the lowest as well as the fir.-^t circle. And to alle2;e that he ever had any stand- ing iu respectable society either at Scooba or He Ivalb, where he Uccd, would, iu the nu^uth of truth, be indeed ]iumiliatin_ii: to umuy residents of those haudets. Ibit if Wells considers nudattoes and mongrels the identifyin.g- elements of his Jirst circles of society, then, periiaps, he could claim both for himself and Gilmer the social status whi;ill soon became a victinj to stioui;' drink, wliicli, Icindlin.i;' all the natuial iiies of liis nature, rendered him, Avhile under its inlluenee, peculiarly i)rone to scenes of ex- citement, and liable to rush into difliculties. Yet he was beloved by his friends as a man of great natural amiability of character. lie was a most uncomi)romisino- Democrat, and, ou that account, early incurred the hostility of the Chisolm clan. Uc was one of the first men whom Chisolm reported to the military authorities as a ku-klux, and upon which Lall was arrested and carried before a military commission at Laud- erdale Springs, where, although there was no sullicient evi- dence against him, or any, other than his 0])en and out- spoken opinions, through the unrelenting persecution and l)Owei'ful inlluenee of Chisolm and his "crowd" with the military authorities, J>all was subjected to imprisonment and to treatment of great rigor, lie finally, however, escaped from the hands of his enemies and returned to his liome. He was well known to be a man of true courage, aiul to possess but little of the spirit of the braggadocio. Soon after his escape from the military authorities, hf aecidently met Chisolm in the road, amidst a swamj). They were alone, and Ball being fully ai)prised of the, heartless author of his troubles, attacked Chisolm, charging him with having reported him to -the military, and expressing his intention of having satisfaction then and there. Chisolm, Avith all his braggart bullyism, (juailed before the solitary eye of the man whom he had so grossly injured, lie denied that he ever reported Ball, and was sufiered to pass, in a crouching manner, without the in- tended chastisement which he, no doubt, fully merited. From this time Chisolm was afraid of Ball. Ball him- self fiv(iuently narrated the above incident. And that it w;is true to the letter would be leadily vouched by all wlio were familiar with the chMiacteis oi' the two men. ^Viid that Chisolm hatl a hand either directly or indirectly in the KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 107 death of Ball, is certainly not ineoiiipatiblo Avith the cir- ciimstances of that event, bat, on the other liaiul, forms with tliem a suspicious con^ruity. These were as follows : Not lon.i;' after the ineetinjx in the swani]), and at the still liour of niidniiiht, while Ball was in liis bed asleep wi(h liis wife, a crowd of armed men surrounded liis house, and with shots and savaf^'c yells, closed in on all sides upon their startled and helpless victim. So soon as Ball became fully aroused IVom liis slumbers, and aware of his situation, leap- ing from his window, he attempted to make good his escape to a neighboiiiig thicket; but his alert assassins discovered his retreat, and he was shot and mortally wounded, from the etfects of which he died in a lew days, but not until he had made his family and attendants fully understand who were the murderers — the vague shadows of whom left their dim outlines upon his glazed eyes. Ilis dying declar- ations made to his Viifc and others now living in Kemper County, left no doubt as to tlie identification of the mur- derers, for "The tongues of dyitip: men enforce attention. "When words arc scarce, lliey arc rartly spent in vain. They breathe tho truth who breathe their words in pain." He said, in snbstance: "That, at first, he thouglit his assailants were Federal soldiers Avho had come to arrest him again, and he determined to make his es(;apeif ]iossi- ble, and ran down a short hill into a dense thicket of small ])ines, but when the murderers discovered ids retreat they ])ursued him, at the same time crying out, 'Here he goes, liead him,' npon which lie recognized the voice of VA\l Clark and other negroes 5 and not fearing that he wouhl bo hurt by them, he turned and walked back up the hill facing them, and when he had approached within a short distance, Clark cried out: 'Turn loose! Turn loose!' and immedi- ately he and George Cole, both negroes, fired, Clark's shot taking effect iu his shoidder, breast and bowels " Upon the f:nth of these dying declarations, and the at- tending ciicuiiistances, two negroes, named respectively Bill Clark and Julius Griffin — Geo. Cole having made his 108 KEMPEll COUNTY VINDICATED. escape— were arrested and placed in the Iiands of W. W. Chisolin, who was then sherilf of Kemper County. lUit it was not unnoticed by many that the deatli and burial of [)0or liall, whieh, otherwise, seemed to awaken universal sorrow, alarm and indignation throughout the county, seemed to cast a feature of peculiar placidness over the eountenances of the Chisolm clan. And yet the slanderer Wells had stuck his tarnishin<;- moral even at the point of this blunt circumstance, llo allc.nes that this killing occurred near Phil Gully's house, aiul that Chisolm's friends, at that time, as to-day, assert that Phil Gully planned Uall's nuirder, and every other inurder committed by the clan. The impudence that could have suggested such an imputa- tion is almost inconceivable; that Phil Gully, whose charity had for years afforded this poor orphan a home, who had raised him with all the teiulerness of paternal afiection, and Avhich was recii)rocatcd by tliis boy to the extent of lilial devotion, should have "planned his nnirder" by a crowd of armed negroes, at the dead hour of midnight, while aslee[) in the arms of a fond wife, and for no assignable reason, is so i)reposterous that it cannot fail to excite the feelings of indignation and scorn in the mind of every reasonable man, and surely will have the further elfect of bringing the sus- l)iciou of guilt n[)on the heads of those whom its concoction was intended to shield. But let us see to whom the facts also gnide the finger of suspicion. These two negroes were arrested upon the afli- davit of Phil Gully, grounded upon the dying declarations of Ball. One of them, Hill (^laric, who, as IJall declared, lired the fatal shot, was soon permitted by Chisolm to jnake good his escape, and was heard of no inore. The other, Julius (Iriflin, against whom there was no positive testimony, arising from the arently closed on him for life, and place him in uniform and in waiting at the doors of the governor's palace, where his striped trousers were cjc- changed lor the gaudy livery of a governor's waitman. But if he was enabled to present to their wondering eyes such exhibitions of his influence at the State capitol, its manifestations were no less striking in Kemper County, where they saw men charged with the highest crimes, and of which they knew them to be guilty, go scot free at the snuick of Chisolm's fingers; and finally, tliey began to see, what to them was still more striking, the mangled bodies of those who opposed his course lying in the highways riddled with the bullets of the assassin. The exercise of this unlimited control over the minds of the negroes, to the ruin of the whites, seemed to be the culmination of his ambition. Under these circumstances it is not surprising to find that he held the entire negro ballot in his hands. Nor is it a wonder that the ends of i)ublic justice were invariably defeated whenever it was the wish of this man that they should be. In reference to this feature of his career his biographer indulges in the following remarks : "Guided by the firm hand and unconquerable will of one man, the County of Kemper, for a succession of years, has stood the tide of hatred engendered l)y secession and nursed by the overthrow of the 'divine institution,' and the final elevation of the late slave to citizenship and equal llli KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. rights under the hiw, and that stronghold of 'radicalism' become an object of special attention by the white line Democracy all over the State." It may be observed that, as that author can never linish one of his killings Avithout the ghost of a Gully, so he can- not allege a i)olitical fact without the use of such stereo- typed expressions as "tide of hatred," "secession nursed," "divine institution," "white line Democracy," "intimida- tion," "fraud," "violence;" and it is difllcult to see for what puri)Ose he so liippantly Haunts these phrases, other than that of concealing under the wings of abuse the falsity of his statements. IJut if ^yells endeavors to hide the tracks of his menda- city, like the thief who stole the oxen of Hercules, so did Chisolm and his "crowd" strive to leave no tracks of their villanies upon the ollicial tablets of the count}'. The author has not been able to discover any final record of the courts of Kemper County, covering a period of live years, extending from the fall of 1800 to the fall of 1871. During this time there were two i)ersons who filled the jjosition of clerk of the circuit court. One, who was a car- pet bagger, was appointed by the military authorities; the other, who was also a radical, w;is ap[)()iiited by Ames. In regard to final records, the General Code of Missis- sippi contained (he following requirement, article 21, page 481: AVithin three months after the final determination of any suit, or, if an appeal or writ of error shall Ikinc been taken, then within three months after receiving a certificate of tlie aflirmaiice of the Judgment, the clerk shall enter, in well bound books to be kept for the purpose, a full and (complete record of all the proceedings in such suit ; and, on failure to do so, such clerk, on such failure being notified to the court, may be fined twenty dollars for each case in which he shall have failed to nutke up such final record, and he shall also be liable in danmges to any party injured. Yet, notwithstanding this st'verely sanctioned provision of the statute, the author has not been able to liud a single KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 113 fiual record of the court over the signature of either of these clerks during the whole time of their respective ser- vices, which covered a space of five years. But, when it is taken into consideration that, during this time, the judge, sheritf, and every other officer of the I county Vv'cre members of the same party and clan, such malfeasance need not occasion any surprise. All this was well known to the members of the bar who practised in this court, and to others, but they felt and knev/ that it would be utterly useless to bring the matter up. They saw so many crimes passed by without the possi- bility of punishment, that they had no heart to become prosecutors or informers in what seemed comparatively in- nocent matters ; besides, there was naturally a disposition to avoid the useless aggravation of those who possessed the power of doing them so much injury. In the summer of 1870, John P. Gilmer, whose character lias already been partially delineated, began his career Avitli bis participation in the killing of Hal Dawson, at Scooba. Dawson was quite a youth, just entering the threshold of manhood. lie was born and reared in the County of Kemper, and only a few miles from Scooba. He was of a good family ; on his mother's side he was de- scended from the Winstons, of Alabama, of which family Governor J. Anthony Winston was a prominent represen- tative, and the uncle of Dawson. He was also a relative of Governor Pettuce, of Mississippi. On his father's side ho was connected with some of the best families of Kemper County. His father Avas for many years one of the most prominent and highly respected physicians in the county. Young Dawson was of a warm and vehement disposition, and was much beloved by his friends. He had but one fault, and one verj* common with young men of his ardent temjier- ament. He had a year or two previous to his -death fallen into the habit of indulging occasionally too much in strong- drink, yet his natural good nature asserted itself even while his mind was clouded with the fumes of liquor, and 114 k:e:mpeii cox:xty vtxdicated. "whatever wildiicss or impriuleiice of speech or action ho iniyht indiilyc, wliile intoxicated, there was no one Avho had any fear.s that lie vrould eonunit any crime. It Ava.s on one ol" tliese well known bhistering but inno- cent, occasions that he met with a foul death. Tliere was in Hcooba, at this time, a man by the name of Davis, who was a member of the Board of Registration, wliich was then liolding its session in the back room of Gil- mer's store. Davis was likewise a native of the county, and had known Davrson from boyhood, and on the occasion in question, Dawson, being under the influence of liquor, and in one of his harmless blusterings against the radicals, "went down the street to Gilmer's store, saying to some per- sons whom he passed that he wanted to see the registrar, Davis. On arriving at the door, Gilmer walked out upon the steps, and asked him if he wished to see him, and if he had anything against him. Dawson replied, " Ko ; I have noth- ing against you, Gilmer. I want to see Davis." Upon this Gilmer stepped out upon the street, remarking to Dawson: " There he is in there ; sec him if you wish." Dawson then entered the door, at the same time having his hand on . his pistol. !N"o sooner had he entered when Davis, who was standing behind the counter a few feet to the right of the door Avith a double barrel gun in his hand, fired at Daw- son, the contents of the gnu — a load of buckshot — passing through his body. Dawson immediately sank upon his knees in a dying condition and rested his head upon tho steps. Then (Jilmer, who was standing some ten or tiftecn feet distant, deliberately advanced, and placing his pistol against the liead of the dying man, shot two bails through it. These facts were obtained from eye witnesses, one of Avhom is a very intelligent lady, an old friend of the writer and the Avife of a ])opnlar and promising young lawyer of De Kalb. This lady happened to be sitting in a buggy in full view of the scene, and lier description of it may bo relied upon with gospel certainty. KEMPEK COUNTY VINDICATED. 115 Gilmer and Davis vtcvq both arrested immediately by the town constable, but by some means procured themselves to be carried to De Kalb, instead ot before the town author- ities of Scooba or tbe magistrate of that beat. The object of this was to reach the hands of their friend Chisolm, then sheriff of the county, in which they were certain to fare in every respec.t to their advantage. This act of carrying criminals to a distant beat to be tried, far away from the evidences of their guilt, was such a shock- ing violation of law, and so apparent an attempt to bafde the pursuit of justice, that on the next day several citizens of Scooba proceeded to De Kalb and demanded that the prisoners be returned to Scooba and tried before the in- vestigating court of the mayor of the town, or the justice of the beat. But the criminals and their friends well knew that if this was done, that they would be committed to jail without bail to await the action of the grand jury, as the crime with which they were charged, and the attending circumstances, would, under the existing law, render the offence unbailable. Besides, the mayor of Scooba and the justice of the beat, although the latter was a radical, were not men likely to turn a totall}- deaf ear to law and justice. To this demand of the citizens, the sheriff, W. W. Chisolm, positively refused compliance, alleging that as they were in his hands he had the right to retain and protect them. Upon this they were brought before a radical justice court at De Kalb, distant from and out of the reach of much of I the evidence of their guilt. Yet, notwithstanding the in- Huence of their friend Chisolm, and its active exercise in their behalf, they were put under bonds of $3,000 each to appe.ar and answer to any indictment that might be pre- sented against them in this matter, at the next term of the circuit court of the county. This bond was procured ior them by Chisolm, and they were released. But it became evident long belbre the meeting of the circuit court, and the impanelling of the grand jury for that term, that a jury ! would bo assembled whose selection had been made for the purpose of preventing the liudiug of a bill of indictment 116 KEMPEK COUNTY VINDICATED. against Gilmer aud Davis. This could be easily eilected, inasinucli as the members of the board of police for the years 18G1) and 1870 were all radicals, and mere ])ui)i>ets of the sheriif, Cliisolm. Upon this board devolved the duty of selectuig" the grand jurors for the ensuing term of the court. Tlie following are the names of the jurors thus chosen for this occasion, together with the well known politics of each : Tiios. W. Adams .....Ttadical. Jas. a. Burton Democrat. Petek E. Spinks Democrat. William Dees Democrat. T. IJ. Morton Democrat. J. J. TiNSLEY .". Democrat. J. C. Carpenter Democrat. O. r.CiiANEY Radical. Geo. 110I3INS0N Kadical. Tiios. Orr liadical. Henry' Greer Eadical. Ja^ies Welsh lladical. KiRSCii Welsh lladical. CiiAS. Nichols liadical. IIenry IvIDISEY^ liadical. Thus it will be seen that this grand jury was composed of nine radicals, and, as the author is informeil, the very TTorst in the county, and six Democrats. This jnry refused to indict either of the parties to this diabolical murder. It is plain that whatever justification or palliation might have been adduced on the part of 13avis, there was not the slightest excuse for the conduct of Gilmer. He had met Dawson at his door, and, in an insulting manner and atti- tude, challenged him with tlic iiKiinry: "Do you wish to see me! Have you anything against nu' f " No," replied Dawson ; " I have nothing against you,"' and in three min- utes after he advances upon Dawson, after he had fallen to KEMPER. COUNTY VINDICATED. 117 the ground in a dying: conditioii, and placing the muzzio of the pistol against the head of the dying man, shoots two bullets through his brain, and the peuj^le of Kemper counfy had the mortiflcation and the patier.ce to see this horrible crime pass by unpunished and unreproved ! iSTor was this all. Their fears were also aroused as to wh.o would be the next unavenged victir.i of such lawless impunity, and it is no wonder that it occasioned through- out the county a feeling of intense indignation as well as alarm. It will be proper, perhaps, to mention, in this connec- tion, the fact that young Dawson was a near relative of Judge Dillard, who was a prominent and influential citi- zen oif tlie adjoining County of Sumter, in the State of Alabama, which fact, if borne in mind, Mill explain othvr circumstances mentioned hereafter. The hostile feeling produced against the clan, as it now plainly manifested itself to be, in the minds of the people of Kemper, the patience they exercised, and the im- pudent indifference with which these men viewed their bloody work, may be gathered i'rom the admissions and evasions of Gilmer, iu his testimony before the committee of Congress, to inquire about the free exercise of the elec- tive franchise in Mississipi)i, at Washington, in January, 1877. Q. By ]Mr. Money — About 1875, what was the condition of i^olitical affairs in your county ? In whose hands was the county at that time, and who ^yas responsible for the condition of things there — I mean up to the election in 1875 ? A. The county officers were Eepublicans. Q. And they had succeeded in keeping the county in a lawful state all the time ? A. There was no outbreak or anything of the sort. Q. The laws were strictly complied with and enforced? A. As much so as in other counties in the State. Q. Did you not kill a man at Scooba that year ? A 1^0, sir. .1.18 KEMPER COUNTY VrS'DICATED. Q. Did you in 187G ? A. No, sir. Q. Ill 1871^? A. Xo, sir. Q. Did you ever kill a man at Scooba? A. I presume I know what you are driving at. Q. That is what I want to get at. A. It was in 1871. Q. Tlie county was then in the hands of the Eepublicans and Judge Oliisohn was the sherift"? A. Yes, sir. Q. Were you ever indicted for that killing ? A. ITo, sir. There have been some twelve or fifteen grand Juries since, both of Democrats and Republicans. Q. You were never indicted ? A. No, sir. Q. Did not a great deal of bitter feeling arise out of the circumstance of that killing, on the part of the white l)pople, towai'd yofi and toward Judge Chisolm, entirely independent of politics ? A. I do not see why there should be any feeling against Judge Cliisolm. There was a feeling as between me and some of this partj^'s relations, and I did not speak with most of them Q. AVas not that extensively used against you in the county ? AVas there not a great deal of feeling gotten up against you and against Judge Chisolm, who v.'as held re- sponsible for the management of the affairs of that county, he being the sheriif? A. I do not know whctlier that was the cause of it or not. A good many Democrats told me this p.arty ought to have been killed, and tliat I was Justiliable in doing it, and that if I would go with the Democratic party it would be all light. Q- (iivc me the name, of some Democrat who told you that. A. J dislike to give you the name of any man who would tell me that the party ought to have been killed. KEMPER COUT^TY VINDICATED. 119 Q. I do not want you to give that, but give the name of a Democrat who said tiiat if j^ou would go with the Demo- crats it would be all right. A. I do not know that I can exactly recall any par- ticular name just now — I might if you would give me a lit- tle time to thinlc over it. But there may have been a hun- dred who told me so. Q. And you cannot recollect one of the hundred ? A. Perhaps I can if it is necessary. Q. I should like to have the names if you can give them. Take time and think of it. A. Well, sir, I do not believe there is a Democrat in Scooba but what has talked to me and told me if I would go with the Democratic party it would be all right. Q. I mean on account of this killing. That is what we are talking about. A. Perhaps I do not understand your question. Q. I ask you if a great deal of this bitterness, which you complain of toward yourself and Judge Chisolm, did not arise out of the killing of a Mr. Dawson by you at Scooba, and your protection by Judge Chisolm, who Avas sheriff of the county at that time, and tlic fact that there was no indictment found agaiust you at all ? A. Ko, sir ; I do not think any such feeling exists, from the very fact that the Democrats have had the grand jury their own way ever since, and I have not been indicted, and from the fact that we are mighty friendly in our busi- ness relations. Q. Have the Democrats had possession of the grand jury since 1871 1 A. They have it now. Q. Is it true that they have had it since that time ? A. iSTo, sir 5 but they have had the last two grand inrit'S. Q. This last year ? A. Yes, sir. Q. Is not that offence barred by the statute of limita- tions I 120 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. A. 1 hardly think so ; I do not think murder is barred. Q. It was murder then, was it ? A. If it could be made out murder; I do not know what kind of an indictment they mi^ht get ; they might make it murder, or they might make it manslaughter ; I do not think any cai)ital oifence of that kind is barred. Q. But the statute itself wiped out the offence. The- fact was that that county was in the hands of Kei)ublicans, . and under the administration of Judge Chisolin, and youi were not indicted for this offence — call it murder, man- slaughter, or whatever you i)lease ? A. Yes, sir; so far as county officers are concerned; the board of supervisors in. Mississippi appoint the grand It would be difficult to surpass the indifference and non- chalance manifested in this testimony, but not at all diffi- cult to draw from it tlie true character of the witness. The statute referred to by IMr. Money is as follows: An act to amend the rules of practice and procedure in criminal cases in this State. Section S. Be it further enacted, That all prosecutions for criminal offences heretofore committed, shall be com- menced within two years after the cojnmission thereof, and not after : Provided, This section shall not apply to any case in which the oi'fendcr shall have lied from the State. Section 9. Be it further enacted, That in all cases where any i)erson has heretofore given bail or security on recog- nizance for the appearance of any other jierson, whether said bail bonds are now i)endiug in the several courts to which they arc made returnable, or whether such bonds have been forfeited, and proceedings thereon have been instituted, such bonds are herebi' declared to be void and ol' no effect, ami such proceedings are hereby suspended, and (he same ordered to be dismissed. Ai)pioved April 5, 1872. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 121 This infamous act, done iu contravention of all the teach- ings of the common law, and in repugnance to aU juridical experience, was given effect from its passage on the above date, and continued in operation until the fall of 1875, Avheu it was expressly repealed. It was but one of the many legislative devices enacted by the carpet bag and negro legislators of Mississippi to shield ofiflcial corruption, and to aftbrd that immunity for crime so pleasing to the great body of the radical party in the South. Under the operations of this act, if any one was detected in the per- ])etration of any crime whatever, it was only necessary to fly to the swamps or step over the State line, remain away for the space of two years, and the oflence would become non esse in law. The killing of Dawson was such a shock to every sense of humanity, and created such a general feeling of exaspera- tion, which was aggravated by the fact that Gilmer and Davis had been taken away for the x)urpose of thwarting the course of justice, that on the night following the mnrder, and while the mangled body of the butchered man lay in sight of his friends, a mob gathered in the streets of Scooba, broke into Gilmer's store and destroyed a large portion of his goods. This conduct was wholly and in the highest degree re- l)rehensible, and nothing less than the high state of excite- ment, and the ample cause for that, could ]n^event it from being criminal as well as disgraceful. And the iiarties who did tliis act were evidently of the same sober opinion, for no sooner had their feelings cooled down than they offered to pay, and did pay to Gilmer more than he had lost. It nmy be remarked that this attack upon his store was made when it was iirst known that Gilmer had been car- lic'd off to De Kalb, and which they well knew was done for the ])urpose of placing him under the protection of Chisolm, and they, by this time, had learned well what that protection meant. This circumstance of the killing of Dawson fully devel- oped the true character of Gilmer, and at once cemented 122 KE]MPER COUNTY VINDICATED. that cord of fellowsliij), and pledge of faith and co-opera- tion, ever afterward so cordially maintained between him and Chisolm. Clilmer from tliis time became one of the chief actors on the stase. But as Chisolm desired no i)art- iier, or i)artition of the functions of the high priesthood of the county, which he now held and enjoyed hi soUdo, it was thought best for Oilmer to go to the legislature. At this time a man by the name of Gambril held the ottice of State senator from this district. Gambril was a native of Ohio, but had emigrated to Mississippi when (l-iite a young man, and engaged in teaching school, and like all of his class and nativity, at that time, he was received with the greatest kindness by the Sonthoru l)eople. While, in many instances, the former were busily- engaged in sowing the seeds of corrui)tion and insurrection among their slaves, Gambril succeeded in obtaining quite a flourishing school, and linally married in a Southern family, and when the war came on he was the father of several children. He continued to conduct his scliool until the passage of the conscrii)t act, when, not having a sullicient number of scholars to ])rocure his exemption from military' duty under the law, he was, like all other uuexem))ted able bodied men, forced into the Confederate army by the oOicers of the conscrijjt bureau. At this time W. "W. Chisolm was the chief conscrii)t ollicer in Kemper County, and in the exercise of his duties as such, was ncxcr known to show any mercy to the vii;- tiuis of his authority. And here it nniy be remarked, that at no time during the liist years of the war was there any obstacle to i)revent any Northern man, or alieu enemy, from removiug himself and fauiily out of the ('onfederacy ; and if Gambril was a Union man and an alien enemy, he had ample opportunity ol" taking liiiuscll' away. l>ut he riMuained teaching his litth' school until Lieutenant Chis- olm sei/cil upon liiin and hurried him olf inlo the army. There were many Norlhern men in the South at the beginning of tlu^ wai- who were similarly siliuited, and KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 123 wlio, be it said to their lionor, adhered steadfastly to those who had ministered, with unsparhig hand, to theui in their adversity. Kot so, however, with Gambril. Iii the iiniforiu of a Soutlieru soklier, he deserted at the first opportuuity and went over to tlie enemy, Vv'ith whom lio remained until the close of the war, when he skulked back, without molestation, to the bosom of his family, of whom he was unworthy. This was the man whom the radicals of Kemper had selected to represent them in the State senate — a man who had, years ago, come South, clad in the rags of j poverty, homeless and friendless, had feasted upon the hospitality of the Southern people ; had been received into the bosom of their families ; entrusted with the training of their young ; joined in marriage with one of their fair daughters, and yet, when they became in- volved in a war of political, social and national life or death, he deserted the wife who had placed all her trust in him ; abandoned tlie cliiklren she had given him; de- serted the friends of his yonth ; and on the first opportu- nity passed over to their enemies, and accepted an office in their ranks. And yet all this is counted as merit by the thieves and villains who composed the most of the white element of the radical party in the South. It is said that the Spartans took great ]>aina to instruct their youth in the art of cunning' and deceit; and that adroitness, particularly in theft, was by them considered meritorious. Yet to steal so unskilfully as to be detected was a great disgrace. And it seems that the moral teach- ings of the Sonthern radicals were of a somewhat similar nature. It made no difierence what crime they committed, just so tliey could procure, by any means, immunity from punish- ment, they were snre to receive the applause of their asso- ciates at the South and their allies at the Korth. i^o harm to break faith with, deceive and steal from a South- ern white man, alias a rebel, was a doctrine early advo- cated, and constantly instilled throughout the radical 124 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. party, and constantly tliundercd into the ears of the uegToes. Althougli Gambril was capable of abandoning his family, and deserting- to the enemy of the country in which they resided, and of which they were natives, yet he seems to have been a man of bnt little vigor and force of character. Hence it seems that he was never gathered affectionately into the fohls of the Chisojm clan. His villanous conduct during the war liad caused him to be elected State senator; but apart from his lack of spirit, Cliisolm, no doubt, from his own experience, thought that a man who had before so basely deserted his friends and family, was worthy of but little reliance. Be this as it may, tlie event of his death, which occurred in 1871, opened the way for the advancement of Gihner. The circumstances of the killing of Clambril were as fol- lows : It seems that he had two or three daughters grown, or about grown, and that one night a negro entered their apartment. An ohl negro woman, who was sleeping in the room saw the negro, gave the alarm, and told Gambril ■who she toolc it to be. The negro sus[)eoted was named Fhinder Jones. Gambril attacked this negro, and an altercation occurred between them. The negro then went otf and procured a pistol, at the same time telling another negro that he intended to kill Gambril with it. They met again, and another tight took place, in which the negro shot and killed Gambril. Chisolm was at this time sheriff and i>eace officer of the county, yet none of the i)arties were ever arrested. It was a radical personal fjuarrcl, and as the white people had but little respect for Gambril, they left the whole matter to be settled by the party which had entire control of the county, and it was settled in this way: Gambril waa buri('(l ; his murderer went unmolested, and Gilmer was put in his [dace as State senator. Although there was no l)roof to that effect, yet the conduct of Cliisolm in this matter caused grave suspicions to rest upon him in regard to it. The whole matter was soon hushcil up ; and the indif- KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 125 ference manifested in regard to it by the members of the Ian, caused many to believe that liis death was procured for the purpose of making- way for Gilmer 5 but it is evi- dent that this conjecture arose solely from the mysterious conduct of the leading radicals in regard to it, for the autlior has been able to find no other ground on which the !mi)licatiou of Chisolm could be surmised. It is certain, lowever, that the opportunity for ])romoting- Gilmer was felt least tlie attainment of liis wishes in that respect. This was apparent to all who observed his manners on the occasion. It may be observed that at the time of the killing- of jGambril, Gilmer Avas an avowed candidate for the ofdce held by the former, and it was positively understood and arranged by Chisholm and his chin that Gilmer should jsucceed him in the seuatorship. But there was necessarily isome difficulty in the way of accomplishing- this object, to Isurmount which it was necessary to act with vigor. j Gilmer was a new comer in the county, and had but recently declared his i)olitical status. In fact, it seems that the prospect of this office maiuly determined his career; and his accession to the ranks of the clan, after the killing of Dawson, i)romised too much imjiortance to justify the omission of any endeavor to secure his co-opera- tion with the party. But Gambril was an old citizen, and possessed, in the eyes of the negro, all the qualifications and antecedents requisite for the position. He was a Northern man ; had deserted to the enemy during the war; and having for- feited the respect of his old friends, he had placed himself upon a level with, the negro, and was a strong advocate of political, if not social, equality. This gave him great popularity with a majority of the voters of the county, as the negroes were largely in the ascendency ; and it could not be overlooked that the chances of Gilmer, under these circumstances, in a fair race witli him, were bad. This was the state of affairs in the radical camp at the death of Gambril ; and these circumstances, connected with 126 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. the mysteries attemlin.t;- liis dcatb, wore well calculated to create tlie ]»rel(y ;;eiieral belief that his life was sacrificed to the i>njniotion of Gilmer, and that his death had been deliberately procured for that i)iirpose. This event removed every obstacle in Gilmer's path to the State capital, where his career was hinf;ed upon the issue of race, and the worst features of the radical party. ]lis history in the State senate is inseparable from any- thing that was obnoxious to the white people and tax payers of the State. Apart from this, no striking feature nuirked his course, save that of his repairing to Vicks- burg, and becoming, while yet senator, the deputy sheriff of the notorions refer Crosby, in 1875. His own tes- timony, in regard to this matter, before the committee at Washington, page 50G, is here introduced : Q. You stated that your place of residence is Kemper county. LIow did yen happen to be in Yicksbiirg, as deputy sheriff, in 1875 ? A. I will tell you how I happened to be there ; I carpet bagged o^'er there. That county was a very largo county, and it had a larger population than any other county in the State. It was a county that might, perhaps, wiehl considerable influence in the i>olitics of the State. Q. You say you carpet bagged over there. State to the committee what they are to understand by your carpet bagging there. What do you meau by carpet bagging? A. I mean that any man who leaves his own county and goes into another county and holds office, if he is alvcpub- lican, is called a carpet bagger by the Democrats. I was only using the term they apply. Q. That they apply to persons who hold office 1 A. Y^es, sir. Q. State how you came to be employed there as deputy sherilf? A. There had been great trouble the year previous in AVarren County. There was great excitement all over the Stat<', and rejtorts of some two or three riots, and the kill- ing of a great many lie])ublicans and colored men. The KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 127 sheriff had been forced to resign his office, and every effort ■was made that couhl possibly be made Question by Mr. Money : Is this of your own knowledge, or did you hear it? A. I know that the trouble occurred ; I did not see it, but anybody who lives in Mississipi)i knows it. Q. You are stating what you got from newspaiiers and such sources of information 1 A. It was my knowledge that the sheriff did not have a bond and could not make one, and he made arrangements through some of my friends by which I was to make his bond. I thought it was a great outrage that a large and influential county, a county that had, at least, four or five thousand Eepublican majority, should be handed over to the Democrats simply by cheating the Republican officials, or either defeating them from making their bonds when they were elected to positions. I felt that it was a fight being made on account of their being Eepublicans, and not against them upon any other ground. On that account I volunteered to go over there and make Crosby's bond. Q. To make the bond and run the office 1 A. Yes, sir. Q. You went over there and accepted the position of deputy sheriff, did you not ? A. Yes, sir. Q. You were sworn in as such ? A. I think so. Q. At that time were you not a member of the State senate from the counties of Kemi)er, JS^eshoba and Koxu- beel A. I resigned my senatorshii). Q. At what time did you resign ? A. About the time I went over there. Q. Can you recollect the date of your resignation ? A. I will not be positive ; it is on file at Jackson. Q. But it is not on file here. I want to know the date of your resignation 1 A. I will not be positive, but I resigned some time while I was over there ; I had the date of the resignation. 128 KEMPEll COUNTY VINDICATED. Q. Do YOU not know positively tlsat you did not? A. I tliiuk I resigned when 1 first went there. Q. Do you not know t'.iat you were liokling both offnies at once i? By Mr. Pease: Do you consider the deputy shrievalty an olhce I i\rr. Money: I will waive that point; hut I want to prt)\e the fact that the witness was a senator when he went over there and took that oflice. Q. You say you went ovav there to j;ive the bond and run the offi(;e ? A. Yes, sir. Q. And at that time you were a senator in the lei^isla- ture of the State ? A. Yes, sir; at tlie time I went OYcr there I was a senator. I do not know what time I resigned. 1 resigned when I was there, bnt 1 do not know when it was. Q. Was not the sheriff of that county, Peter Crosby, shot at some time ? A. Yc«r., sir. Q. Was he shot while you were his deputy ? A. ISTo, sir; 1 was not his deputy. Q. IIow long had you ceased to be his deputy when he was shot ? A. Two or three days. Q. Did Crosby ever charge you with doing that shoot- ing ? A. Yes, sir. Q. And he dismissed you then fiom the ollice of de- puty? A. I was dismissed before he was shot. Q. AVhy did you leave the place, or why were j'ou dis- missed ? I do not know how you got out of it. A. The deputy's oflice ? Q. Yes, sir. You ceased to be Crosby's deputy, for what reason 7 xV. We did not agree, lie did not give me any reason for the disuiissal at all. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 129 Upon tbis charge Gilmer was arrested and acquitted. But the writer is iulbrmed by gentlemen of undoubted veracity that on his return to Scooba he frequently con- fessed that he did shoot Peter Crosby, and for the reason that the latter had dismissed him from the deputy' shriev- alty, when he had aided in making Crosby's bond, and that if his pistol had been all right, the result of the affair would have been dilferent. Soon after the shooting of Crosby, Gilmer returned to Scooba, and resumed his mercantile oi)erations, and made large purchases of goods on credit, which he sold reck- lessly, or divided among his friends, in such a manner as to arouse the suspicions of his creditors ; and very soon four imlictments were lodged against him in the criminal court of the City of St. Louis, Missouri, charging him with having obtained goods by fraud and under false pretences. Upon these indictments the governor of Missouri made requisition for Gilmer, and he was arrested and delivered to the authorities of that State. He was carried to St. Louis, and was required to enter into recognizance for his apiiearance at the proper trial term of the city court, or go to jail. In this dilemma Chisolm went promi^tly to his rescue, and succeeded in making the neccssarj- bonds, which aggre- gated the sum of twenty-four hundred dollars. This he did, it is said, by depositing the amount with Gilmer's sureties. Chisolm immediately returned to Kemper after this arrange- ment had been effected, but Gilmer did not return until several days after, for which he assign(;d as the reason that some letters of information in regard to his conduct and character had been sent from De Kalb to his prosecutors in St. Louis, of which he suspicioned John W, Gully to be the author, and that he remained there for the purpose of ascertaining that fiict. But it was, and is still believed by many, that he was hunting up the negro Walter Eiley, who had fled from justice several years before, and was at this time living at some place in the State of Tennessee, well known to Chisolm and his clan. 9 130 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. Be tliis as it may, it is true that Eile^^ returned to Kemper County soon after, but as this circumstance forms an important link in the chain of events to which we will have occasiou to revert more fully hereafter, its discussion will be reserved till then. These indictments were pending, and the recognizance was in force at the time of Gilmer's death, which occurred not long- after this. Upon Chisolm's return, he declared repeatedly, in reference to the letters referred to, that if Gilmer should ascertain the author it would be bad for 1 the latter, aiul that both Gilmer and himself were satis- fied that Gully wrote them. A short time prior to these events an incident occurred in the streets of De Kalb, which will conduce to a fuller development of the charac- ter of Gilmer and the disposition he cherished towards Gully, and which, when combined, may lead to an insight into that chain of mysterious circumstances which culmin- ated in the terrible tragedies that followed. On the occasion referred to, John Gully was sitting quietly on the lower steps of a store in the front street of De Jvalb, when Gilmer procured a wheelbarrow, and pn)- ceeding down the street with it, rolled it deliberately against the legs of Gully, at the same time placing his hand on his pistol, which he finally drew and cocked, and holding it in one hand, continued to push the wheelbar- row against Gully with the other aiul with his stomach, which he a])plied to the round connecting the handles of the implement. Gully was entirely unaruied, and well knowing the desperate character of his assailant, made no resistance and said nothing. Finally Gilmer said to him, " By God, you know what I mean ! I mean, that you are a damned rascal, and that you have to get out of my way!'' "I'll do it," said Gully, and, rising, he went im- mediately to his store and procured a gun, with which ho returned to his i)osition on liie steps. In the meantime, Gilmer had been arrested and carried into the. court honse yard, jtist across the stivet — not, houe\er, until he had primeil and tired olf his pistol — KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 131 where for hours he strove with the utmost desi)eratioii to escape from the officers and return to the assault. For this conduct he was tiued by the radical judge oue dolhir aud the costs. Aud thus the tist of impunity was again shaken in the face of the GuUys and tlie wliole community. Of all these glaring manifestations of immunity for every degree of crime, the people of Kemper County were not, nor could they be,, unobservant or oblivious. Their minds be- came deeply impressed with a general feeling of insecurity that finally resulted in something akin to desperation. They saw themselves in the midst of a semi-barbarous race, of brutal instincts and strong race prejudices, in- flamed with avowed hostility to them, and whose passions were continually fanned by nien wlio seemed to have no sympatliy with any class of Southern white society, or any respect for the laws of God or man. They saw the scales of justice swinging in the hands of the assassin and the thief, and their laws adiniuistered by outlaws. Such a state of affairs was well calcuhited to excite first their fears and indignation, and then a spirit of self de- feuce ; and these combined to urge the adoption of every measure that promised them relief. Such was the state of aftairs in Mississippi at the begin- ning of the year 1875, aud which had existed for seven long years, with a constaiit tendency to, if i)ossible, a still ■worse conditiou. 132 KEMPEE COUNTY VINDICATED. CHAPTEE VI. Ainoiig' llie worst of tlic avenues of corruption tbat ])enneiite(l every department of the State and county .i40veriunents of Mississippi during radical rule, and one ATliicli afforded, perhaps, tlie most aini)le opiK)rtunities for plunder, was the public school system, every feature of Avhich seems to have been fashioned with a view to its prostitution to purposes of iniquity, a,nd every position con- jiectcd with it seems to have offered a bid to corruption. At the period which we are now discussing, the State superintendent of education was a negro of the most vicious character, and the exami)le set by the chief seems to have been followed, as a lixed policy, by every subor- dinate in the entire system. Of which a better descrip- tion cannot be given, perhaps, than that set forth in the testimony of the Hon. J. A. Campbell, at that time one of the judges of the supreme court of the State, before the IMississippi investigating committee at Jackson, on June 21, 1870. It will he observed that at this time the State government had passed into tlie hands of the Democratic party and the native white i)eople. Q. By Senator Bayard: Who is the present superin- tendent of the schools ? A. T. S. Oath Wright. Q. Who is he ! A. He has been a devoted teacher for many years. Q. A man of education ? A. Yes, sir. I will add that he is thoroughly imbued with the spirit of maintaining the scliools without regard to race, color or previous condition of servitude. (^. Who preceded him ? A. A man by tlie name of Cardozo, a colored imli- vidual. Q. How did he get out of oftlce, and how long did he hold his oflico ? KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 133 A. He must have held it about two years. Q. What office had he hekl prior to that ? A. He had been circuit clerk of Warren County, I believe. Q, Do you know whether, as circuit clerk, he had been charged with forgerj^ of warrants ? A. Yes, sir. He had been charged and indicted. Q, Were those indictments fouud before or after his election as suijerintendent? A. Prior, I think. I know he was charged with being a forger, a thief and a felon — all that sort of thing. I know the disposition on the part of the Republicans to shake him off, as being unable to carry such a weight. Q. Notwithstanding this charge and this reputation, he was elected State superintendent of education ? A. Yes, sir; he was. Q. What was his course in that office ? A. Well, I only speak from reputation. It was bad. I can speak from some knowledge of one transaction. I am president of the board of trustees of the normal school of Tougaloo. I am president of the board of trustees of the State department of that normal school. This man, Car- dozo, as State supernitendent of education, was ex officio member of that board. Prior to that, however, 1 would not associate Avith him, even officially, or in any way. Cardozo was, as stated, a member of that board, and he was treasurer of the board, and he drew from the State treasury the full appropriation by the State for the main- tenance of its department in that university, or normal school, and he accounted for about twenty-two hundred dollars, and the balance of it he has never accounted for ; and the trustees have recently instituted a suit, or ordered it to be instituted, against Cardozo, or the sureties on Car- dozo's bond, in Warren County, to recover for his deficit in that appropriation. He drew the money from the treas- ury, and paid over twenty-two hundred dollars, and the balance he put in his i)ocket, I suppose. Q. How much did he draw in all ? 134 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. A. rorty-five luiiulred dollars, I tliiiik, and aecouutcd for twenty-two liniidicd dollars, I think — I am not cortaiii tliat 1 am iifciuate in tlie li^^nics — and suit has lately been instituted, or ordered to be, a.^aiust liim. IMartiu Casey is one on the boud, but says his name is a forgery. Mrs. Wil- liams is the other one, and her signature will probably be iuvalidated, as she will undoubtedl}' claim that she signed it in view of this name being upon it, relying upon it. Q. You have stated that you would not associate, offici- ally or otherwise, with Cardozo. State jour reasons for that. A. His character is most infamous, according to repu- tation. Q. Do you know uudei' what indictments he rests at present ? A. No, sir; 1 cannot say 1 know. I have understood there were sixteen indictments against him. Q. For what crimes "'. A. For forging, 1 think, county certificates, county war- rants — embezzlement, i)erhai)s. 1 am not sure as to that. Q. How was lie gotten out of office ? A. He was im[>ea('!)ed by the Ilouse of Kei)resentatives of the legislature of JMississipi)i. Q. And tried by the senate ? A. No; he resigned, 1 believe. I do not think he was tried. I think he resigned under impeachment ; that is my impression. Q. In your school system, wliat part and authority has the board of supervisors 'I A. The board of supervisors, composed of five men, is the county school board of education. Q. Does the board levy a school tax I A. Yes, sir; it is allowed to levy an additional sum for the ])ayment of teachers ; also, a school house fund, as it is called. Q. Are those levies discretionary with the board ? A. They are, within certain limits — whicli is two per cent., or two mills on the tlollai', I should have said. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 135 Q. Who com])osed the board in Madisou County after the election of 1873 ? A. Five negroes. Q. Were any of them educated men ? A. No, sir. Q. Do you know whether any of these five negroes were able to read and write ? A. My information is that one of them could sign his name, after a fashion. Q, And it was to that board the control of education in that county was submitted '? A. Yes, sir ; they levy the county taxes for education, and other purposes. Q. Could any one of that board calculate the rate of assessment estimates upon sums of money ! A. I have no idea they could. I do not know from per- sonal knowledge, but, from information, I do not think there was any one of them that could make any sort of computation. Kot one of them was familiar with the simple rules of arithmetic. It may be remarked that Madisou County was the home of Judge Campbell, and the same state of the school system which he has described as existing in his county, was common in all the black counties of Mississippi, or counties in which tiie negro voters were in the majority, with the addition that the intermixture and participation of carpet baggers found in some of them, but added a still more dangerous and corrupt element than ignorance to the control of the moral and educational training of the people. It had been the early aim of the radical party to force social equality upon the Southern people through the in- strumentality of the public school system, and the first constitution prepared for the people of Mississippi, under the reconstruction acts of Congress, embodied a feature requiring the whites to mingle with the negroes in the public schools of the State, or submit to the unjust alter- 1;>G KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. iiativo. of contributing Ironi their scanty substance a heavy tax to maintain a costly system of public schools, in the advantages of which they did not participate. i^Tevcr was there a more arbitrary and humiliating con- dition imjiosed upon a people, than this of being com- pelled either to accept the terms of having their children trained and educated upon a social footing with the negro, or on the other hand to become vassals to the effort to make him tlieir superior. It was tills provision that early and naturally excited the ojjposition of the white people to any contribution to the education of the negro, who paid no taxes himself comparatively worthy of consideration. AVith the destruction of slavery, they had become woe- fully impoverished. Their lands w^ere almost valueless. Tlieir personal property, too, had been swept away by the tide of war, and they thought that these consetjuences were snlliciently onerous without being forced to con- tribute their slender means of support to educate their former slaves. r>ut when the burden was rendered humil- iating and insulting, it, imh'cd, becanu' insupi)ortal)l»\ It was this that ])iovoked the strenuous eftbrts on the part of the white i)eoi)le ol' AIississi]>])i, which resulted in the defeat of the constitution fashioned for thein by Con- gress, in 1818. Nor did this feature of mixed schools enlist the sym- ])atliies of the negroes themselves?. Their own sense of inferiority led many of them to oppose the scheme; con- sequently they voted largely with the whites against this constitution. This proscription policy of the radical ])arty was prompted by a desire to perpetuate its power, wen at the cost of producing a state of social anarchy and mongrelism, or a war of races, in the South. But when these objectionable clauses had been severed, and the constitution was resulnnittiMl to the peoi)le, it was ado])ted by a large majority, and the system ])rt)viding for sej»arate schools for the whites and l^lacks would no longer have met with any serioui opposition, had it not been for ! KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 137 its gross and outrageous mismanagement. It still proved under radical rule to be a prolific field for the gix)wtli of every species of corruption, which, if it did not iu a measure revive the spirit of opposition to the entire in- stitution, produced, at least, a general feeling of apathy and indiflerence iu regard to it. Four mills on the dollar were levied by the legislature of 1874, and two mills additional by the county boards of education, whicli, for the most part, were composed of illiterate negroes, as iu Madison County, or by a mixture of these and the more vicious white radicals; while the county superintendents were mostly adventurers from the Northern States, who proved iu almost every instance to be defaulters, who had no sympathy for the white peo- ple, and whose habits for the most part were so dissolute and degraded that they were not admitted into the society or even to the acquaintance of those, the education of whose children they were presumed by law to supervise. In the County of Lowndes, there was a small school dis- trict containing but two schools, one for the use of each color. The negro school was taught in a house on the plantation of Mr. James Sykes. This house he had caused to be built j)rior to the war for a negro church, and it had always been devoted to that purpose, and was being so used at the time of the following occui-reuce. An arbitrary demand was made of him for this building by the super- intendent of education or school board, to which he replied that the building was being used by the negroes as a church, and that if they, tho negroes, desired to have a school there, he had no objection. Upon this the school was es- tablished. Some time afterwards, Mr. Sykes, on looking over the records of the county, was surprised to find that the county school authorities had made a charge of about one bun- dled and seventy dollars for the rent of this house. They had also assessed seventy-five dollars for a stove, fifty dollars for repairs, fifteen dollars or twenty dollars for benches, and about seventy-five dollars lor fuel, and that 138 KliMPKR COUNTY VINDICATED. for this small school roperty and the widespread impoverishment of the people KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 141 occasioiKxI by it. But the fact that those funds, denomi- nated respectivelj' tlie seminary fund, the sixteenth section fund, and the Clnekasaw school fund, whether secure or not at this time, were for the most part beyond tlie reacli of the lingers of the carpet bagger, was snflicient to call forth fron) them a howl of disappointment, indignation and I'ag'e. llence, we llnd one of them, IJ. li. Poase, concluding his report as State school snperintendent to the legislature, in 1872, with the following wail : " I am €f the opinion that when full ami complete returns are made of the amount of loss of the sixteenth section school funds alone, to say nothing of the seminary fund and the Chickasaw fund, will exceed one million of dollars absolutely squandered and irretrievably lost." AVhether the above allegation has any foundation in fact, or not, it is a lesson of experience, that had these funds found their way into the hands of Pease and his successor, Cardozo, there could be no doubt as to what would have been their disposition. JSToth withstanding this onerous tax of four mills, levied by the legislature of Mississip])i, for the support of the public schools, and the additional levy of two mills made by the county board of education, the schools were re- quired by law to be kept open but four months in the year, and for the accomi)lishing of this short scholastic period there was maintained perpetually the most costly organization of officers. There was the State superintend- ent of education, with a large annual salary. There Avas a State board of education, whose officers were maintained in the capital of the State ; then there were the county boards of education, and the county superintendents, who kept their costly furnished ofiices at the different county seats, and whose salaries for their four months' pretended sn]>ervision reached, in some instar«ces, as high as two thousand dollars. All these, gathered under the clouds of ignorance, or the banner of defalcation, will present a horde of parasites never before fiistened upon the body politic of any people. 142 KEMPETl COUNTY "^TNDICATED. Such was the state of the public school system of Mis- sissippi under ladicnl rule. When, iu 1874, the Demo- cratic party became possessed of the State government, one of its first eiibrts Avas to reform the school system. The onerous tax was abolished, and in its stead was substituted tlie proceeds arising from the sale of the sixteenth section lands, all i^roceeds of lands forfeited to the State for non- payment of taxes, the net ])roceeds of all fines and for- feitures, and all money accuuing to tlie State from the sale of licenses to retail vinous and spiritous liquors, which aggregated much n)ore even than the former burdensouie taxation on the valuation of i)roperty. The schools were required by law to be maintainfd five months in the year, and longer, if tlie money arising' from the above mentioned sources should be more than suflicicnt for the period designated. All poll taxes were appropriated to the ^' teachers' fund," and the supervisors of counties, and the mayor iind aldermen of towns of more than two thousauil inhabitants, were required to levy a tax upon the taxable ])roperty of the county or town " suilicient for school house jjurposes, the superintend- ent's salary, and any deficit in the teachers' fund that may arise.'' The salaries of the county superintendents were reduced by law, iu every instance, to one fourth of their former aiaount. In addition to this, the sum of fifty-seven thousand dollars of United States bonds, in the State treasury, whicli had arisen from an investment of State funds, was ordered to be appropri- ated to school pnii)Oses, and devoted to imnuMliate use. The renting of oilices for the snperintendents, practised by the radical ]iarty, the purchasing of furniture for the same, and the furnishiiig of stationery, etc., were all piomptly abolished, and the great benefits derived IVoni these changes began at once to he manifested in llu' greatly improved condition and enlianced eflicieiiey of lh(» ])ul)lic schools, which, to-day, rests u])on as solid a roumlation as in any State in the I'liion. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 143 But although the harness of the school system, as innii-.irate(l by the radical party in Mississippi, fitted easily upon tlie shoulders of the thief, it was not the only department of the State or county governments gaugrened with infiimy and corrui)tion. The boards of supervisors, which constituted the legisla- tures of the counties, as well as the county boards of education, were, during the years of radical rule, composed, in large part, of the most ignorant and vicious men that ever participated in the government of any people. Their ofiices were political soup houses to which every vagabond in the counties looked for support, and their sessions were occasions of party largesses, where corrupt contracts were dispensed with lavish hand-conclaves of conspiracv, where all manner of scliemes were concocted in secrecy to wrench money from the white people, and to promote the interest of the radicnl party in all its features. We have already noticed the composition of the board of supervisors of Madison County with the observation that the same description would apply to the boards of many other counties in the State. In Issaquena County the negro board had established but one white school, while there were a great many negro schools in operation there. Under this state of things the white people preferred a petition through an old gentleman named Snjith, to the board of supervisors, asking for the establishment of another white school, and at the county seat. Smith api)oared before the board in a very respectlul manner, tendeied Ins petition, when the following scene occurred, as related by T. M. Miller, Esq., a lawyer, and at the time the attorney for the board. He says: "Iliad been attorney for the board for quite a length of time. These negroes had appointed me unanimously, and 1 re- signed my ]>osition on account of their reckless maimge- mciit, and on account of the refusal of the board to hear the whites in regard to schools, and so on. IMght there, at Mayervill,., there was a great demand ibr a wliite school. There were, I s!ip[)f)se, some lliiity or forty pupils, and 144 KEMPER COUNTY VESfDICATED. they had no school house. They had to employ a teacher, aud they got a room wherever they could to teach in ; and the iKiOple brought the matter to the attention of the board several times, aud earnestly requested them to have a school house erected there. The board finally went through the pretense of posting a notice for bidders. Tlie law X)rovides that the contract shall be let out to the lowest bidder, aud bids were ottered by good mechanics to build a school house at a much less cost than they had been paying for negro school houses in various parts of the county, and they rejected the bids on the grouiul of extravagance. Old Mayor Smith came up there, and requested them politely to have the notice renewed. He was very anxious about this school house, and it was the wish of the whole community. It was oi)posed by a negro named Gross. This man. Gross, was very ottensive to Mr. Smith, and ordered him to sit down ; he didn't want to hear him, aud finally drove him away in disgust and desjiair. I was present at the time and I left the board in disgust. The white people paid nearly all the taxes of the county, and they had but one school, which was kept in the base- ment of a church which they rented, and this school was ten or twelve miles from the one they sought to have established." It would bo useless to attempt to bring within the province of this work all the glaring instances of crime and malfeasance committed by the boards of supervisors in the various counties of ]Mississipi)i during radical rule in the State. Such a detail Avould itself compose a volume, but 1 will subjoin one other instance which occurred within the knowledge of the writer. In 1872, the legislature created a new county, to which it gave the name of Colfax, but which was subsequently changed to that of Clay. This county was formed of portions of Monroe, Lowndes and Ok(iblu'ha, and the board of supervisors of the new county was authorized to elect some person to transcribe from those counties the records which ])cr(aiiied respectively Ui llie i>ortio!is severed from KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 145 tbeni. For this purpose the county superintendent of edu- cation, a carpet bagger, named Eugg, was elected by the board, the president of wliich was a negro named Henry Hardy, who, that same year, had entered into a written contract with the author to ]>erform labor on his farm, and iiad moved thither with his family, but, on receiving what he conceived to be a better bargain, suddenly moved away, in violation and total disregard of his obligations. This negro, while president of the board, together with another member of the board, named Frank Strong, was indicted for forgery and bribery, and upon the trial of Strong, Rugg- testified that he had paid to Hardy and Strong each the sum of twenty-tive dollars for their votes in selecting him to transcribe the records. Yet, notwithstanding this direct and positive testimony, the jury, composed of negroes, and one or two white men, returned a verdict of not guilty. So flagrant was this outrage upon justice, that Judge Orr, a Eepublican, but the most talented judge in the State, denounced the jury from the bench, and ordered their names to be enrolled on the records of the court as men incompetent and unworthy to sit on the jury, and instructed the sheriff never again to introduce one of those men as a juryman while he occupied the bench. The trial took place at night, but, in the meantime, Rugg, becoming apprised of the consequences to himself of his confession, tied during the night, and on the trial of Hardy, tlie following morning was non inventus, nor has he been heard of in those parts since. Hardy was, as a matter of course, discharged, there beiug no other evidence against him, and he continued to officiate as president of the boarid)li(^ road at his i»lanta!ion, the l:ig!i water preventing him at that KEMPER COUNTY VINDIOATED. 147 time from fcucing bis place. Tliis petition was preferred to the board bj' Win. S. Farrisli, as attorney for the pe- titioner; and upon Iiis askini^' i)ernjis.sion of the board to read tbe petition, this man, (Iross, ordered liim, in the ]uost i^eremptory manner, to take his seat. Farrisli re])lie(! that lie had a ri^ht, he thought, as an attorney, to read his l)etition, and to be heard. Gross rejilied, '' ^STo, sir ; you will not be heard ; and, furthermore, if you don't take your seat you will be fined for contempt of this board." lie refnsed to even hear the petition read, the object of which was simply to obtain iiermission for a, citizen to place a gate tempora- rily across the public road, which would save him several miles of fencing through an inundated. swamp, and protect his crops until the water subsided, and he could haul his rails from the bottom. "In regard to petit juries, it was still worse. The law provides tluit they shall be selected in the following man- ner : The tax assessor each year shall return into the circuit clerk's office a list of all qualified taxpayers ol" l)ro])er age, or of all persons qnalilied for jury duty. Origi- nally, when tliis list was returned, the names were all i)ut into a box, marked and numbered, and tlie tax assessor was required, annually, to make amended returns, report- ing snch ])ersons as had moved out of the county, and those who had moved into it, and the jury box would then be revised by him and the circuit clerk, and, perhaps, the sheriff. 1 observed for years, and we could not remedy it, that the juries were composed almost entirely of negroes of the most ignorant sort, and they carried the race feeling with them into the jury room. If there was any sort of (iueslion between a Avhite man and negro, in which there was any feeling, it was impossible for the white man to get justice. I have known some very outrageous cases of this sort; one in which a negro went into the store of a white man. Ilis wife waited in the store. He was armed, and he assaulted and cu.rsed her in the most shocking and abominable manner. The negro was indicted, tried by one of these juries and acquitted, upon the clearest evidence of 148 KETNIPER COUNTY VINDICATED. a wantoif attack and assault upon the ^oman. These are mere instances of what universally occurred. Not one of these jurors in five hundred could read or write. Tliey invariably slept while we were ariiuing the cases to them. It .was the most disheartening- thing in the world. They would sleep during the entire argument, then go out and promptly render their verdicts. You could not do any- thing with them unless you would repeat to them ribald jokes, or something of that sort. You could arouse their attention in no other way. There was a class of them, or ring, that hung around the court house as pro- fessional jurors, and, as witnesses, they thought it their duty, generally, to swear lor the side that summoned them." An instance of this kind is related by Judge Shackle- ford, a Republican. It occurred in AVashington County. There was an Irishman by the name of Kelly indicted lor murder, and after all the evidence had been elicited in the case, the district attorney and the counsel for the defence came to an agreement to submit the case. The district attorney stated to the jury that he would be satisfied with a verdict of manslaughter, or a verdict of guilty, as charged in the indictment, coupled with a sen- tence to the penitentiary for life. This had been agreed to by the counsel for the defence, yet the jury went out, and to the utter surprise of every one, brought iu a verdict of " not guilty," and the court could do nothing more than to discharge both prisoner and jury. The justice courts of ^lississipi)i have jurisdiction in all matters where the amount in controversy does not exceed $150, and they have an extended jurisdiction iu criminal matters. They may ininish for assault and bat- tery, petty larceny, alfrays and riots, all disturbances of the i)eace, and they have a general committing ])ower in all cases. It will be seen tliat this extent of jurisdiction renders them the most important courts in the State. Yet these courts were often presided over by the most ignorant and vicious of the negro population, and so illiterate as KEMPER COUNTY VINDICA.TED. 149 to be wholly unable to read intelligently any law what- ever, or to comprehend a legal argument. The following- description of a negro justice, given un- der oath by EoberL Powell, Esq., a lawyer of Madison County, before the Mis.si8.sii)pi investigating committee, ni;iy be received as pretty generally ai)i)lieable to those of other counties : Q. By Senator Bayard: Had you any justices of the l)eace wJio were colored ? A. Yes, sir. Q. Do you know their condition as to illiteracy '? A. This year we have one in the county that can write his naine. Last 3'ear, however, I don't thiidc there was a colored justice in the county who could write his name. I know several of them personally. The way they kept their dockets was to get some friendly neighbor to write them up just before the grand jury met, to present to them. They report but few lines. I think one of them reported about five dollars. Q. When the docket was written Avere they able to read it ? A. ^o, sir. Q. Were these justices of whom you have si)oken able to fill up the writs they issued, to sign them, or know what they contained ? A. No, sir. Q. Bid they sign these writs by a nuirk, or get some one to write their names to them '? A. They signed them by a mark. Q. Have you seen them so signed ? A. I have. But, if the offices of superN'isor and justice of the peace, were, in many counties, as we have seen, tilled almost entirely by ignorant and vicious negroes, the judges of the higher courts, appointed by Governor Ames, from the carpet bag or scalawag element, were in many instances but little less infamous. The chancellors especially, for the most i)art, were as motley and iucomx)etent a set as ever i)olluted the JoO KEMl'KR COUNTY VINDIOATED. s<';its of justuw. In fact, it was diilicult for a person of strict integrity, under this administration, to hold the ])0.sit;on, and wJierever one i)roved himself to be abovt; ])artisuu intlueuces when on the bench, he was promptly removed. This was the case in regard to Chancellors Peyton and Drennan. The iormer had been appointed to the bench by Goverjior Alcorn, and was removed by (lovernor Ames, because he refused to make certani rulings and decrees in conformity to the wishes of the governor in the case of The University of Mississipi)i, et al. i\ The Vicksburg and Xashville Itailroad ct al. For the purpose of making this chancellor subservient to his will in this matter, Governor Ames approached the father of the chancellor, lion. E. G. Peyton, who was then chief justice of the State of Mississij)[)i, and en- deavored to persuade him to exercise such inliuence over his son as woukl induce him to frame his decisions in ac- cordance with his will. This infamous proposition the chief justice spurned with scorn and indignation, and, although a Kepublican, was ever afterwards bitterly hostile to Ames and his administration. The circumstances of the removal of Clnincellor Dren- nan, of the twelfth chancery district of ^Mississippi, were as follows : A radical candidate for sherilf in Yazoo County by the name of IMorgan, and a henclnnan of the governor, had shot and killed his rival for the same ollice, under very aggravated circumstances. Morgan was tried ami refused bail by the justice court. At that time the statute forbade a justice of the peace or any judge granting bail to any person charged with a ca]»ital crime where the proof of guilt was ])0sitive or the l)resumi)tion great. 31organ sued out a writ of habeas corpus before the chancellor, who, upon hearing, refused also to grant bail, and remanded Morgan to jail. Upon this he received from Governor Ames an order of removal. In both of these instances the action of the governor was evidently in i)ursnaiice of a purpose to control and render the judiciaiy of the State entirely subservient to his will, KEMPER COUNTY VINDIGATKD. I5i aiul that, too, by metbods in violation of the. constitution of the State, and coiitraiy to all the provisions of law, made as safe<;'uards to the integrity of the judiciary. The constitution of the State of Mississii)pi provides that the chancellors be appointed by the governor of the State, with the advice and consent of the senate; but Governor Ames, in order to dispense with this traniuiel ni)on his purposes, declined to make the nominations t«> the senate, as required by law, and made the appointments after the adjournment of the legislature by virtue of his authority to fill vacancies in vacation. The character of some of these appointments is here given. He appointed as chancellor of the eighth chancery district, a man by the name of J. D. Barton, who was not only totally incompetent to discharge the duties of the ofiice, hut had been publicly charged with the crime of forgery. Of this Governor Ames was informed upon high authority. Among his informants was J. M. Stone, the present governor of Mississippi, who then resided in the same county with Barton. Yet Ames refused to believe it, or, at least, cared nothing for it, and ai)pointed Barton as chancellor ; but when at the next session of the legislature, his appointment came before the senate for confirmation, the charges were investigated, and the proof of guilt was conclusive. Yet Ames refused to witlidraw his nomination until he was told by his IViends that it was impossible to get the senate to confirm the appointment. In some cases he appointed men to be chancellors who were not members of the bar; in these instances tht^ persons were promised the appointment as a reward for some services rendered, or to be rendered, to the governor, and they would then pretend to read law for a short time, and get their licenses, which would be followed imme- diately by their commission as judges of the chancery courts. There were some of theni who had never practised. A man by the name of Cullins was appointed in Marshall County, who had been a sort of physician, but had never 153 KEMPEU COUNTY VINDICATED. read a law book. IL; wa.s a State senator, receivrd liis appointment wliile at Jaekson, went home, managed to procure license, and immediately took his seat ii[)on the chancery bench. These licenses to ])racti('e law were quite easy to obtain ; the custom was to make npplicntion to tlie court thron.i;ii motion made by some nu'mber of the bar. A committee of two or throe members would tlu^n be appointed by the court for the purpose of examination ; this conunittee a)id the candidate wouhl then withdraw to a corner of the court room, talk to the applicant a little about law, then fto in and report favorably, and license would be i;raiited at once. The whole tiling: of admission to the bar in Mississippi, jsince the war, has been a mere matter of Ibrm and a farce. The writer himself has known young men admitted to l)ractice in the courts of the State who, elsewhere, would not have been considered competent for an ellicient clerk in a law office. Hence, even their admission to the bar afibrded no recomnuMulation to Ames' appointees. As chancellor of the ninth district he appointed a man named L. C Abbott, who was not a lawyer, either by reading or i>ractice. lie had never practised law, or written a bill, though he is said to Irnvc been a conscien- tious man and tried to do the best he could, so far as a man could be conscientious, who would attempt to occupy >u:-h a i)osition under such circumstances. He had been adndtted to the bar only a few days prior to his nppoint- nu'ut, and with the distinct understanding that his admission to practice should be followed by a commission to act as chaiu'cllor. In tlie thirteenth district he appointed William Breck, Avho was said to be wholly unworthy an law, or experi- cnee in its practice, ami he had also l)eeu i)nl)liely charged and r('i)orted to the governor as having defraiuled and swindled, as assignee of the estate of orie Green, of Madison KEMPER COUNl'Y VINDICATED. 153 County, tbe creditors of said estate, and as having been a I)arty to certain illegal and fraudulent contracts let out by the board of supervisors of Madison County, while he was the president of the board. It may be observed here that the chancery courts of Mississii^pi have full common law chancery and equity jurisdiction, without limitation as to the amount in contro- versy, and when the suit is once properly brought, and the circumstances arrayed so as to give jurisdiction to the particular court, its writs run throughout the entire State. They have control of the estates of minors, and the dower of widows, and the partition of estates, and they have the power of granting all remedial writs, such as the writ of habeas corpus, injunctions, ne exeat, etc. Waiving all questions of honesty of purpose, or leaving them to the judgment of the reader, I will mention here an instance or two of the manner in which these powers were sometimes exercised by these chancellors : In 1875, a large number of the citizens of Oktibbeha County sued out an injunction against the collection of a railroad tax in that county. The sheriff of the county, by whom the tax was to be collected, was a Eepublican, and a contractor with the authorities of the railroad, and was, therefore, a i>artici- pant in the advantages of collecting this tax. This tax was to go to him under a contract for work on the railroad. A bill of injunction was prepared and filed by the Hon. J. W. C. Watson, on behalf of the taxpayers, and the sheriff being the principal defendant, the process was placed in the hands of the coroner, as provided by law in su(;h cases. The fiat for the injunction was obtained in the name of some ten or twelve taxpayers, from Chancellor Frazee. The sheriff, upon this, applied to and obtained a fiat of in- junction from Chancellor Sullivan, enjoining the coroner from serving the original or i)rior writ. Upon the strength of this novel injunction, some ten or twelve other tax payers came forward and having caused the first bill to be dismissed, filed another bill, praying for the injunction of the sheriff in behalf of themselves and 154 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. tlic other tax payers of the county. This was likewise very ])roperly ^iirauted by Chaneellor Frazee, who lived some [)i. Tlie writer had occasion to act as counsel in a suit belbre Austin Pollard, chancellor of the seventh district. On rendering his decree, he ai)pi)inted the clerk of his court, one U. II. Harrington, as coiiiinissioner to comi)utc the amount in. volved in the decree. The clerk made out an exorbitant bill of costs, besides falling into an error of a considerable sum in (computing the amount covered by the Judgment. The counsel made a motion to have (he eompiilation cor- ke:\iper county vindicated. 155 reeled. The chancelloi- positively rernsed to entertain tlie motion. Upon this the clerk was arrested on a charge of extortion, and bronj^lit to trial before the major of West Point. Tlie chan<;elIor came in with him and attended the trial. The clerk was found guilty. Tlie next morning the chancellor opened his court, and on his own motion, with- out the knowledge of the parties, revised the bill of costs, making it even larger than that lor which his clerk had been found guilty of extortion. This same clerk was sub- sequently tried and convicted of forgery and altering the records, and was sentenced to the ])enitentiary, but suc- ceeded, through means of some technicalities, m having -the judgment reveist-d by the supreme court. What ma.y have been the notion of right and justice these men entertained, the writer does not pretend to define; but it is certain that such conduct is utterly in- compatible with that ])urity which the teachings of chan eery jurisi)rudence and the sacred functions of that court would lead us to exi)ect. The clerks of the circuit and chancery courts during this period were extremely ignorant and unreliable; many of them could not write or read, but depended entirely upon some deputy who could, but who was generally, if possible, more untrustworthy than themselves. The sheriff of De Soto County *for four years, was an illiterate, ignorant negro. He had no conception of the duties of his office, and, in fact, did not i)ietend to dis- charge them. The business was all done by his dei)uties, who were generally irresponsible persons. And while the funclioirs of the circuit judges do not require a higher order of talent for the purposes of justice than those of the chancellors, they, at least, are more open to view, and incompetency in their exercise is more readilj' detected, which, perhaps, made them more cautious ; yet, with one or two exceptions, the entire judiciary of the State, during this time, lacked the confidence and respect of both the bar and the people, for there was but little cer- tainty as to whether right or wrojig would triumph in 156 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. any cause in law or equity. They saw the whole judicial machinery ramified with corruption, permeated with vice, and clogged with ignorance. During this era of crime and misgovernmenfc there was no held more prolific of villainy than the ofQce of the shrievalty. The sherifCs were, ex-ofticio, the tax gatherers of the counties, many of them notoriously defaulted, wliilc others, no less vicious, managed, by engaging the co-opera- tion of the auditors of public accounts, in concealing the tracks of their crimes, under color of their otlice and un- der cover of political fraternity, extorted, at pleasure, the hard earnings of the negro, whose ignorance and credulity toward his white allies rendered him a tame subject for tlieir exactions. The sheriff of Noxubee County, in 1875, one W. ]\I. Conner, was reported to the governor as a defaulter, hold- ing twenty-two thousand dollars of public money which he relused to pay over to the county, and yet, on account of the partisan services of this individual, Governor Ames refused to remove him from office. The sheriff of Colfax, now Clay County, was indicted for malfeasance in office, was tried and convicted, and a judgment of tine and removal from office passed upon him. This judgment was affirmed by the supremo court, and, Avithiu two hours after the affirmation of the judgment, Governor Ames reappointed him to the shrievalty of the same county. And it was by his direction and aid that the notorious I'eter Crosby returned to Vicksburg and at- t('mi)ted to take i)ossession, by force, of the shtTilf 's office of Warren County, whicli he had voluntarily abandoned, and which caused a conllict between the races, in Avhich many lives were lost. But, as we will have occasion to recur to these events hereafter in taking a special view of Governor Ames and his conduct during the canvass of 1875, we will d<'fVr any ])arti('nlar notice of them until then. It was in rctrrciicc to {\\i^ dclcnnincd attempt to rt-in- state Crosby that, on being warned of the hazard attending KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 157 it, and the terrible consequences likely to ensue, tliegover- jnor declared that " the blood of the martyrs was the seed of the church," and that " the killing- of twenty-live or thirty negroes would result beneficially to the Eepublican party." Th euse of these expressions was testified to by Major Allyn, at that time the commander of the Federal military forces in Mississippi, and intimate in both his official and l)ersoual relations with the governor ; and on another occa- sion, wlien there were a number of negro politicians as- sembled at the governor's mansion, for the purpose of discussing the right of the negro Crosby to be reinstated in his office, and the manner in which that object should be accomplished, some one present intimated that, if that attempt should be made, as Governor Ames urged that it should be, there would be bloodshed. Upon this, the Gover- nor declared, in substance and effect, that he and other white men had faced bullets to free the colored people, and now, if they were not willing to fight for their rights and to maintain their treedom, they were unworthy of it. In consequence of such expressions and the active aid ho promised, on the morning of the 7th of December, 1874, a large body of armed negroes appeared before the city of Vicksburg, with the avowed intention of capturing the city and reinstating Peter Crosby in the office of the sheriff of Warren County. The citizens Hew to arms in defence of their homes, and marched out to meet the besiegers. A bloody conflict ensued, in which many lives were lost, and the negroes were totally defeated and dispersed. On this occasion the people of Mississippi had the morti- fication of seeing their governor instigating and abetting the negroes in a war of rapine and savage butchery upon the white people of tho State ; and that the attempt proved a failare was owing to the prompt manner in which the whites accepted the gage of battle. Being thus baffled in his efforts to i)ro(lucea war of races, as he declared, for the benefit of the radical party, he now songht to avail himself of the opportunity, at least, of ir)8 KESrPER COUNTY VINDICATED. iiivokiiin tlio i)resence of the United States niilitnry forces, aiul called lustily upon the President of the United States for troops to quell what he chaiacteiized as a rebellion on the part of the white people of the State. The call was answered by the authorities of the Federitl government, who were ever ready to seize upon everj- circum- stance calculated to fan the embers of hate in the minds of tlu^ Northern peopU', and to further ]);ntisan i>urposes. Troops were sent to Yicksburg, and through their instrumentMlity the negro, Peter Crosby, who had now become extremely obnoxious to the people, was leinstated, and the sheritf of their choice, A. J. Planigan, forcibly ejected by the arnu'd tbrces of the United States. The governor, so far, was triumpliant, and no doubt felt that hereafter his schemes wouhl meet with no further opposition, and that his acts wouhl henceforth be beyond any (piestion or eiibrts of redress by the wiiite j)eople of ]\Iississii)])i. JI(^ now began to gather around hini the most vicious men of liis i>iuty that couhl be found iu the State, and who were thoroughly imbued with his s]»irit of hostility to the whites, anen ])ro('ured for less than one fourth of that sum. Vet this man, with this princely salary, placed his ])riiiting oflice in charge of another, it is said, at a salary of eighteen hundred dollars iu currency i)er annum, and accei)ted for himself a clerk- shij) in the ollice of the State Treasurer, at a salary of fdteeu hundred dolhus iu State warrants, worth seventy-five cents on the dollai'. This was done in order to handle the funds of the State, and easli the warrants, which he ])urchase(l at a heavy discount. A. II. liowe, ex-cougressiuan ajul ex-treasurer of Panola County, was another. Jle had KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 159 obtained imlawfully from the negro board of supervisors of that coimty about five thousand dollars, of which amount he swindled the county The third, ami last, that it is deemed necessary to mention here, was one A. T. Morgan, of Yazoo County. This man had married a negro woman, and, it is said, that when State senator he oii'ered to sell his vote on the printing bill to Eaymond for two thou- sand dollars, but Eaymond said he bought it for nine hun- dred dollars. He is the same individual that murdered his rival or opponent for the office of sheriff, and in which case the governor appointed a chancellor especially for the purpose of granting him bail. He secretly, and without any competition or public bid- ding, conferred the contracts for the convict labor of the penitentiary upon two of his partisan and personal favor- ites — namely, one O. C. French and one C. S. Jobes — who were partners in the transaction, upon terms most unfavor- able to the State, and upon conditions precedent that they should render to him certain partisan and personal services for the advantages he had thus bestowed upon them, to the great detriment of the interest of the State, and to the increased penance of the unfortunate inmates of the State prison themselves. Proving more and more violent in his feelings toward the white people of Mississippi, his mind was constantly irritated by a consciousness of the scorn he merited on their part, and his whole policy seemed now to be shaped by a desire and fixed purpose to degrade the sovereignty ot the State, and to bring its constitution and laws into con- tempt. He never suffered an opportunity of humiliating the people to pass unavailed. All his appointments, re- movals and reinstatements seemed to be subordinated to that purpose and design. He even assumed to appoint and commission justices of the peace and constables, in contravention of the laws, and in violation of the constitu- tion of tlic State. This he attempted in the County of Washington. He corruptly approved the bond of one M. L. llollaml, who had been api)oiuted State treasurer by him. IGO ICEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. This 1)011(1, as required by law, was to consist of an obli- gation made to the State to the amount of eighty thousand dollars, with three or more good freehold sureties, Avhose solvency and responsibility for that amount should be es- tablished by their oaths that they were worth the penalty conditioned and nominated in the bond over and above their just debts, legal liabilities and exemptions in free- hold estate, and to be approved by the governor before the candidate could be inducted into oHice. Notwithstanding these positive requirements, Governor Ames approved the bond of Holland, regardless of the fact that his sureties had not made the oath of solvency and responsibility as required, and notwithstanding a jn'oinpt admonition from the attorney general of the iState, his constitutional adviser, that he had examined the bond and found it to be insuflicient, and not in the due form of law, and that the said Holland had no right to exercise the functions of the otlice of State treasurer until his bond w^as perfected. In the face of all this. Governor Ames thrust this man, thus irresponsibly qualified, into the treasurer's ollice, and gave force and validity to all of his acts in the same manner as if he had been duly qualified. Nor was his i)ardoniMg i)owc'r exercised in a less parti- san manner, or less in derogation of justice. Indeed, so notorious and arbitrary was his conduct in this respect that the vilest criminals, provided they were his political adherents, looked with no unfounded hopes for this boon, which he disiiensed with such lavish hand. The following is an instance of this character: One Alexander Smith had been tried and convicted in the Circuit Court of Chickasaw County of a heinous crime com- mitted ui)on the person of a little girl under ten years of age ; for this crime he had been sentenced to the peniten- tiary of the State for life. There was no question as to the guilt of this criiiiiiial ; no technicality of law violated on the trial, and no grounds for an app(Mil. Tlu^ proof was positive and incontrovertible, and the sentence was KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 101 reached by aud through the regular channels and due forms of law. Smith was placed in the penitentiary for the term of his natural life, but soon after this ho came into possession of a large sum of money, which was imnnv diately put in operation to procure his reprieve. One Frederick Parsons and one William Koonan were well known partisans and personal friends of the governor. To them he at once applied for mediation. He gave to Par- sons the sum of twenty-eight hundred dollars, and to Noonau the sum of two hundred, for their resi)ective ser- vices in his behalf. These men at once set to work to effect the object for which they were hired. They procured the signatures of parties living in remote i^arts of the State, who had never even heard of the case, to a petition to the governor for the pardon of Smith. On that petition, neither the name of the circuit judge, before whom the trial had taken place, nor that of the district attorney, nor any other member of the court, or of the jury appeared, nor, in fact, the name of any one con- nected with the trial ; yet ui)on the strength of this peti- tion thus obtained, the governor tendered his pardon to Smith, and he was enlarged and restored to all his rights and privileges, v/hile dyed all over with the black stains of unatoned and unmitigated guilt. This liberal exercise of the pardoning power, which was dictated by no humane considerations, but purely for partisan purposes, as the character of its recipients shows, was carried to such an extent as not only to interfere with the course of public justice throughout the State, but it was a charter of immunity for the commission of crime. According to his report of i^ardons aud commutations of sentence, made to the legislature on January' 17, 1876, it will be seen that Governor Ames i)ardoned thirty-seven, and tlM3 negro lieutenant governor, while acting governor, thirty-two convicts during the single year of 1875. Thus were sixty-nine convicted felons turned loose at once upon society, aud most of them devoid of any mitiga- 11 102 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. ting circumstance to justify u pardon. By reference to this same rt'i)ort, it will be seen that these re|>rieves were for the most part based upon the recommendation of parties who were particular personal or political friends of the govoi'nor. The imnumity fiom the le^al consequences of crime thus occasioned and ajjoroved by the chief executive of the State did uot lail to bear its Iruits. It promoted a disposi- tion of lawlessness, for which the governor himself was, in a great measure, res[)onsible. It encour;iged and prom])ted his partisans to the i)erpetrati()n of any villainy which might redound to their personal or i)olitical advantage, and the contagion once promoted by the examples of the highest otUcers of the State government continued to spread until the whole macliinery was gangrened with corrui)tion, at which even the stomach of Korthern Eepublicans became nauseated to sncli an extent as to call forth such observations as the following fi'om a k'ading Eepublican paper, the Philadelphia P/y.s.s; "The administration of Governor Ames, a carpet bagger and political adventurer, has done much to disorganize society and teach general contempt for all authority in Mississip])i. The disorder is palpably the result of a corrupt and powerless government, that has taught its ignorant negro depenirits were even bnrdened with dread less the very shelter should be torn jiway from over the heads of their wives and little ones. That in addition to their i)overty, there were necessarily many burdens to be borne by the Southern people nn- Juiown to them in more prosperous times, such as their l)art of the public debt of the general govern ment, the great expense of the public school system, and the in- creased i)rice of necessary commodities, and to this might be added the wilful waste and extravagance of ])ublic officers, and the heavy local burdens that fall n]>on the ndiabitants of cities and towns. For the remedy of these evils, they asked for economy on the part of the party in (Control of the State government. They showed the rapid and continued increase of the taxation imposed upon them, which had been continually augmented and raised from a State tax often cents on one dolkir in 18G1), to fourteen times as much in 187-4, and that the county levies, in many instances, were increased in a still greater ratio, wliile the people were much poorer at the latter period than at the former, and that this tax was even greater, from the fact that the assessed value of their property was greatly in excess of its market value, and thus, while their [)roi)erty decMned in value, ami the peoi)le became poorer, their burdens of taxation were continually increased. That nothwithstanding these extravagant tax levies, the public debt during all these years had increased annually on an average of over six hundred and sixty-eight thons- aml dollars, a sum wliich, if economically administered, would itself defray all the expenses of the State goveru- mcnt. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 1G5 That proportional results had, in many instances, at- tended the operations of the ])oards of county supervisors, wliose malfeasances and extravnuaucies lind saddled the counties with ruinous debts. That these facts, wliether regarded as the result of misgovernment, or as i)roof of the uuprosperous condition of the people, i!risin<^' from other causes, were alike painful to contemi)late. That the general failure of crops during- that year con- tributed to place the taxes still further beyond their power of reach. That all the crops raised in the State during that year, if sold at their market value, would not pay the cost of production and their enormous taxes; and that in con- sequence of this, in many parts of the State, the people were on the very borders of famine, and tiiat these suffer- ings fell heaviest upon the poor, who formed a very large miijority of the citizens ; and they then asked, if in this condition of things, the few officials of the State, who were the mere servants of The people, ought to be allowed to grow fat and rich, while the people were suffering for the common necessaries of life. They asked that a system of rigorous economy be estab- lished ; that the salaries of public officers, of every grade, be reduced to a scale commensurate with the extreme pov- erty of the people and the product of all other labor, and that the number of ofticersbe leduced to the sniallest num- ber adequate to the performance of the necessary functions of the government. They enumerated the following particulars, to which tliey suggested the application of economy: First, the ])ublic printing — which they represented to have cost the State, prior to the year 18G1, but eight thousand dollars l)er ainium, and that subsequently to the year 1S70 it had cost annually an average of more than seventy three thou- sand dollars, and which could not be attribiited to any ex- tra amount of labor in this department, for that, in the State of Georgia, where like conditions exist, the cost of l)ublic printing, during the years 1872 and 1873, did not average more than ten thousand dollars per annum, thereby IGO KEMrER COUNTY VINDICATED, sliowinj;- that the cost of public printing in Mississippi, for those two years, was oi.uht times that of Georgia for the same i)eri()(l. The remedy suggested and asked for this evil, "Was a diminution in the size of the public journals and rei)orts, tlie omission of all useless and superfluous matter, and a reduction of the price of printing, and that the same matter be paid for but once. They represented, also, the injustice of what was known as the district pi-intiiig bill, and which required that cer- tain newspapers be designated in each district as the only' bearers of i)nblic notices, by means of which the people Avere forced to contribute to the maintenance of a ]iartisan press, and to bestow their ])atronagc on persons who were obnoxious to them, besides the inconvenience and futility of such notices being made in ])apers often at a distance, and with little ('ir(!ulution. They suggested a reduction in the nuud)er of circuit judges and chancellors, which they represented as having been increased as to circuit judges, without sullicient reason, from ten to thirteen, aiul v.iiich ten circuit judges performed, without complaint, all the duties of the thir- teen, in addition to all the duties now performed by the twenty chancellors, and that the litigation before the thir- teen circuit judges and the twenty chancellors was far less than it was before the ten judges who formerly performed all these duties. Tliey called attention to the increased expenses of the legislature, and to the number of sinecure cilices that had been introduced in connection with it. They showed that the salaries of the governor and lieu- tenant governor were fai- larger than those paid by other States of like ])oi)nlation, and they asked that the salaries of the treasurer, auditor, secret;uy of state, and attorney general, and all other State oHicers be lixed at the amounts they were jjiior to tlie wai'. Thai the h'c^ of the slieriIVs and (;leiks of the (;ouits weie too high, and, besides, wei'C often greatly augmented by exorbitant and illegal charges. They also emiiiierated, as lit subjects for the applic^alion of economy, jail ices aial tlu> cost for the support of pri- KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 1G7 souers ; Uic salaries of the inspectors of the penitentiary; the trustees of the insane, deaf and dumb and blind asy- lums, and the approi)iiations to the State universities. They complained of the unjust discrimination made in maiutaining a few favored students at these universities in exclusion of other children of the State at large. They also comi)hiined of the extravagant rates of taxa- tion for public school purposes, and the reckless appropria- tions made for them, which they showed amounted to the sum of six hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars an- nually. They suggested that the office of commissioner of immi- gration be abolished as utterly useless and siuecural, and recommended that the salaries of school superintendents be saved by combining the duties of that office with those of the sheriff; and they requested that the salaries of teachers of common public schools be reduced to the smallest ainount sufficient to secure the services of com- petent teachers. They recommended amendments to the constitution, fixing biennial sessions of the legislature, and ])rohibiting special legislation. They alleged that a large portion of the time of the legislature was consumed in the consideration of bills of that character, and by means of which the reports and ])amp]dets of acts were rendered volumiuous and expensive, when general laws would at- tain the same ends. They called especial attention to the powers and abuses of the boards of county supervisors, which they characterized as the most important courts of the State. They represented these boards as being composed gen- erally of very ignorant anarty alone, and not for the i)eople, it lias no business to govern at all. And this tax i)aying is not so niucli a question of i)artisan feeling as of pocket T)Ook feeling." For the benefit of those who may desire to study carefully this most extraordinary document that t'ver emanated from a free i)eoplo, or was ever preferred to the legislature of a free government, it is presented in full in the appendix to this work. For the lessons it teaches arty, into the ranks of which, through the l)olicy of the military goveriniuMit, and the instrumentality of the cari»et baggers, the negroes had now been inar- shalled in a solid mass. Alcoiii was a citizen of the State, but one whose c(^ndnct had rendered him entirely untrustworthy and obnoxious to the white people. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 177 The election of Alcorn was eflected by tlie active inter- ference of tlie district military commander. General Ames attended in person i^be convention of negroes and carpet baggers that nominated bis friend, and wben called upon for a speecb, be made tbe following laconic barangne: " Yon bave my sympatby, and sball bave my support." Tbis, by reason of bis uniform and tbe military jjower be had already so ijrominently displayed, exercised very great control over tbe sentiments and conduct of tbe negroes. In tbe interest of Alcorn, be sent United States troops to various parts of tbe State. lie caused leading Demo- crats to be arrested and tbrown into prison, and by this means controlled and determined tbe election in accordance witli bis wisbes. While he was military Governor of Mis- sissippi be ruled with hatred in bis heart, and a rod of iron in bis hand. His proscriptions were wholesale, and as systematic and inexorable as those of Marius and Sylla. Tbe best men and tlie truest patriots seemed to incur bis especial dislike, and were expelled from othce witbout cause. If they stood at all in tbe way of his ambitious schemes, or in tbe way of oflice seeking adventurers, it was sufficient to evoke an order for their expulsion. Nor were his i)ersecutions less notorious than his pro- scriptions. Citizens were frequently arrested for their ])oliti- cal oi)iuions, and dragged from their homes by armed sol- diers of the United States, without warrant, and often without knowledge of tbe ofience with which they were charged, kept under a military guard, often in chains, carried to places remote from the scenes of the offences alleged against them, and tried before military commis- sions created for the purpose to convict. In such cases the writ of habeas corpus was tbe only remedy to which tbe citizen could look for relief. But Ames was not to be baffled in his persecutions by any ancient right or form of law. He determined at once to forestall any effort to avail themselves oC the operation of this time honored writ. Mili- 12 ITS KEMPEll COUNTY VINDICATED. tary law, coinbiiied with the dictates of his own arbitrary will, was to be, indeed, the supreme law of the land ; and to tear away every barrier to his cruel and cowardly per- secutions, he issued the following despotic MLLITAIIY order: " To commanders of posts of Grenada, Corinth, Jaclcson, Lauderdale and Yiclishurg. "The coininandiui;- j^cneral, Adelbert Ames, directs that yon do not obey in future any writ of habeas corpus issued by the United States district or circuit courts, nor any or- der made by such courts for the release of prisoners in your custody. Should such order be served on yon, you will report the fact by telegra[)h." That this order was in violation of that clause of the constitution of the United States, which guarantees to every citizen under arrest the right of judicial inquiry into the cause ol" his imprisonuient, is beyond all (piestion. Kor can it be chilmed tliat any such power was conferred \\\)()\\ military commanders by the reconstruction acts. But the constitution had no bounds for the paity then in power. And this partisan tool of tlie Washington authori- ties, was left to {\\v. flee exercise of his own vicions will, in 0|)i)ressing and torturing a i)eople whom, from the bottom of his heart, he desi)ised and regarded as worthy only to ])e ruled and robbed by adventurers from the Xorth. It was left for Ames thus to annul this sacred right, a riglit held heretofore to be inalienable in every common law country, and which has existed from the days of liunna- mede. Governor Ames persistently and disdainfully spurned all kindly relations with the white peoi>le of j\Iississipi)i. lie desii'iMl none but the aifections of the negro, ami with him alonc^. he desired to unite his fortunes; and while he Avas continually fanning the llames of iirejudice against himsell", his vanity e\'eu suggested to his imagination the s|»''c(;ul<' of Mis.;issi|»[.ians cringing Itel'uie iiim with I he KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 179 offers of corrupt overtures. He stated on oatli, before tlio Bontwell committee, that be was satisfied he had been ap- proached from time to time by the leading' white people with llattering oll'ers of honor and oflice if he would put on the garb of Democracy ; but this assertion was fully re- futed and its falsehood i'ully exposed at the time by the Democratic press of the State. In answer to a question of Senator Bayard, he said : "It is a notorious fact that in that party — and I don't hesitate to say that I imagine I have been api)roached from time to time by the oi)positi()n with most tlattering offers held forth that, should I chauge my coat and become a tool of others, I migist receive any honor that I might deiuaud." Q. Will you state the names of any leadiug members of the opposition w!io liave made this i)ro])osition to you? A. Not unless it is essentially necessary. Q. You have stated the fact, and I merely ask you to give you an opportunity" to state them if you choose. A. I say, witli reference to that, that any ])roposition of that hind would not be made iu wiiting, but in a way that the person whose name I miglit give might evade it, or give another interpretation of it. But, as I stated origi- nally, I imagine that I ha^"e been a}>p:()a.clied, and I have no question in my own mind on that point. Q. Can you give the name of any person of the opposi- tion party to you in MissisJpi)!, who made such offers to you as you have described ? A. I think I can ; but I prefer not to do so unless the committee require it. Q. Do you know their names, or the names of any one or more ? A. The events referred to occurred a number of years since. I think I would be able to name the persons, or cer- tainly to ascertain their names vrithout any difficulty. Q. From whom would you ascertain them ? A. The chaige was publicly made in a Kepublicau paper, called the Leader, in 1870 or 1871, and I think never denied by tlie opposition press ? 180 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. Q. Were the parties named, who made you the otlfcr, in that i)aper ? A. I do not remember. ]t is true tliat such a cliargo did appear in that paper, l)ut it was j)roniptly challenged by the leading* Democratic ])aj)ers of the State, ami proof was demanded. The reply of the Leader was that the proposition had emanated from ]3emocratic members of the legislature, who would soon be called upon to elect a United States senator. Upon this a disclaimer was nuide and published by every Democratic member, in which each one, separately and singly, denied ])ositively that any such proposition had ever been made or thought of. No reaflirmation of, or attempt to substantiate this charge, was ever made. This, together with the relnctancy and manifest inability of Governor Ames to designate the authors of the pro])osition, is well calculated of itself to breed grave suspicions as to the existence of anj' such fact. The administration of Alcorn was impressed with the same features that characterized that of his military predecessor. The active interference of General Ames in the canvass had enabled him to triuinpli at the election, and it now be- came a ])rominent object on the part of Governor Alcorn to consummate the compact by which Ames was to be ])laced in the United States senate. This, owing to the circumstances which have already been mentioned, was easily accomplislied. And in 1870, Adelbert Ames, a citi- zen of Maine, and an olTicer in the United States army, took his scat in the United States Congress as senator from the ^ttatc of Mississippi. lie was military governor at the x"jie of his being chosen to the senate, and it is said that lie ccrtilied to his own election. Alcorn succeeded Ames rtS governor under the new constitution. During his career in the United State senate, his course vas marked by an utter indiilei'ence and disregard to the interests and liglits of the State \\c i)reten(led to represent. lie was ever ready to give credence and imjmrt to any slander which the carj>ct baggers, and often more d^.'graded KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 181 native rud teals, might eoiieoct aud perpetrate upon the white people of the State, aud invariably voted for every measure of persecution which their bitterest enemies in- trodneed to congress. ]S"ot once was he known to assume the attitude of their champion or defender. In sliort, his course in congress is too well known to require any lengthy commentary. Suffice it to say that his senator- ship was simply a burlesque upon a Eepublican form of government. At the expiration of his term in the senate, in 1873, he returned to Mississippi aud entered the canvass as a can- didate for governor against Alcorn, in consequence of which a rupture occurred between these two radical lights, which eventually caused an incurable split in their party. Criminations and recriminations of a bitter character were now bandied between them and their respective ad- herents. In this contest Ames had a decided advantage. lie was sustained by the worst element of the party. The carpet baggers flocked to his standard and marshalled the negroes in a solid phalanx under his banner, lie was, in consequence, elected by a large nuijority, and with the opening of the year 1871, he began his notorious career as governor of Mississippi, or rather as governor of the ne- groes aud the few white adventurers who had alone elected him to the position ; for from the native white people he sought no support, either before or after he entered u])on the ofQce of governor, but his whole conduct manifested a desire to repel any sympathy on their part with his admin- istration. To show that the white people were actuated by the sentiment '■'■ lyrincipia non homines^^^ it may be adduced, that at this election, they, as the least of two evils, accepted and sustained Alcorn, whom they had spurned in his race with Dent. While they had but little confidence in Alcorn, they saw, in the administration of Ames, a pro- lific crop of the bitter fruits they had already tasted under his military rule. The mutual denunciations indulged in by the two wings of the radical party during their canvass, did not cease 182 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. upon the election of Ames. He entered upon his office as governor of the State, confronted by the opposition of the native white people and tlio hostility of a portion of his own party, whom he had alieiuited. This breach in his ]iarty continued to widen during the progress of his ad- ministratiou. The two wings now assumed the name respectively of tlie Ames and the Alcorn wing. In reference to this oppo- sition to his administration by leading members of his own l)arty, Ames made the following statement before the Bontwell committee, in atiswer to Senator Bayard : Q. Without going into the fact of the cause of their op- ])ositi()n to you, was there, or was tluMC liot, in Mississipi)i, in the year 1875, a violent and vigorous opposition to you and your administration in the ranks of the liepublicau party ? A. I say violent — but not powerful — not numerous. Q. Did not IMr. Pease, the ex-senator, publicly denounce your administration ? A. He did. Q. Bid not IMr. Alcorn, Ihc ])resent senator, denounce your administration constantly'!* A. lie did. Q. Have they not constantly charged you in ]>ublic with making an effort to array the races, one against the other 1? A. I am not aware, that Mr. Tease ever did; Senator Alcorn has always made lliat charge: I do not think Mr. Pease ever made that charge; at least, it never attracted ni}' attention. Q. Are you aware of IMr. Pease's publication in regard to your administration '^ A. I never read it, but I know that he did nmko such charges. The following is an extract of the jniblication referred to, and it is inserted for the reason that it einanated from a leading Ite[)ublicau of the day, ami one who was intimately acquainted with the workings of Ames' administration. This statement was publisheil in the New York Tribune of October 12, 1875 : KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 183 ^' I regret to say that in several localities in the State of IMississippi a deplorable condition of affairs exist. Indeed, among the people throughout the State there is a most lamentable want of confidence in the State government. The colored people distrust the power of the State under Gov- ernor Ames, and the whites generally question his disposi- tion to administer the government so as to afford i^rotection to life and property and maintain domestic tranquillity, for whicb governments are instituted. As to his motive, I do not undertake to explain ; but the fact is, he has, unfortu- nately, pursued a policy calculated to create distrust, and he has caused the white population, who represent the intel- ligence and wealth of the State — the true, essential element upon which the maiutainanceof good government depends — to believe that he has been, and is now, attempting to create an open antagonism between the races, and to plunge the State into a condition of revolution and domes- tic violence such as will necessitate martial law, and thereby advance his personal political schemes. * * * "I was going to say that, notwithstanding the excitement incident to partisan strife and the race i)re'iudices, which have been wrought up by the extremists on both sides, the majority of the people, regardless of race or political affilia- tions, deprecate violence, and are ready to assist the properly constituted authorities in jireserviug peace. I have no war to make on Governor Ames personally. He is deader now than Hector ; but he hopes, by the means he is pursuing, to secure a legislature that will send him to the United States senate. " To reach the senate was his ulterior purpose in becoming governor. All his appointments are made upon the condi- tion that his appointees shall support him for the Senate. The preservation of the liepublican party in Mississippi depends upon an honest administration of the laws of the State, and it will go under unless the remedy for all our troubles is within political integrity, exact justice and honest dealing. 1^'ederal interference is not ueeded or wauled. The use of force would do more harm than good. 184 KEIMPEK COUNTY VINDICATED. Nine tenths of the white population arc opposed to hiiri. They want good men to come into office to work a reform in existing abuses." Upon this same subject, J. S. Morris, Esq., formerly attorney general of the State, and a leading radical, ad- dressed a letter to the chairman of tlie llepublican State executive committee, and bearing date September 8, 1874, in wiiich he said : ''The evils which have for some time past afflicted all classes of our people, are attributable, iu a large degree, to the desertion by high liepublican oflicials of the principles of the party, to wilful and llagrant violations of the consti- tution which they are sworn to support. These are well known to every intelligent man in the State, and will be universally discussed, exposed and i^unished in the next election." Thus, with the leading men and most intelligent portion of his own party, whom his misgovernment luul alienated from his administration, arrayed against him, aiul bearing upon his shoulders the terrible load of hatred he had wil- fully engendered on tlic part of the white people, and which lie had on all occasions sought to aggravate and inllame, the position of (iovernor Ames in the beginning of the year 1875 was by no means enviable. Amid this universal discontent of all classes of the ]ieoide, and the restless distrust of him ami his administration, pervading the whole State, he saw no other means of effect- ing his ambitious purposes than that of force and intimida- tion — the exercise of the military power of the general government in co-operation and alliance with his armed partisans. And it is questionable, from the general tenor of his conduct, whether he ever desired to accom])Iish his })olitical schemes in any other manner, llis sole wish seemed to be to ride into the United States senate upon the crest of violence and the ]>alanquin of military rule. He was (charged ])ublicly by ex-Senator Pease, Senator Alcorn, ex-Attorney General JNlorris, and Attorney Gen- eral Harris, all leading radicals, with using the executive KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 185 power of tbo State for the purpose of securing his electiou to the United States senate, and to this end it is evident that he had prostituted every function of the gubernato- rial power, lie had, for this purpose, and in scorn of tlie intelligence of the State, united Ms fortunes with the ne- groes, ichom he believed to he in the majoritij. Although utterly unlearned in the science of civil juris- prudence, ho avoided eveu the acquaintance of the most learned and intelligent citizens, and, in fact, all who could liave imparted an air of respectable polity to his adminis- tration, and surrounded himself with the most reckless and vicious adventurers, who were entirely obsequious to his wishes. Conscious of having no claim to the respect of the white people, and without the least eflbrt to obtain it, he determined to defy their opposition. The end of all his methods to consummate his intrigues and accomplish his designs was the sword. IJe declared that he regarded all opposition to his administration as a " rade issue," and avowed his intention of using all his power, personal, political and oflicial, in belialf of the ne- groes, who were now as thoroughly enslaved to his will and to that of his obsequious tools, with whom ho had tilled the various offices of the State, as they ever weixi to the most arbitrary owners. Yet there were many of the most intelligent of this race wlio were by no means blind to the disastrous conse- quences of such a course on the part of the governor. ]lence, about this time, ex-United States Senator Kevels addressed a letter to the President of the United States, the following extracts from which it is deemed not imperti- nent to introduce in this connection. He says : '• The great masses of the white i)eople have abandoned their hostility to the general government and Eepublicau princi])les, and to-day accept as a fact that all men are born iree and equal, and I believe are ready to guarantee to my people every right and privilege guaranteed to an American citizen. The bitterness and hate created b}^ the late civil strife has, in my opinion, been obliterated m this 186 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. State, except, perhaps, iu some localities, and would have long" since been entirely obliterated, were it not for some unprincipled men who would keep alive the bitterness of the past, and incnlcate a hatred between the races, in or- der that they may a;j,j4ran(lize liiemselves by office and its emohunents, to control my pc'0i)le, the etibct of which is to degrade them. ******** " If the State administration had adhered to llepublicaii ])rinciples, advanced pati-iotic measnres, ai)pointed only honest and competent men to ollice, and sought to restore contldence between the races, bloodshed would have been unknown, peace would have ])revail(!d, Federal interfer- ence been nnliiought of ; harmony, friendship and mutual conlidence would have taken the place of the ba^'onet." It is hard to conceive of a more terrible responsibility than that lodged by these charges upon the shoulders of the governor, but that ho was utterly indifferent to both the circumstances and the consequences of his course, may be gathered from the pertinacity with which he held to it. lie was alike deaf to the voice of warning and expostula- tion, and his short career was like an angry tornado that sweeps onward in its maddening course, strewing its path Avith ruin, until stayed by its own exhaustion. Terhaps the most infamous act of the Ames administra- tion, and which drew upon it the fiercest opposition of tlie more intelligent and honest members of his i)arty, Avas what is (tailed the Pearl Kiver navigation scheme, v.hich was an a(;t of the legislature, api)roved by Ames, in re- gard to the State lands. The genej'al government had given to the State of Mis- sissipi)i certain lauds for educational ]nirposes, and for the improvement of navigation, etc. The opportunity whicii this donation afforded for swindling the State had been seized u[)on by a ring, composed of the editor of the Filot^ the oflicial radical papei-, and AVarner, French, Sullivan, O. S. lice, adjutant to the governor, and others of his warm i)artisan and i)ersonal friends. These men proposed to the legislature that if it would KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 187 give tliem these lauds, coiuprising one liuiulred and twenty thousand acres, that they woukl open the navi- gation of Pearl lliver. The legislature made the grants as requested, and the governor approved them without talc- ing the proper bonds for the i)erlormance of the service. These men sent O. S. Lee, tlie governor's adjutant, to Chi- cago, to hud a purchaser, ile soon returned, bringing witli him a man named Baldwin, to wliom the lands were sold by tliese men, while not a chunk was ever removed from the river, nor has the JState received any other equivalent. AVliether the fraud and other invalidating elements of this transaction wili su[)port the principle of caveat emptor, or otherwise restore these lands to the State, has never, to tlie knowledge of the writer, been tested. Surely there should be some way to annul such an outrageous swindle. In such a state of affairs, it became evident that the Democratic party, composed of the wealth and intelligence of the State, was disposed to combine with the discon- tented elements of the opposition for a strenuous effort to gain control of the State government. This alliance was promoted by many natural features which it convoked. It was an alliance between labor and capital, the employer and employe, both of which had suffered alike from the corrupt administration of govern- ment. It was also an alliance between natives of the saun; soil ; men who had been reared together from infancy, and whose natural affection and mutual faith had been dis- rupted by base devices. It was an alliance of mutual in- terests for the protection of mutual rights and the promo- tion of mutual prosperity. The radical party had arrayed the negro in a groundless and unnatural state of political hostility against his former owner. Therefore, it is not surprising, that when the barriers of deceit and prejudice, and the race hedges that had hereto- fore impenetrably fenced in the radical party were once broken through, that the negroes should have flocked by thousands to the staudard of their natural allies. To defeat this event was an object to which Governor Ames directed his efforts early in the year. 188 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. For this pmiiosc lie procured tlie passage of a bill by the legislature, in the spring of 1875, called the Gatling gun bill; so named because the purchase by the governo)- of Ibnr Gatling guns was authorized by its i)rovisions. This bill empowered the commander in chief to organize, from the enrolled uiilitia, two regiments of ten companies 'each, and to purchase four or more Gatling guns, and or- ganize a cori)s of select oHicers and men froni the infantry to send with these guns. It may be observed that these guns were regarded as peculiarlj' terrible and destructive. To elfect the pnrpose of this bill, there was an appr()])ri- ntion of sixty thousand dollars, of which five thousaiul dollars were limited to the purchase of supi)lies and munitions of Avar, ecinipments, etc. Alter this li\'e thou- sand dollars had been drawn and expended for the i)urposes for which it was designated, the tax payers obtained an injunction from the chief Justice of the kState. This injunction was based ujjon the condition conpled with this appropriation, that it should not be drawn unless the militia be called into active service. The writ prevented the expenditure of the money for the i>urposc intended, and it is to the timely interference of this man- date from the chief justice that the people of Mississippi to-day owe their narrow escape from the horrors of a race war that would have drenched the 8tate in blood. Is'ot- withstanding that the military preparations of the gov- ernor were paralyzed by this circumstance, they had pro- dnced a, dangerous state of feeling — they had inllamed the ])a.ssions of the negroes, and excited the indignation and fears of the white people. His plans, up to this time, had met with no serious opposition ; in fact, they had succeeded but too well, ami the state of alfairs they had i)r(Kluced caused at last a sense of alarm to seize upon eveu the nund of Governor Ames himself, lie had been, as already stated, bafiled in his etforts to secure the co-operation of the Federal army. As early as the L'oth of JMay, as if i»re- paring for hostilities, he had addressed a letter to the sec- retary of war, iu which he applied for a statement of arms KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. ' 189 and otliei military stores tliat had been issued to tlie State since 18(30, and the amounts of the a})]>ortionment for the different years. This was for the ])nrpose of ascertaining; what qnantity of arms and munitions he might depend upon obtaining from the general government, in advance of tlie formation of his companies. Again, on the 2d of June, 1875, he wrote to the chief of the United States ordnance department, making application for a price list of ordnance and ordnance stores, also for a book of forms in use in the department. On the first day of May of the same year, an order was issued from head- quarters, State of Mississippi, adjutant general's oflice, in which was announced the officers of the Mississippi State tooops, as follows : " Brigadier General Albert G. Parker, of Holmes County, aide-de-camp; Lieutenant Colonel James J. Spellman, of Madison County, aide-de-camp ; Lieutenant Colonel Omar S. Lee, of Holmes County, aide-de-camp. [This man after- Avard proved a defaulter for a large amount, and tied the State.] Brigadier General Win. Gray, of AVashington County ; General Brown, colonel, first regiment of infan- try ; Alexander Warner, of Madison County, major gen- eral, State militia." These men were all radicals, and three of them, Spellman, Gray and Brown, were negroes. Warner was also chairman of the State Eepublican execu- tive committee. There was no Democrat appointed to any offico in the military service of the State. It is not deemed necessary to set forth a fall list of all Governor Ames' military appoint- ments made during the spring of 1875, preceding the elec- tion ; but it will be sufficient to observe that they were numerous enough for an army of great magnitude. Coupled with these i)reparations, were constant threats on the part of Governor Ames, to bring United States troops into the State. It was necessary for the existence of his party that the political unity of the negroes should be preserved, and that they should bo solidly massed in the radical ranks. To do this, it was necessary to retain them under 190 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. tlie impression tbat lie was supported by tlio rcderal authorities, and would be sustained by the military' power of the general government ; for the great body of the negroes had but little relish for the idea of entering alone into an armed contest with the whites. These demonstrations produced tlie ver^- state of feel- ing the governor desired. From what has already been adduced, it will not be a matter of surprise that the campaign of 1875, in ^lississippi, was conducted by both parties with a feeling of bitterness extending to all parts of the State, and which, being thus aggravated and iuteu- sihed by the conduct of the governor, soon assumed an alarming as]>ect. That individual seemed to cherish the idea that the white people over whom he ruled had no rights not subject to military authority, or which could be exercised in antagonism to his own personal interest and the interest of the radical party. The "race issues," which he so promi)tl3' recognized and promoted, would, he hoped, produce results which would alford him a pretext for in- volving the aid of the United States army in ])ursuance of his purpose to control the election — to crush out all opposition to radical rule, and to his own ambitious scheme of riding into the United States Senate on the necks of the negroes of ]Mississii)pi. Nor did he wait for the self presentation of such i)retext, but sent the very functions t)f his oflice to lish for them throughout the borders of the State. Accordingly, on the 24th of September, 1875, he sent the following cinmlar letter to each of the sherilFs of the State, most, or all of whom were cainlidates for reelection : "Sir: I am directed by his excellency the governor to inquire if any militia organizations are needel in your county to assist tlie ci\il olTiccn's? Are there any threats from the o])p()siti()!i lliat, in your Judgment, will be carried into elfcct ; and, if so, will it be possible to hold a (iiuet and peaceable election ? "A. S. rACKi:K, Adjutant GcncraV^ ICEMPEK COUNTY VINDICATED. 191 The assurance implied in these questions, being the surest nietliod of fixing beyond doubt the re-election of these sheriffs, as a matter of course suggested to them the reply desired ; and wherever there were any doubts in this resi)ect, those doubts either gave rise to false reports or to actual eftbrts on the part of the peace officers of the counties to stir up something as a pretext for the sending of troops into their respective counties. Thus were the very precincts of peace invaded by the governor, and the very fountains of order corrupted that they might con- tribute to the tide of strife, with which it seems he wished to see the whole State inundated. It is not likely that these sheriffs, with such intiuences bearing upon them, "would fail to avail themselves of this proffered opportunity of rendering their tenure of oflice secure. Hence we find them replying to the governor in one general strain, the key note of which was " riot and intimidation " in their counties ; and, in some instances, as in the case of the sheriff of Monroe, as stated by Ames himself, we find them smuggling arms auolicy and conduct of the governor was soon pro- ductive of its natural and expected fruits. The negroes assumed, day by daj-, a more threatening attitude, and in many of the negro counties the white men grew pale and haggard with alarm and anguish. In many instances, they became sick from constant watchiug and loss of sleep. Their ])illows were haunted with ai)paritions of the assas- sin. They lived in constant dread and expectation, not knowing on what night, or what hour of the night, they and their wives and children might be butchered, and their homes consumed by the torch of the incendiary. Such was the universal state of feeling among the white people in many localities of the State. Yet, notwithstand- ing these influences, there were, even at this time, a few well disposed negroes here and there who deprecated this state of things, and manifested a feeling of kindness toward their former owners, but in almost every instance of this character they were threatened with death, beaten and silenced by their own race. In Yazoo County, a negro member of the legislature of the State, named Patterson, paid a negro fifty dollars to take the life of another, who voted with the Democrats. For this Patterson was hung by the friends of the mur- dered man, who were all negroes, and his ])rocurement of the death of the negro Democrat was confessed by the negro who committed the deed, while occurrences of whipping and threatening for this cause were frequent throughout the State- The first serious public outgrowth of this state of a Hairs was also in Y'azoo County. The sheriff of that county, one A. F. JMorgan, a white man, had, as has been belbre stated, married a mulatto woman, and, as a matter of course, was an autocrat among the negroes, lie had KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 193 al.so murdereil a radical rival for the office of sheriff, and had, in many respects, rendered himself peculiarly obnox- ious to the white people. Ha was a stanch personal and l)artisan frit'iul of the governor, and was ever ready to serve Lis wishes, ui^on the least intimation of their char- acter. The government of this county was completely in tlie hands of the worst elements of the radical party, so that it was utterly impossible to bring Morgan to justice for any act that he might commit. As has been stated, a chancellor, Drennan, had been removed from office by the governor, because, in the exer- cise of his judicial discretion and his judgment of the law, he had refused to allow bail to this man for the murder of Hilliard, his opponent for the office of sheriff. The whitQ people, believing him to have been guilty of an outrageous murder, were anxious that he should be brought to trial, and law and justice vindicated ; but the negroes became furious in his behalf, and made the most terrible threats in regard to the people and town of Yazoo City, if he should be brought to punishment. This was more than a year prior to the event of which I shall presently speak, and the bad feeling engendered by this circumstance con- tinued to grow, and was encouraged by Morgan on his triumphant return from the Hinds County jail, where he had been placed for safe keeping, to the sheriff's office of Yazoo County. No indictment against him was found until the State passed into the hands of the Democratic party, when he immediately became a fugitive from justice. That he was guilty of murder was found by Chancellor Drennan, when, after a hearing extending through five days, he refused to grant him bail ; but he was a bitter partisan, had married a negro woman, and all these efforts U) bring him to justice inflamed the animosity of the negroes against the whites. No sooner had the campaign of 1S75 opened, than this man began to pi}" all his arts in inflaming their minds and instilling the lessons dictated 194 KElVn^ER COUNTY VmDICATED. from the mansion of the g'ovornor. So viohnt had he become in his harangues that it was deemed expedient on the part of some white men to attend his meetings, and if ])()ssil>le, to check to some extent hy tht-ir i^resence his inthimmatory discourses. For tins i)ur})ose they were present at a negro meeting in Yazoo City, on the night of the 1st of September, 1875. At this assembly there were about a dozen white Demo- crats in attendance. Moigau was the speaker of the oc- casion, and while engaged in one of his usual incendiary diatribes, a Democratic negro in tlie audience arose and uaked him some question, upon which the negroes became very excited and indignant, and such expressions as " Knock him down !"' " Put. him out !" etc., were heard throughout the ludl, which they doubtless wouhl have, carried into effect, if nothing more, had not the white gen- tlemen in-esent offered him protection, which resulted in a general firing of pistols in the room, in which Mitchell, a white man, was killed, and Foote, a negro, was wounded. Morgan lied from the room and proceeded to Jackson, where he sought i)rotectiou and aid from liis friend the governor. Upon which the governor tlueatened, and in fact began preparations, to send ^Morgan back under a nnlitary escort of negroes. This step greatly exasperated the Avhite people of the county, and they began in turn to make ])reparations to prevent the advent of such an expedition into their county. A few days after this, on the 4th of September, a riot of a more serious character occurred at tlie little town of Clinton. Inspired and infliuned by these events and the attitude of the govc) nor, and i)y the inflammatory s])eeches of the radical oiators of lioth cok)rs, a feeling of intense excite- ment and animosity against tln^ whites existed on the ]);iit of the negroes at the cai)ital of tlie State an(i in the neighboring kr.vns, wlu-ic these intluences were most KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED, 195 directly felt ; and while this cauldron of excitement was at its fullest ehiillition, a negro barbecue and political mcetiug was announced to take place at the town of Clin- ton, on the 4th day of September, 1875. Clinton is in the County of Hines ; the county containing- the State capitol. To this barbecue and speaking dense masses of negroes, mostly armed and in military order, flocked from the surrounding country. The number was estimated by many eye witnesses as being not less than twenty -five hundred men, women and children, of which more than twelve hundred were men, of whom a large number bore arms of some description. A general invitation had been extended to all persons to attend this meeting, at which, as had been announced, there was to be a joint discussion between members of the two i^olitical parties. According to this understanding, there were some sixtj^ or seventy white men in attendance. Of these, some twenty or thirty, perhai^s, wore pistols on their persons. Not more than half of them, however, participated in the fight. All that is known, to any degree of certainty, about the inception of the riot tlmt occurred on this occasion, is that it originated in a personal altercation between a white man and a negro. This hap]>ened amid the dense throng of negroes that enveloi^ed the speaker's stand. It seems that this M'hite man attempted to avoid the difficulty, and retreated from his dangerous and heli)less position in the dense crowd, and reached a small party of whites who were standing about a hundred yards from the stand, whither he was pursued by the negro and his friends. This party consisted at hrst of four or five persons, but on the assault on the white man being renewed, it was increased to about a dozea white men, who were soon, however, separated into groups of two or three by the pressure of the dense masses of negroes who immediately gathered around them. At this time the cry of "A fight!" "A fight!" was heard, and immediately such exclamations as " Come on !■' " Eally !" "Kill the white men!" were heard in every direction. Ul)on this the drums were beaten, and dense masses of 190 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. negroes with knives, pistols and clubs, rushed upon the little party of Avhites, wlio still endeavored to retreat, and had succeeded in making their \yay a short dis-f tance to a small ravine, at the same time asking the negroes to stand back and keej^ the peace, and saying that they desired no difficulty; but at this juncture their retreat was cut off by the advance of another dense maas of negroes who bore down upon them in front, at the same time crying, ''Kill them!" "Damn them !" " Jvill them ! " There were now eleven white men surrounded by, perhaps, live hundred armed negroes, all clamoring for;j their blood. The whites made every effort to escape and' avoid bloodshed. They pleaded for peace, but they were now pressed almost to sufibcation by the dense crowd of I negroes. At this time an unfortunate circumstance gave the desired signal for the attack. A i)istol in the hands of one of the wliite men, being struck by some one jostling against him, was discharged into the ground at his feet; a negro then shot a white man named \Vharton. Upon this the firing became general, the whites using their arms vigorously. Two negroes were killed and four or five ^vonnded, when the crowd in front of the whites began to break and retreat. The whites also began to leave the gronnds in small squads and in different directions. At this some negro cried out, " Don't let a wliite man get away !" The negroes then rallied and pursued the whites in every direction. Two young white men, lively and Thompson, were overtaken, killed, and their bodies hor ribly mutilated. One Charles Chilton, a white man, who had reached his home immediately, on the road, a short distance from the si)eakiiig grounds, was shot and killed while in the act of assisting some negro women and children to enter his yard to escai)e being run over by the dense troop of negro horsemen who were dashing wildly up the road. A Cajitain AVliite was ca[)ture(l, shot, stabbed and beaten and left for dead by the road side, while several other white men were Avonnded in tlu; fight or in attempting to leave the grounds. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 197 Such, iu substance, was tbe origin, so far as known, and the result of the riot at Clinton, Mississippi, on tbe 4th. of September, 1S75, as concurred in by all of those persons whose testimony was taken before the mayor of Clinton, within a lew days alter the events occurred. That the negroes were anticipating and desired a tight, and went to Clinton that day prepared for it, is a conclusion that can scarcely be avoided b}' any calm and i)assionless view. It is stated by many gentlemen who were present that the negroes seemed from the first, and througliout the day, unusually disrespectful toward the whites, and frequently rubbed against them in a boisterous manner, as if they were seeking to provoke a difficulty, and at the same time re- marking that they intended to have theii* way there that day. It is quite evident that the negroes, who were armed, went to Clinton that day v»'ith the intention of attacking the whites, and that they made a quarrel between a white man and a negro the pretext and signal for the slaughter. Upon the heel of these events the wildest and most horri- fying rumors fiew through the country. It was reported that the negroes were gathering for the destruction of the town and a general slaughter of the whites. The citizens Avero horrified with the events that had already taken place, and even more so at the yet more terrible scene, which their just fears i^ictured upon their imaginations. They called aloud for their fellow citizens to bring them relief and save their town from ruin, and their wives and children from destruction. A prompt and speedy response came up from all directions, and before the bright sun of the Sabbath morn had again peeped at the scenes of the previous day, five hundred white men, with glistening arms, were gathered in the streets of Clinton for the protection of the town. During the great excitement that followed this massacre, which continued for several days, there were some seven or eight negroes killed in the vicitdty, who were known to have been leaders in this riot or chief actors in the murders. This was the work of the friends and rela- tions of the murdered men. 198 KEMPEU COUNTY VINDICATED, Yet, iiotwitlistandiag this scene of turbulence and blood- sbcd, in which more than a thousand negroes either di- rectly or indirectly participated, on Monday niorninj;^, two days alter, the town of Clinto!i and the surrounding- coun- try were as quiet as if tlie soil had never been bathed but with the balmy dews of heaven. All was quiet and peace lestorcd. Another riot occurred not long after this at Friar's Point, in Coahoma County, which was inaugurated by the negroes, and originated in the party schism between the adherents of Governor Ames and Senator Alcorn. On this occasion three or four hundred armed negroes approached the town for the avoM'ed puri)ose of destroying it. They were promptly met by the Alcorn party, headed by Senator Al- corn himself, and in theconllict that ensued two white men and nine negroes were killed. The Democrats had no share in this matter. These riots are all traceable directly to the policy of the governor, and were the natural results of the teachings of his ])artisans, and to the feeling which his own conduct aggravated and inspired. Prior to these events, a disturbance took place at Vicks- burg, but it seems to have been unpremeditated and of no ]>olitical importance. In this aliray, which occurred on the 5th of July, a man by the name of Hill, the same who had figured so notoriously in Kenii)er County, w'as wounded. This man was there befriending Cardozo, the negro super- intendent of education, who was engaged in a difljculty ^vith a white man, from wiiich the riot originated. These riots created alarming rumors throughout the State, and greatly added to the llames of animosity between the two parties and the two races. There was no iirosecution or legal investigation of these riots set on foot by the civil au- thorities of the State. Governor Ames had but one remedy he desired to apply, and that was the bayonet. There is nothing to show that he exercised any of the civil functions anil powers of his oflice to suppress these disorders, or to jjacify the spirit from which they originated ; but in con- formity with his ideas of government, he i)romi)tly applied KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 1139 to the President of the United States for protection, "but as Le failed to establish such a condition of aiiairs as couhl justify General Grant in sending United States troops to his aid, the application was refused ; not, however, from any returning res})ect for constitutional government on the part of the President and his advisers, but owing, as he said, to the repugnance on the part of a majority of the people of the United States to the further interference of the general government in the affairs of a State. Yet, at his suggestion, the attorney general sent a man in a rather nondescript capacity to the ca})ital of Mississippi. This man, wliose name was Chase, acted as a kind of spy of the Federal government, witli power to investigate the police condition of the State of Mi^ssissippi, and to control matters, by constant threats to introduce Federal troops in the State, should he find it necessary to do so. In the meantime the rebuff" he had received from the Federal authorities, and the resolute and manly attitude of the white people, entirely disconcerted the military plans of Governor Ames; consequently, he intimated to the Demo- cratic leaders of the State, through this man Ciiase, his willingness to enter into an arrangement with them in re- gard to the conduct of the eleclion. This intimation met with a cordial reception, and, accordingly, a committee of gentlemen waited on the governor, and represented to him the terrible state of aiiairs ; the great danger of a race conflict ; the determination of the white people to defend their rights ; to protect themselves, their families and their property to the utmost of their ability ; but that they de- precated such a necessity, and begged the governor to disband his militia, and to put a stop to armed negroes marching to and fro through the country, as that alone could possibly preserve the peace between the races. They stated to him in substance that it was these mili- tary and intimidating movements on his part, which were the sole cause of the excited state of public feeling ; that his calling out, and arming the militia, their marching through the country with fixed bayonets and with drums beating, 200 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. and liis rc])orto(l intention of invading* the eonnty of Yazoo, attended by all the oiicnnistances of war, had i)ro- duced an intense feelinj;- of indignation among the whiti'. citizens, and that all these demonstrations were attiihnted to political i)nri)Oses on his part. They assnred him that the peoi)le woidd not toUaate this liourishing of bayonets all over the coniitry, and that if it was not diseonlinncd it wonld surely result in a eollision between the races; tliat the best way of settling matters was for him to disband his troops, and accept the pledges of the best citizens and most iniluential gentlemen of the State that peace and quiet should be maintained. Upon this, the governor pro- posed to disband his militia with their arms in t.heir hands. This was objected to, upon the ground that the retention of their arms by the negroes might still be the source of se- rious disturbances. The governor then agreerevail a more perfect peace, or a greater respect lor law, or a greater desire to preserve order, than in Mis- sissippi, and this is well known to the State executive, if he knows anything of the disposition of the people over whom he rules. Under these circumstances, we cau regard the i)resent eftbrts of the chief magistrate of the State to put into active service the militia, and thus, in a time of })rofound peace, to organize a standing army iu violation of the Constitution of the United States, and of this State, in no other light than as a deliberate attenii)t to incite dis^ t.urbances, so that there may be an imaginary insurrection which he may suppress in blood. We deem it our duty to warn you against these machi- nations of the chief magistrate of the State, and to urge you not to be betrayed in a moment of passion and just re- sentment into acts of violence not necessary for self de- fence. The governor, in his eftbrts to blacken the fair name of the State, and to procure Federal troops, which ho lioped to use for the advancement of his personal fortunes, telegraphed to the attorney general of the United States that the race feeling was so strong, that it was believed that the organizing of a militia of colored men would develop a war of races extending even beyond the limits of the State, and that the organization of whites alone would be inellec- tual. Notwithstanding he entertains these views, he has steadily refused the prolfcrcd aid before alluded to, and is now ])roceeding to organize, as we are informed, a regiment (»t Ciich raci', and to iiiu.->ier them into active ser\ ice. There ciiu be no otlier reason for tliis tlian a wish on the x)art of the chief magistrate of the State to incite that war which he said would he produced, and to bring about disorder and confusion. For it is well known to all of you that there has not been the slightest eople to obstruct the enforcement of the laws. The horrible misruh^. of the jtresent State government has, very naturally, produced Jin intense interest among all classes of our people in the result of the pending elec- tion. It is right, and m\ aus])ici()us omen, that this interest is so deep and so universal. ^Ve would jiot liave you to abate one jot or tittle of the earnest zeal and deterjniua- tiou you have hitherto nmniiested to lescue our State from the corrupt horde of adventurers and their ignorant allies wlio, by sowing distrust betvreen the races, seized the govern- ment of the State for sellish and unworthy ends, and who have so administered it that, but for the conservative love of law and order of our people, we would now be in a state of anarcliy. AVe would rather urge you to work with a still greater zeal and with a more untiring energy, until the redemption of the State is secured beyond all doubt. We are glad to be able to assure you that victory is so certain that it cannot be lost, except by our own misman- agement or failure to carry on the contest to the end, in the same spirit that has characterized it up to the present time. In every x:)art of the State our friends are organized and thoroughly alive to the importance of the contest. Every- where on our side there is union, harmony, activity and conlidence. Our adversaries, on the contrary, are divided, demoralized and dispirited, and their rank and hlearckei>t 204 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. together ouly by the desperation of their leaders, who seem detennined to retain their ill f;otten and ill nsed power at any cost to the i)eoi)lc of the State. Be patient, yet firm and determined. Let every true son of jNlississippi act as if the fortunes of the day depended on his individual exertions. If there be, in any quarter, strife and rivalries among our friends, let them cease. Let every consideration of self and personal advancement be buried out of sight. Let us all be animated by the one sen- timent that there can be no higher duty to discharge than to work faithfully to secure the redemption of our beloved State, unless, perhaps, it be to use nobly the victory, when it is won, for the common and eipial good of all her people and to the injury of none. J. Z. George, Chairman, 11. n. Chalmers, I. A. P. Campbell, L. B. Chrisman, TJ. M. Young, E. C. Walthall, Thomas B. Sykes, A. T. Koane, H. M. Street, I. D. Vertner, John A. Binford, W. A. Percy, W. II. 11. Tyron, E. Kichardson. On the 2Jth of September, 1S75, the following secret cir- cular was sent by the chairman of the liepublican State executive committee, addressed to the shcrift's, chancel- lors and circuit Jiulges of the State, who had jointly the a])i)()intment of the registrars of election : " Dear Sir : You are aware that during the present can- vass and in the conung election, while the opposition are using every means to defeat the Republican party, avo are forced to the necessity of em[)loying every lawful advan- tage our position gives us. Not the least of these is the matter of registration, and the proper performance of the duties of registrars. " lb is apprehended that many Bepublicans have already been prevented from registering by threats and intimida- tion. It is, tlierefore, of the greatest imiwrlance that the miijorily uf (he hoard of registrars should be composed of T J^x^JJA.\JJ-l.^^u±J* men not only true and faithful, but who will also have the courage and firmness to discharge their duties fearlessly, especially in canvassing the vote and making up the re- turns. With this view, we earnestly ask you to examine the list of 3"0ur appointments critically, and satisfy your- self fully as to the character of each man, and make such changes as, in your judgment, will promote the free and full expression of the people at the ballot box. We take the privilege of addressing this circular letter to all the judges and chancellors throughout the State, because it has been suggested to us that there are some professed Republican registrars who are incompetent, unworthy and of doubt- ful fidelity. "A. Waener, CliairmanP It surely requires no close examination of this document to disclose its imi^ort and purpose. The circuit judges, chancellors and sheriffs of the several counties, jointly ap- pointed the board of registrars; that is, the circuit judge, chancellor and sheriff respectively appointed a registrar for the county. These registrars, in their turn, appointed the inspectors of election, and supervised and canvassed the votes and made up the returns, and, in fact, controlled the whole machinery of the elective franchise in their re- spective counties. Such were the organization and power of the officers whose adaptation of character to the dntics required is so strenuously demanded by the chairman of the Republican State executive committee. What these " lawful advantages'''' were, in an honest and impartial per- formance of their sworn duty, to tlie party which possessed the appointment, is not readily discernible. But they are .further required to be " not only true and faithful," but to have sufficient courage to meet whatever requisition may be made upon them in the interest of their party, " espe- cially in canvassing the vote and making up the returns." It is hard to conceive of language more suggestive of the ?v>/e expected of these election officers, by the chief of the party, than this last phrase. To lock themselves up in a secure and rctiied room, with liUa KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. tlie boxes, and then peaceably and leisurely count the bal- lots, certainly does not seem to require any liigli degree of courage; but, in the lace of their oaths, to make and utter a false list of the votes, surely recjuires attributes whicli none but an unscrupulous partisan could denominate courage. J>ut it seems that the chairman was apprehensive that there might be some registrars appointed who would not l)Ossess a sufficiency of the "courage" for the puri)ose in (juestion. lie had been informed that some were " incom- l)etent, unworthy, and of doubtful lidelity," and he desires the honorable And grave and (lignilicd judges and ehanceliors of the State to lay aside their sanctilied ermine and patrol the counties in search of registrars who might have the courage, worth and Jidelity to use every advantage their po- sition conferred ; in short, Avho would make up the returns favorable to their party at all events. CHAPTEE VIII. Let us now return from our peep at the general condition of affairs in tlie State to the conduct of the campaigns in Kemper County. Tlie feeling' of distrust and alarm Avhich we liave found existing- almost universally in Mississippi at this time, was greatly increased in this county by the lawless and violent conduct of Chisolm and Gilmer. Tlierc was a general and peculiar interest felt in every canvass in this county, not on account of any special importance thej^ possessed, but in consequence of the high handed career these men had long pursued in the county, and of which I have treated in previous chapters only of the most criminal and diabolical features. It will be necessary now to advert more especially to their liolitical despotism and partisan outlawry, which led to the complete overthrow of all law and justice in the county, aiul produced an era of alarm and distrust well nigh bordering on desperation. They had the whole negro population of the county, which exceeded that of the whites, comi^letely under their control, and were, in fact, the arbiters of life and death throughout the county. From the time that Chisolm was appointed sheriff', in 1S70, he had been the acknowledged leader of tlie radical party in Kemper County. He was looked upon by the ignorant negroes, whom he controlled with despotic hand, as the fountain of all law and the medium of all power — county, State and Federal, civil and military. They voted in every instance for whomsoever he designated for office. The first canvass in which Gilmer threw his black heart into the radical scale was that of 1872, in which he was a candidate lor the State senate, to which aspiration his dia- bolical part in tlie murder of Dawson, as has been already stated, ])romoted him. No hoouer had be entered the canvass than, hund in hand 1308 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. witli Chisolm, lie began his infamous career. Indeed, so joint and inseparable became the careers of these two men from this time, that it would be difUcult to treat of their conduct singly. Prior to this time Chisolm, as he himself testified, caused a great many of the leading citizens of the county to be arrested by the military authorities. This fact has already been alhuled to in a former chapter. ITe luul, besides this, and after the cessation of military rule in tlie State, while sheriff", reported many citizens to the grand juries of the Federal court. This was done to procure, if l)()ssible, their imprisonnu'ut and removal from the county, or such a conviction as would either work their disfran- chisement or alford grounds for challenging their votes at the polls. In consummation of their plans to intimidate all disaf- fected negroes, and to prevent the white people from voting, Chisolm and Gilmer procured United States troops to bo sent to Scooba on the day of the election, who surrounded the i^olls with fixed bayonets, and api)eared ready to do their bichling. On this oc(;asion it is said that Gilmer took his position in a middle door leading to the jwU room, and examined the ticket of every negro that approached, and whenever lie found one with a Democratic ballot in his hand he seized and tore it up, at the same time forcing the negro to pass in with a radical ticket, which he substituted in place of the Democratic. He also (challenged all the white men who hail been indicted chielly ujjon his information and that of Chis- olm in the United States court, and on their i)leading "No conviction," he would reply that there soon would be, and that they consequently could not vote ; and thus, with such imi)udence hurled in their face, and the bayonets of the Federal troops pointed at their breasts, they were but too glad to make their escape from the scene, retire to their homes and there contemplate these glorious features of the " best government," etc. I'erhaps the most cruel and ouliagcons instance of this kind occurred at l)c Ivalb. An aged genlk'nian, wiio lived KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 209 a short distance in the country, named McCIelhind, a man of the most peaceable and innocent character, caine in to tlie polls bringing with him several negro men whom he emi:)loyed on his farm. This old man went to the ])ol]s with his negro employees, and all voted the Democratic ticket. When the lieutenant in charge of the Federal troops, named Shelby, saw these negroes vote the Democratic ticket, he, without the slightest provocation, kicked the old man out of the court house, where the election was be- ing held, in a most shameful and brutal manner. Wlien the I)eople saw the poll box in the hands of Federal soldiers, ready to do the bidding of Ohisolm, who stood over it witli observant eye as the arbiter of the very right of franchise, and men beaten because their negro employees voted with them, they, as a matter of course, felt that it was an intol- erable humiliation, to remedy which no effort in their power should be spared. Nor was there any remedy or redress to be found for these outrages — surely none to be had by a recourse to the courts of law. They, too, were controlled by these same men. The law was in their hands, and its vindicatory arm was never raised, save in its maddened strokes against the objects of their jiersonal or political vengeance. In any cause of virtue the courts were dumb. During this same canvass, Chisolm, in a speech at Scooba, told the negroes to stand tirm for their rights, and if they could not obtain them otherwise, to go for the white people in their homes. Mr. J. W. Maury, a highly respected and reliable gentleman, who was the opposing candidate for sheriff, on hearing of this expression, afterward took occa- sion to ask Chisolm, while making a i)ublic speech at De Kalb in this same canvass, if it was true that he gave such counsel to the negroes at Scooba; when Chisolm, drawing himself up, replied with much emi)hasis, " Yes, by G-d ; I did !" At this same meeting one Kellis, a radical, was making a speech, in which he denounced Dr. Saunders, the Demo- cratic candidate for the legislature, as a habitual drunk- 14 210 KEJIPER COUNTY VINDICATED. nrd, 111)011 AYliicli John W. Gully, who was present, with many other Democrats, replied in a very mild manner that Kellis erred ; that he knew Dr. Saunders well, and that he did not get drunk on all occasions as asserted. Upon this, Chisohn rushed up to the speakers' stand in a very boister- ous and anj;ry manner, seized a double barrelled gun, and exclaimed, " John G-illy, you damned old scoundrel, if you can^t keep your mouth shut, leave the court house!" At this the Chisolm clan made a rush toward Gully and gath- ered pressingly around him. Mr. Maury, the opposing can- didate for sherili", then remonstrated with Chisolm and his crowd, telling them that Gully meant nothing, and that he had only told the truth in defending the personal character of a friend. By this means he succeeded in allaying the excitement of Chisolm and his partisans, who, for this triv- ial oflence, had assumed an attitude toward Gully which even threatened instant death. Mr. Maury, then, by pre- arrangemeut, arose in reply, and after contradicting and refuting the slanderous assertions made in regard to the Democratic candidates and the white people generally, demanded of Chisolm what he had those guns concealed behind the judge's stand for ; to which Chisolm replied that John Gully had that moi-ning brought some guns to town hidden beneath his shawl, which was known to bo entirely false, and so jn-oclaimed hy JMr. ^Nlaury. Soon after this, Chisolm announced that he would speak on a certain day in the village of Wahnlak. News of this was dispersed far and wide among the l)lacks, accompanied, as usual, by such instructions as Chisolm deemed necessary to the con- summation of his ])lans ; and accordingly, on that day the negroes poured into the village from every direction, in a boisterous aiul threatening manner, and prominent among these hostile demonstrations was a wagon load of shot guns, all loaded, which was stationed near the speakers' stand. In addition to this, the negroes, as they arrived upon the grounds, were formed into line, placed under the connnand of a very desperate individual named David, and regularly drilled. KEMrEIl COUNTY VINDICATED. 211 Before tlic speaking began these guus were distributed among the negroes, who immediately gatliered around the stand with them in their Iiands. Alter Chisolm had fin- ished a very iniiaramatory harangue, Mr. Maury arose in leply, and eontradicted some assertions that Chisolm had made. Upon this there was a general npi'isiug of the negroes, and every gun was eoclced and pointed toward the stand. Captain James Jenkins, a highly esteeraed eitizen, ealled on Chisolm for an ex})lanation of all this l)ristling and flourish of arms. To wliieh Chisolm rep'lied that he had taken these preeantions through fear that he might be mobbed ; and yet there was searcely a single pocket pistol even worn by the whites in attendance that day. It is said, moreover, that Chisolm's speech on this occasion was extremely bitter and incendiary. It seems that he had but one speech, which he used on all occasions, and which he toned to suit the circumstances. It seems that this ghost of assassination — .which no doubt had its origin in the throes of conscience — often haunted him, and was often invoked as a pretext for conduct, the- purpose of which was too apparent for so flimsy an attribution as the aggressive character of his fears. On one occasion there was a small squad of men, said to have come from Alabama, who were, on some errand or other, passing through the county, and had camped overnight on the outskirts of the village of De Kalb, in a grove near Chisolm's residence. In the early morning they were discovered by a negro boy, and their presence reported to Chisolm. As to what followed I will let him state upon his oath, as testified before the ku-klux com- mittee, page 250. He says : " I met this boy at the gate, and I saw that he was very much excited. He said : ' Judge, there are twenty-five or thirty men over there after you.' Said I: ' \Vhat in the devil are they after me for!' He said: 'I do not know what they are after you for.' I said : ' Where are they V Said he : ' They are gone on in the direction of De Kalb.' Said I : ' Hezzy, you go by and tell Joe and Tom and April to get their guns and come up town just as quick as they can.' " 212 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. Q. Wlio vrerc tlicy ? A. They were colored men living on ray place. It will be observed that at this very time Cliisolin was the sheriff of Kemper County, and we have him here arm- iiii;- four negroes who were living on liis place, and piir- sniiig a squad of strangers for the purpose, evidently, of creating a disturbance. lUit the climax of this story yet remains to be told. Q. Were these men mounted ! A. Tliey were all on horseback. They halted at Gully's store, and got a gallon of whiskey, and then left town. # * * * * * I got up a crowd of fifteen men, white and colored, and followed them to the Alabama line— to Painville, in Jvem- per County. Q. Was that over the line ? A. Yes, sir. I followed them over the line and waked up a grocery man, as I supposed they would stop there to get a drink. Q. AVhen did yon get to Painville'? A. About an hour before day, Sunday raoriung. Q. Did yon overtake them I A. I did not see one of them. I stopi^ed where they got dinner, and saw where they had killed a great nniny chickens and dogs, and one thing and another in the road. This invasion of the State of Alabama by the sheriff of Kemper County, Mississippi, with an armed posse of ne- gro(!S and white radicals was, perhaps, without parallel in the American States, and could only spring from a state of atfairs whose counterpart would bo sought in vain on tliis continent, save in the lawless i)rovinces of Mexico. This cNpedition was no doubt intended to spite and in- timidate the friends and relatives of young Dawson, who resided in that part of Alabama, and who, as has been said, manifested great indignation at the barbarity and iniputiity with which the murder of that unfortunate man had been attended. Some of these visited Kemper County immediately after that occurrence, and made every eifort iu their power to bring the perpetrators to justice. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 213 TIio open aid which Chisolai aiiordcd his friend Gilmer in this matter, and his >strennons exorcise of his influence as sheritt* and partisan leader of the county, to shield him from the strokes of justice, had very much enraged the friends of Dawson against him. They well knew that it was his influence that prevented an indictment or even a committal of Gilmer and Davis for this crime. It was in consequence of this that some severe articles appeared in the Mercury (a newspaper published at Meri- dian), written by Judge Dillard, an uncle of Dawson, charg- ing him with defeating the ends of public justice, to which A'ery acrimonious and insulting replies were written and l)ublished by Chisolm. This correspondence resulted in a personal altercation in the streets of Meridian, in which Chisolm shot Dillard, under the following circumstances. It seems that neither had ever seen the other before, and by accident they met that day. Without deeming it necessary to set forth the full particulars of this circumstance, which is of no general importance, save so far as it elucidates the character of Chisolm, and to show that the account given of itbj^his fulsome biograi^her, AYells, is utterly false. For this pur- pose I will rely upon the reader being satisfied with Chis- olm's own sworn statement in regard to it. He says (Boutwell report, page 772) : "I was returning from Jack- son, and stopped over at Meridian on business, and me and Dillard met in Judge Ham's office, who knew the bitter correspondence that had passed between us, and knew our feelings toward each other. I did not know Dillard my- self at all ; didn't know the man ; never had seen him before that morning ; and a big man came in, and they all seemed to be greatly excited, and I was dumbfounded myself. Judge Ham said, 'Judge Chisolm, walk into Judge Fewel's office, and let us talk this nmtter over,' and when I got in there, he said, ' That is Dillard.' Says I, ' Hell ! is that Dillard V and I started to walk out, and he says, '■ Come back into the office ; Judge Dillard is a very bad man ; ho is a desperate man, and he is drunk to-day, and I would ad- 214 KEMPER COUNTY VESTDICATED. vise yon now to try to avoid ineeting liim at all, if you can.' Says ], ' Fewel, this is one of tlic days I don't feel like fi.illitini;' at all ; I ain't jjotany li^iht in nic to-day.' He said, ' I don't think yon do want a dillicnlty with anybody.' Says I, 'I don't.' In passinu,- alon<;- tlie street, I went into the I'eople's Savinjis l>ank, to make some depositof nionej', and to take the receipts of the cashier, and me and him was talking', and he asked me where I was going-, and I told him I was going down to Jndge Love's ,• I had promised to pay some money for a nuin in that connty, and I walked down the street, and I saw Love and the man Dillardabont twenty steps before me. I saw that there was nothing for me to do bnt to Avalk right on, and I went on and spoke to Jndge Love, and shook hands with him, and he says, 'Al- low me to introdnce yon to Judge Dillard; I remarked that we didn't talk, and Dillard then commenced abasing me. with his])istol in his hand, and mine was not out: my hands were loo.^o. I stayed tliere and took it until I got a cliance to (aoss the street, and then I fixed myself and came baclc, and we met on half way ground, and I shot him. I mean by Mixing myself to liave my i)istol like his was." This descrii)tion of the shooting of ])illard not only shows the character of Chisolm, but gives the lie to the representation made of it by J. M. Wells. If that individual desired the truth, wliy did he not refer to this sworn description of Chisolm himself ? But the features of the nairative did not suit the purposes of tliis slanderer, and so he i>rererred drawing ui>on his own imagination for a jnstilieation of his heio — which that hero himself did not attempt, or jx'rhaps even desire. As a matter of course, Chisohn stated tliis matter to the semito- rial committee in a manner most favorable to himself. I'l'om wliom (lid ^VelIs obtain his xersion of the affair ? for it is eiitirely dilferent fioin the rei)resentation of it which ("hisolm made under oath. It is certain that the sworn words of the dead man contradict his vicarions biographer in this, as well as in many other instances, wl;i(t]i have already been, oi' will be, noticed in this woik. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 215 I-'or this attempt on tlie life of Dillard, Cbisolm was placed under recognizance for his appearance, and at the circnit court was indicted and brought to trial at the second term, before Wm. M. Hancock, a radical and partisan friend of Chisolm. Therefore, it will not be a matter of surprise, from what we have already seen of the rulings of this class of judges, and the prtyudices of negro juries, that he was acquitted. It may be observed, however, that Dillard had the mag- nanimity to forbear the exercise of any influence in the prosecution. This circumstance formed another ground for Chisolm to base his apprehensions of danger from the dreaded Alabamians. Judge Dillard was a prominent citizen of the adjoining- County of Sumter, in that State, and was, as has been before observed, an uncle of Hal Dawson. The conscious guilt in the killing of this n)an had, as wo have seen, caused both Cliisolm and Gilmer to entertain lively susjjicions of all Alabamians. And these suspicions were intensified b}' the circumstance of the shooting of Dil- lard. Henceforth the grim spectre of an Alabamian seems to have forever haunted their minds, and formed a favorite analogy for the constant association of the name of John W. Gully. So apt ATas Chisolm in this respect, that in his examination before the ku-klux investigating committee, the fact Yv-as noticed and observed by Mr. Blair, in the following colloquy with Chisolm : . Q. Who is this man Gully ? A. lie is a great big South ern bully. Q. You have had some (pmrrcl with him, have you not? A. Oh, yes, sir ; certainly I have. C^. I thought so, from the way yon brought him in on all occasions. What have you quarrelled about ? A. Well, he is regarded as the leader of the crowd that comes to my town, ]Mr. Taliaferro told me that he was the lircsident of the shebang— the high priest of the concern in my county. Q. Is that what you and he quarrelled about particu- larly f 2iG KE]0'EK COUNTY VINDICATED. A. I never knew auy thing else for us to quarrel about. Q. Was it not about some matters of a note, or a forgery- matter? A. No, sir ; that liad nothing to do with it ; \\e were quarrelling before tliat came up; we had had one or two rows before that thing ever came up. Q, That only made it worse ? A. 1 suppose so, but I do not know that it did ; it did not amount to anything that I know of. There never has been the scratcli of a pen against me in the county, if that is M'hat you want to get at, and there has been everything, from rape down, against him. Q. What was this allegation that he made about you ? A. lie made a charge against me there, alter we had split, that I was trying to hx up, to get some government cotton. Q. From whom ? A. From the government. Q. How did lie say you were trying to do that ? A. lie said that the man who Avas on the aflldavit never made the aihdavit. lie never said that, however, until after the man died, you understand. Q. Was that all he said 1 A. The God of Israel only knows what he said. I do not know anything about that. That is what I heard him say. I know the courts never bothered mo about it. There is nothing on God's green earth against me in the courts or anywhere else, that I know of, except what Gully saj^s. Q. I thought you and he were somewhat acrimonious? A. Yes ; that did not start the thing at all ; we were out before that, and he thought he w^ould take that start of me to break mo down. Q. Generally, he is a pretty bad man, is he not ? A. Well, I tliink the ])co})le think so, both Democrats and lxci)nl)licans ; that is my oi)inion about tliat. 1 think they regard him as a very bad man. lie has some money yet, because he docs not i)ny his ch'bts, and lives in a pala- tial house, and all his proi)erty is in the name of his son. KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 217 I suppose tbat is very easy to do iu tbis country; but I only refer to bim (tbere are otber men tbere besides bim) as tbe bead centre of tbe concern. That is why I referred to bim ; not because I care anything more about bim than I do about any otber little man in tbe county, because be is a very small man here ; I only refer to bim because otber men told me tbat be is tbe bead centre of tbe concern there. It may be observed here tbat John W. Gull^'j at tbis time, was the recognized leader of the Democratic party of tbe county. Ardent, enthusiastic, bold and outspoken by nature, be labored with untiring zeal in the interest of his party, and was tbe trusted leader and represen- tative of the intelligence and property interest of the county, while Chisolm occupied a like position in tbe radi- cal party, and that their respective spheres sbould have engendered unfriendly feeling between them is not at all wonderful. Chisolm bad always considered Gully, as be calls it, tbe head centre of the Democracy of the county, and his most powerful opponent. To get rid of bim, or to de- stroy bis influence, bad from the first been bis most ardent aim. He bad reported bim to the military authorities as a ku-klux, and that having failed, be was charged with tbe crime to which he alludes in bis testimony. For tbis be was arrested and carried before a military tribunal. The v.'oman Vvbo was alleged to be tbe victim of this crime went before the clerk of tbe court, and made an affidavit tbat it was false. Yet Chisolm and his clan were not to be baf- fled in their ])urpose. She was carried to the military camp and there coaxed and induced to retract her oath of denial. Her former affidavit was considered a nullity, and full force nnd el'fect was given to her subsequent and forced accusa- tion. Yet Gully succeeded not oidy in tracing the original ciiai'ge to its malicious source, but proved l)y incontrovertible lestimony the impossibility of the act at the time alleged. tSo clear was bis proof of innocence, and so plainly was it the M'orkof malice, that he was again triumphantly and bon- oral)]y acquitted, and thus once more escaped the meshes 218 IvEMPEU COUNTY VIOT5ICATED.' of lii.s inveterate foes. But if Gully was thus fortunate iu refutini; tlie cliarjieof illicit love, it was not the case with Cliisolm. Jt is a notorious fact in J3e Kalb and in Kemper County that he dressed a nep'O woman and quartered her in one room of his law oilice, and on one occasion, it is said, iMrs. Chisolm repaired to this room, pistol in hand, and was oidy prevented by her husband from killing- her dusky rival and quenching' in blood his illicit tlamc. During the year 1874, an act was passed by the legisla- ture of Mississippi, requiring the county boards of super- visors to summon before them all delinquent taxpayers of their respective counties, to show cause why they had not ])aid their taxes, and to sutler such i)ains and penalties as might be iuq)osed upon tliem lor their delintpiency. Under that law ]Mrs. Hull, a widow lady, and sister to John W. Gully, was summoned as a delinquent, although her brother had promptly paid her taxes, for which he held tlie receipt of tlie slierilV, \V. \V. Chisolm. On the day appointed for the appearance of Mrs. Hull before the board of supervi- sors, Gully ])resentcd himself with the receipt, and upon liis remaiking the fact that he had it, Chisolm became furious, and there, in the court room, and in the i)resence of the board, began to indulge in the most profane and insulting language, directed to Gully, Ui)on this. Gully observed to the board that he thought it hard tlmt he could not ai)pear before them to attend to business without be- ing insulted by the t^herilf. At this Chisolm immediately retired to his oflice, which was an adjoining room, and soon rea])peai'ed with his i)isl()lin his hand. CJuUy sinq)ly called the attention of the l)c)ard to this, when the president told him that he could retire, and that they would send tor him when needed. AVhen tiie case was reached, the clerk of tlie board was ordered to notify Gully, ui)on \\hi('h Chis- olm, with an oath, said that he himself would summon him, and at once i)i()ceeded to Gully's store, and on his notilica- lion to Gaily, which he made in a very im])erious manner, the latter remarlccd that he had already insulted him about this lualtci', as he had donir on almost every occasion that KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 219 lie visited the court lionsc on business, and that it must not be repeated. Cbisolm then went to bis bouse, ^ybich was but a sliort distance away, and got liis double barrel gnn, came back, tired it off, and reloaded it, then placing it against and beliind the corner of tlie next liouse to Gully's store, promenaded for some time back and fortli in front of tlie store. In the meantime, he liad summoned his clan, several of whom seized their guns and repaired to the court house. Gully, well knowing their designs, took every pre- caution to avoid tlje difiiculty, and, quietly walking over and presenting the receipt, returned to his store. Tliis circumstance was witnessed by many of the most reliable citizens, who were satisfied that Chisolm was then seeking an opportunity to kill, or have Gully killed, as his conduct was otherwise inexplicable. During this same year, the legislature passed an act im- posing a i)rivilege tax upon all merchant^', bankers, law- yers, keepers of livery stables, and all transient venders, ajid others. This tax ranged from two to five hundred dollars per capita, and was collected by Chisolm, as sheriff and tax collector for the year 1870. Yet, in the report of the State auditor for that year, the amount of the revenue from this tax is suinmed and expressed for every county in Mississippi, exce]it Kemper, in reference to which the au- ditor tersely adds, "No i)rivilege tax collected in Kemper." Yet there is, perhaps, not a single person in the county, belonging to one of the classes designated as subject to this tax, but would on oath declare that he paid it to Chisolm, or his deputy, and for which many still have his receipt. These facts are corroborated by a radical who was at that time one of the officers of the county, and who stated to the writer that he had a personal altercation with Chisolm for remonstrating v^•itll him about his conduct in this re- spect. But a sufficiency of these disgusting circumstances have been emimerated to serve the purpose for which they are adduced, namely, to depict the true character of the man, and with an expression of disdain, and a feeling of relief, the writer dismisses the subject. 220 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. It now becomes necessary, in order of time, to advert to UM incident wliicli, no doubt, liad its origin, like many other crimes committed in tlie connty about tliis time, in the in- .s[)iration drawn IVom the immunity alibrded by the radical authorities. Of this circumstance, the carpet bag biogra- plier. Wells, has manufactured quite a supply of food for Ids mendacity. To again show his aptitude and proficiency in this respect, it will be necessary to qnote his statement. He says: " In the month of October, 1874, some one, in the, night time, entered the room of a daughter of George Cal- vert, who Hves in the southwest beat of Kemper County. The young hidy awoke in great alarm, and just in time, as she believed, to see some one, whom she did not recognize, run througli tlie doorway and escape before the family AveTe aroused. " Suspicion of this grave offence centred upon one of two negroes living on the place, bnt no evidence whatever, and no circumstance tending to strengthen this suspicion, was ever obtained, farther than, the boy was not found at home that night. Ilis own explanation of his absence was that lie had been out, as he had often done before, to witness a fox hunt in Avhich some gentlemen were engaged not far away. Notwithstanding this, he was taken into custody, Avithout process of warrant, or any legal arrest, and carried to De JCalb, when the deputy sheriff, Charlie Eosenbaum, very properly refused to take the ])risouer, save only in the manner and form prescribed by law." After a careful examination of the facts, and from his knowledge of them, obtained from theolliccrs and eye wit- nesses of the proceedings in this case, the writer is pre- l)ared to say, that there is not one iota of truth in the above account. Tlie young lady fully recognized her assailant, Avliose name was Perry Greenlea, and the negro was duly arrested and tried before a justice of the peace of the county. The evidence of guilt was positive, and he was found guilty, and was sent under a regular and lawful mittimus to the Kheriifof (he county. The deputy sherilV, although a radi- cal, did not refuse to receive the prisoner upon auy such KEIIPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 221 STOunds as those alleged, but he was returned to the custody of the justice and his constable, for the reason that the jail of the county had become so decaj'cd that it was totally un- safe as a prison, and he was refused by the sheriff or his deputy with a request tliat he be sent to the jail of an ad- joining- county^ as provided for in sncli cases by the statutes of the State. Wlien this action of the sheriff was known, and tlie negro brought back to tite neigliborhood, a crowd of both black and white gathered, and took the negro from tlu! hands of the constable and hung him, just as they wouhl liave done under simihircircuinstaiujes in perhaps any other county and neighborhood. In consequence of this visitation of justice, long' a rare thing in any form under radical rule in the county, the negroes became greatly enraged, and their movements and sulky deportment showed but too plainly that they had something- serious in view. Finally, a negro, named Wash. Smitli, informed Mr. Harbour, a gentleman residing- in tlie neighborhood, that, headed by a negro school teacher, named Brown, they were endeavoring- to get up an insurrection, for the avowed purpose of killing all the whites, and that they were making' violent threats of wreaking- suramary vengeance upon the perpetrators of the hanging- of (xrcenlea. On learning this, (Jiiptain J. L. Spinks, who was then a justice of the peace, and now the popular representative of Kemper Cou.nty in the legislature of the State, visited the negro who gave this information, for the purpose of interviewing hiiu more closely concern- ing it. The negro seemed very much alarmed, and proposed to make an aiiidavit before the justice in regard to the truth of his statements, which he did. He stated that the plan was for the negroes to assemble with arms and proceed to the neighborhood of the hanging, carryijig with them the negro coroner", who was also a waiting boy of Chisolm, under the pretence of holding an inquisition, and that a note written b^' Brown had been sent among the negroes av>]nising them of the movement. He charged four negroes in the neighborhood with being the iUvStigators and leaders of the scheme. These were immediately arrested, and 222 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. Moses Grilfin, one of tlic four accused, confessed the con- spiracy. Tliey were bron.ubt to trial before the justice and two ol' tbeni were convicted. Orillin, having turned State's evidence, was released, and was simply placed under bonds to keep the peace. The news of the iuforniation of Smith, and the confession of Grittin had, in the meantime, spread through the county, and even into the counties adjacent, and the minds of nu'u being prepared by experience for the reception of such reports, their fears were aroused to the highest degree, so that on the day of the trial of these negroes, quite a large crowd of citizens had gathered there from the surrounding- country. Prior to this, however, as Chisolm was the high l)riest of the radical party, and exercised full control over the county, a correspondence had been entered into with liim in regard to the matter, for the purpose of securing his co-operation in the interest of peace. To this end, Mr. A. P. Davis was sent to him as the bearer of the expression of the wishes of the peo])le, upon which Chisolm promptly wrote and sent n note by ]3avis to oue of the leatling nc- croes, ordering him to desist from his hostile demonstrations. But on the assembling of the citizens at the trial, and when the whohi truth Avas laid open by the testimony, the nuitter was deenied to be of so serious a nature, that it was thought best to come to some more definite uiulerstanding with Chisolm, in order to allay the fears of the people, and, if possible, to obtain some satisfactory guarantee against any future attem])ts of this character, and, he being the sheriff and p'^ace oflicer of the county, as well as the recognized leader of the negroes, it was considered important that he .shouhl visit the neighborhood, as his presence would, it was thought, have a soothing and assuiing effect. In pursnance of this, they now dispatched two gentlemen of the neigh- borhood, Arcliy McMahon and J. E. Driver, to invite Cliisolm to come there. lie, with some excuse, declined going, but gave these men every assnrance that he would use his inlluence in the interest of ])eace. Upon the return of these envoys, at the request of the citizens generally, KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 223 the following note was written and sent to Clusolm. Two of the signers of this letter were justices of the i)eace, and the other a member of the county board of supervisors. The note and its purport speaks for itself; and it may bo observed, that the writer is informed by one of its authors that its having- been written on a grange letter head was purely accidental, and that neither its import or indite- ment had any connection or relation whatever with that association. " Mount Pleasant Grange, Ko. 230. " J. K. Davis, Master. J. L. Spinks, Sec. ^' Moscow, Miss., October 1, 1874. " Judge W. W. Chisolm, De Kale, Miss. " Dear Sir : Wo have been requested, by at least some two hundred persons, now assembled at J. L. Spinks', Esq., to inform you that we are proud of the conversation you had with Archy McMahou and A. P. Davis in regard to the excitement now in our beat about the negroes rising in arms against the whites. We have additional evidence to substantiate our fears. We have arrested several negroes, and the proof is positive against them. We do not intend to do anything in violation of the law or anything without reflection. We intend to defend ourselves, if the negroes come upon us as they threaten to do. We insist on your immediate i^reseuce at J. L. Spinks', Esq., to-day, just as soon as you can possibly come. We assure you that you will be treated as a gentleman, and hope that you will not fail to come. " Eesijcctfully, your friends, ADAM CALVERT, J. L. SPINKS, JOHN R. DAVIS." Of this innocent aud commendable i)roceeding of some of the best citizens of the county, the carpet bagger, Wells, indulges in the following dissertation, which, ia 221 KEMPER COU^;TY VINDICATED. view of (lie facts, is as ]u(li(;r()us as it is contemptible. He- says: " It Avas believed by the leaders of tliis allVay, that an opportunity was now ])resented lor carrying out a Ion;;" clierished desire— that of niurderin.i;' Judg^e Chisolni, and niaknii;" it apjx'ar as the volanlary act of the whole coni- niuuity.'' * * " The adiuonilion of friends saved Jndi;c Chisolm's life on this occasion, as tiiat wliich follows will «dearly prove: David Calvert, a brother of Adam Cahert, who married a sister of Judge Chisolm, afterward told his wife's family that he was cognizant of the note being car- ried to liis brother-in-law ou the occasion ()f the ' negro hanging' near the house of Justice Spinks ; that he knew the object for Avhich it was delivered, and to thwart tlu! l)urpose of the men who sent it, and prevent the! shedding of innocent blood, lie himself despatched a man with a message to warn Judge Chisolm of the danger which awaited his arrival at the scene of the riot. With no further evidence than the statement of an indi\i(lual to l)rove a conspiracy lilve this, there might be found room for (luestioning its existence, but, fortunately, whatever evi- dence may be needed to dispel every doubt in the matter is at hand, and will be found in the letter which follows: "llio, JMississim, September . "Judge W. \V. CiiTsoL:\r. " Siu : I believe there is a plan on foot to assassinate you. This belief is founded upon an assertion that 1 heard one AVilliam LVarse make, in the presence of four respectable ladies, lie said that you would be taken out of Do Kalb before next Sunday night, and meet witli the same fate that the negro did who was hung on last Saturday, near here. Other remarivs, similar to this, have been repeateortcd warning was dated September. — (Wells, CLisolm massacre, pages 102 and 107.) Again, he says : " The leaders of tljis affray " (meaning, of course, the two justices and the supervisor who extended the invitation to Chisolm to come to the neighborhood) " sought to murder Chisolm and make it appear that it was the work of the whole community ;" and yet he makes his man, Windham, say that there were a hundred men there. Again, Wells, after stating a fact pur- ported to be alleged by one David Calvert, suddenly admits that "there might be found room for doubting its exist- ence," and in his preparation for the introduction of the letter, he premises its assured truthfulness and ponderous weight with such vehemence that the reader is doubtlessly surprised that Windham should confess, in the second sentence, that his story was " founded upon " what he heard one Pearse say. And Wells closes his comments upon this letter with the magnanimous peroration, that the fact that 15 226 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. tbis man Windham was dead, and beyond the reach of harm, accounted for his nanjc bein^' j^iven. Perhaps it did not occur to him in what terribk; Jeoi)ardy he liad lefc David Calvert, the brother-in-law of Chisolm, who was not dead, whoso family secrets and contideutial communications he had so ruthlessly divulged ; but it seems, unfortunately, that AVells cannot make his blanket cover all his bed — when he pulls it to one side he exposes another. It is remarkably strange that Chisolm, in his two examinations at Washing- ton, before the congressional committees, in which he took so much pains to recount and picture every semblance of spite or threats against him, should have been so perfectly silent in regard to this terrible cousi)iracy. Perhaj)s it can be accounted for on the ground that John W. Gully had no connection with it. As to this man, Windham, for whose veracity Wells so gushingly vouches, it is well known in Kemper County that he was a disreputable radical — who went about olKciating as chairman of negro night meetings, and was expelled from the masonic lodge for defrauding it. But the date of this letter being a month anterior to the events to which its contents relate, engenders grave sus[)icion that it was either a forgery, or was written subse(piently, for a purpose Ibreign to its import. But 1 will not follow Wells any further in this matter. I will leave him to the contemida- tion of the reader, while he branches olfinto his usual en- comium upon the merits of the unfortunate IMiss Chisolm, which he ahnost invariably does after every flight of invec- tive and spasm of ku-klux delineation. It is a great pity that the task of ]H-eserving the juemory of this young- lady has not fallen into the hands of one with more discre- tion and sense of proi)riety than to make it a hobby to pass from one slander to another, and to so mingle it with political events as to leave it in doubt as to wliicli was tho more bitter partisan, she or her father. The writer is pre- ])ar(>d to give her a more amiable character, and to treat her iiu'inory with a more delicate consideration than to constanlly use it as an iutcijacent theme between murders ICEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 227 aud assassinations, with wlii(.-li slio liad not tlie slightest coiiuection. The nunnoiy of pure and virtuous Southern M'oraeu is not accustomed to such treatment, and the con- spicuous role assigned her by Wells is no doubt a i)romi- ueut feature of his slanders. 228 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. CHAPTER IX. At tlie beginning of the year 1875, John W. Gnlly and W. W. Chisolni were, as lias been stated, the chairmen of the countj'' executive committees of their respective parties. The Ivepublican ticket for the canvass of that year, in Kemper County, was composed of the following* names : For the State Senate John P. Gilmer. For lieprcsentative Moses G. Halford. County Assessor MosES McDade. Coiaity Treasurer Hezzy Jack (colored). The harmony of the canvass, on the part of the radicals, was disrupted early in the campaign, in consequence of the nomination of the negro, Jack. 11. A. Hopper, the then treasurer of the county, desired re-election, and upon his defeat before the convention, publicly charged, in a speech, that llczzy's candidacy against him had been corruptly procured, to which llezzy })romptly gave the lie. This caused a llouri-sh of pistols among the parties and their friends at the time; which, however, resulted in nothing serious ; but threats of revenge were continued to be made by Hopper, which caused Hezzy to be on his guard, and to ^'o constantly armed until a short time afterward, when Sie was engaged in conversation with some gentlemen in the court house yard. Hopper came along, and with his liand on his ]>istol, attempted to seize hold of Hezzy, and lircd two shot.s at him without effect. At this Hezzy l(';ij)ed back, then drew his pistol, and lired two shots at Hopper, one of whi(,'li took etfect in his iace. Hezzy then ran away, and the alfair ended. They were both indicted for assault \vith intent to kill, and tried, and both were acquitted. This negro, Hezzy Jack, had long been, and was at the time, a waitniiiu ol' (^hisolm, and was C()nii)lolely under his intluence. He was, otherwise, by no means a bad ni'gro, KEMPER, COUNTY VINDICATED. 229 and would have been more acceptable, without this influ- ence, to the white people than any one on the ticket. It was he who informed J. W. Gully of the threats that Ben Eush had made against him, and warned him of his danger. This difQculty had the effect of impairing the influence of the Ohisolm clan over the negroes, and rendering the minds of the latter more accessible to the overtures of the Democrats, and was worth more to them than all the intimidation that existed even in the imagination of Wells and his class. The state of affairs in Kemper County at this period is truly beyond the conception of those not familiar with it. The same condition of general corruption, which has been described as prevailing throughout the State under radi- cal rule, existed with multiplied aggravation in Kemper Oount3\ The radical government had here become in- tensely unpopular, and had engendered personal feuds and bitter political and race animosities. The negroes had a voting majority of about three hundred in the county. They were entirely under the control of Chisolm and his clan, and voted solidly on the radical side, while the white people were as solitlly Democratic, with the exception of the Chisolm clique. This small clique controlled the entire machinery of the county. It numbered among its mem- bers all the county ofhcers, the judges and registrars of election, except one registrar at each precinct, and through this combination Chisolm ruled the county as despotically as a satrap of Persia. He had ruled the county as its sheriff for seven years preceding the election of 1875, while the other oflices were hlled by the men whom he told the negroes to nominate. It was too much power to be possessed by any one man be he ever so just. As sheriff", he had the selection of petit jurors, and a board of supervisors, chosen at his dictation, selected the grand jurors, and he sent whomsoever he wished to the legisla- ture of the State, and tilled all the ollices of the county 230 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. with bis personal friends. Indeed, it may be said that the very life of every man, Avoman and child in the County of Kemper hun^- ni>OM the smack of his iiniier, so great -was his intluenee over the negroes and his white adherents. The Kepablican candidate for representative, Moses G. TTalford, was a man of but little force of character, and a lit subject to become the tool of Cliisolm. For this reason he was idaced upon the ticket. McDade, the candidate for county assessor, was of a similar character, and Chisolfi had his name placed on the radical ticket for alike reason, ibr otherwise it is impossible to perceive what merit or quality either of these individuals possessed to entitle them to ])romotion, even in the radical ranks. The candidate for county treasurer, Ilezzy Jack, was a negro, totally ignorant and illiterate, who was unfamiliar with a tigurc in arithmetic or with a letter in the al- ])lfnbet. Surely not a very' suitable person to conduct the linancial affairs of a county! but the more ignorant and incompetent these officers, the more absolute would be the rule of Cliisolm. During the s(tven years of radical rule, the indebtedness of the county had been increased to an extent bordering on bankruptcy. It was said to be the most indebted county in the State, and yet the late of taxation was nearly forty dollars on the one thousand, while the property was arbitrarily assessed at an excessive value, and a debt of twenty-seven thousand dollars was contracted for the em]>loyment of teacliers ; ibr the greater number of log cabins used for school purposes were erected b^'^ i)rivato enterprise and contributions. So burdensome were the taxes, and so utterly impossible was it for the i)eoplc in their extreme poverty to meet them, that more than one hundred thousand acres of land were seized by the State ibr taxes, as no purchasers could bo found, even at the profitable percentage guaranteed to them should the lands be redeemed. During- all this time the i)overty stricken i)eopl»;i beheld Chisolm and his friends growing rich. It is said that when he entered the ofhce of KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 231 sheriff he was too poor to purchase a horse, and "when ho left it he was worth fifty thousand dollars ; yet he was au extravagant man, but he possessed at least one good quality — the quality of liberalit}'. He would rob the county without compunction and lend money to his j)ersonal and political friends without the least prospect of regaining it. He is also said to have been liberal in his contributions to the churches and other eleemosynary objects. But this liberality evidently proceeded more from a spirit of vanity tiian liom the jiromptings of any virtuous sentiment, for he was iii)parentiy utterly destitute of religion and of any reliiu'd moral sentiment. He was coarse, vulgar and i)ro- fane in the extreme, which rendered him truly disgusting to all gentlemen of relinemeiit. As an instance of this, United States Senator Bayard, who was one of the senatorial investigating committee, in a letter to the writer says : " I send you Chisolm's testi- mony, which will show him to have been a violent and dis- orderly man. I remember his x>ersonal appearance, his production of his pistol in the committee room, and the general impression he made upon me of being an outlaw; so that when I heard of his shocking death I was not much astonished, although I could not but be horrified with its details." Here M^e have a true impression of Chisolm's character, made upon one who never saw or heard of him before, but whose tutored observation and knowledge of human na- ture enabled him to form at once a correct opinion of his character. Ko doubt the other grave senators, Avho com- posed that committee, were no less disgusted than Senator Bayard, and with the same candor, would express them- selves in a similar manner. Ohisolm took especial delight, on all occasions, in flaunt- ing his ill acquired prosperity in the face of the people whose losses furnished his ill gotten gains, while any at(einj)t on the part of the people to investigate and ex- ])osc the financial condition of the county was met by insult and even danger to life. To such an extent was 2:3L* KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. this the case, that many of the best citizens of the county refrained from visiting tlie court house, unless they were conipelled to do so on business. To throw olf this intolerable yoke, became now the one ruling passion of the people, and they determined to make one supreme eftbrt, and to employ every legitinmte means to tins end, while the radical leaders were as equally deter- mined to maintain themselves in power at all hazards. Under these circumstances the campaign of 1875 wiis inaugurated, and it was conducted with all the vehemence and vigor of des])eration. The radicals sought in every way to stop the ears of the negroes against the arguments of the Democratic sjH'akers, and to prevent them from listen- ing to their si)eeches. For this ])urpose every method of intiaming their minds and kindling the prejudices of I'aco "was resorted to ; every old cry, by which the party had lieretofore been so successful, Avas raised with lusty voice. They predicted to them the utter ruin of their race if the Democracy should come into power ; invoked all the mem- ories of the past, and painted in gloomy colors the return to slavery as an inevitable consequence of Democratic suc- cess. From long habitual political associations with the negroes, they well understood their fears, were perfectly aclished, it was no longer difficult to make them nnderstand the true situation and to comprehend the fact that their own and the interests of the white people were one and the same. This done, tliey flocked by hundreds to the Demo- cratic standard. The county was thoroughly canvassed by the candidates of both parties, and many political meet- ings were held. At these meetings the Democratic speakers would offer to divide time with the Eepublican, but this was abnost invariably declined by the latter. The chief arguments used by the Democratic speakers to induce the negroes to change their political affiliations were the incompctencj" and corruption of the radical officials, the high and ruinous rate of taxation, and the general depression of all business, which kep't them, as well as the white people, in extrenui poverty. They showed them what they might expect under a com- petent and honest adiuinistration of the afiairs of the county, and this they promised should be the result of the success of the Democratic party. They also gave them to nnderstand that there could never 1)0 any state of amity, good w'ill and mutuality between the two races, which was so necessary to tlieir mutual prosperity, so long as the negroes continued to foist such corrupt men in oflice. These arguments were not such as the radical candidates desired or were competent to meet; their hobbies were the old issues of race, and the designs of the whites upon the liberties and rights of the negroes. They ajipealed to their Avorst passions, and pointed at the great social gulf be- tween tiie two races, which they endeavored to convince them to be the result of an invasion, or a withholding of their just rights. 234 KEMPER COUNTY VKsDICATED. Auotlier arguineiit was tbat tlu-y were indebted to the radical party lor their rree(U)iu • tliiit General Grant bad fought lor t Ileal, and was tiie i^ivat eliaiiipion of their rightSj and that it was Ins desin' that all of them should vote the radical ticket j tlnit alt who did not so vote would be aban- iloiied by hiui to t!ie white peoi)le to be put back into slavery, or be treated in any way they might sec ijroper. These arguments,' however ridiculous, were yet aa im- provement, as respected the credulity of the negro, upon the old forty acres and a mule doctrine, and the like, which were for a long time so effective. They had been so often deceived by these promises that they no\v no longer l)aid any attention to liicni, and the radical leaders found themselves at a loss to invent some new talisman to work upon their imaginations. Military support had failed them, and ill their desperation they resorted to every possible de- vice as a substitute. It Inid alwnys been the custom here- tofore for the negroes to march to the election precincts and up to the ])olls after the manner of soldiers, armed with clubs and sticks, some of them with old swords and pieces of scythe blades. In this way they would take possession of the polls, and the white men would be comi)clled to give way to them, ami wait for them to get through before they coidd vote. This way of rushing them to the polls in a body and in military parade was resorted to by the radical lead- oint that I was to speak at in the county. At some places there were no colored men turned out. They told me that they had heard so much talk in the neighborhood that there would be some trouble that they were afraid. My speeches to the colored men all the time were that I thought there would be no trouble, but if there was to just let me, and what few white men there Avere along with me, and the white Democrats light it out; that it should be a straight out white man's fight. I didn't want them to have anything to do with the fighting; that if there was any fighting to do, what few white men v/ent with me would fight; that we didn't want them to have anything to do with the fightnig. 238 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. Q. Was there an}' particular disturbance at any of your meetin*i"s ? A. There was not, except on the hist day that I spoke at Scooba, on Satnrchiy before tlie election on Monday. On that day, after 1 had left De Kalb, and was about a mile from town, I was stopped by a j'oung man named Haltbrd —I tliink they called him Julius, but 1 am not positive now; his father was a candidate for representative on the Republican ticket, and his name is Closes J. llalford. This younj;- man, his son, met nie and threw up his hand, and hollowed for me to halt ; he rode np to me — and Mr. noi)per, I believe, was in the buggy with me ', I am not l)Ositive as to that, but I know there was some one with me — he rode ni) and said his latlier had started him that night to meet me; that lie had heard I was coming to Scooba, and that I never would get there ; that 1 Mould be killed before I got there. I told him I hated to turn back after I had started, as I usually went where I started to go to. There were four or live men with me, and they rode u]) and asked what Avas the matter, and we consulted about the matter, and I asked them to ride ahead of the buggy. I asked the young num how they Avere going to kill me, and he said I\Ir. Poole, one of the men in the l^emocratic club near Scooba, said that they were to be liuntiug right on the road ; that Poole came to his lather's house at midnight, and said that they Avere going to be hunting that d:iy on the road, and that they Avere going to kill me; that they were going to jjretcnil to be deer huut- ,ing. lie iKslongcd to the Democratic^ club, but came and told llalford that night, so this young man told me. I sent these men ahead of nu', and I drove on down about six miles from Scooba, and i"\lr. .lames West, who belonged to the JJemocratic; club, came Avalkiiig, as 1 thought, sort o' out of the Avoods. 1 got out of my buggy and took my ]»istol in my hand. Says he, " ,Iu(lge, what is the matter f aie you going to shoot; uur;"' I said, '-No, sii'; 1 haxc no intention of shooting you. lam a little excited though, Jim.*' Says he, " I (;ame down here to see you, but, for KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 239 God's sake, dou't let anybody know I have been bere ! But if you are determined to go to Scooba, you must stay there all night, and not come back to-night." I said, "Jim, tell me the truth about this juatter." He said, " I have told you enough now, I suppose, to get myself in trouble. I don't want you to say anything about this. 1 am your per- sonal friend, and I am satisfied that almost all the people in the county are your personal friends." Theu I told what Ilalford had told me, and he said that lie thought that by having the men riding on before me that we would pass by all right ; but if I would go on to Scooba, he told me, not to go back from there that night. I kept my horses geared up, and ready to go back, though I didn't intend to go back, but I held out that I Avas going. The uegroes told me that a crowd of men had gone otf from Scooba with guns, in the direction of De Kalb, leaving that day about twelve o'clock. I don't know whether that was correct or not, but at Scooba there was considerable excitement that day, and there was a man from Clark County there ; I think his name was Carter. I was intro- duced to him that morning, and I think he was drinking right smart. lie told me that he was sorry that a Southern man with the brains, and the sense, and the general intelli- gence that I had, would be going against his countrj^, and his kindred, and his friends ; tluit he thought that it was bad enough for the dunuied infernal jSTorthern Yankees to be trying to destroy the South without Southern men doing it. 1 told liinT that I was conscientious in all I did ; that I thought after 1 got whi})ped that I v/as whipped, and that 1 believed the best policy for the Southern people was to do what the Constitution of the United States said — give every man an equal and a lair showing to exercise his lights freely and voluntarily; and consequently, I was a Republican ; but 1 remarked to him, " The damned carpet baggers,! have no i)articular love for them,'' (What does Weils say to this ?) "got no i)articular use for them," but ilu'ie were no eaipet baggers in my crowd ; it was all South- ern men, and my IVii lids were nearly all of them gallant 240 KEIVTPER COUNTY VTNDICATED. Confederate soldiers, and I told liini that I supposed that my family had as good a record, as far as the war was con- cerned, as he or any other man in Kemper County ; while 1 didn't go myself, that they had made honorable soldiers, and filled honorable graves upon battle fields. I made my speech that day under some excitement ; there was a good deal of excitement. I will state that Mr. Duke, anothergentlemnn at Scooha, told me that the excitement was caused by some gentlemen coming from Jackson down there, who claimed to be United States marshals. I don't know as to that. I told Mr. Duke that I didn't know that they were United States marshals. I know one of them had been a United States marshal ; but I didn't know whether he was now or not. I hadn't sent for him ; they said that they came there with Senator Gil- mer a night or two before that. I told him that I sui^posed that they had a right as citizens to be thej-e. I went to see Mr. Woods — n. Woods, jr., — a leading man and a very quiet man. I asked him if there could not be some arrange- ment made whereby there could be some assurance of a fair election. Said I, " There is a great deal of excitement here to-day, and what is the cause f He said he didn't know ; and he remarked that he su])- ] osed that those men coming over from Jackson caused some excitement. Said I, " ]Jal), 1 want to make some arrangement, if I can, to have a lair election ; there ain't no use talking about holding an election without you let us have an election." IJe said that God knew in his heart that he wanted a fair election, and no trouble. Lie said one diliiculty might be avoided if wo would agree not to let twenty negroes vote that they knew to be under age; that perhaps that would quiet them, and he said he would go over and get Mr. Duke and Mr. Glider Jones, old citizens there, and bring tliem over to talk the thing oven' in his oflice. They canie, and J agreed with Mr. Duke and ]\Ir. ]\liller Jones that tiiese men should not vote; that 1 would ask them as asi)ecial hnor no! lo vole, il'that would (suii't thethiug. KEMPER COUNTY VESTDICATED. 241 Mr. Duke said tben that that would quiet them, provided we didn't interfere with the negroes, and make them vote tlie radical ticket. I said, "Duke, by God, I am a free American citizen, and I have as much right here as you have! I have as much interest in the county as you have. I will make a proposition to you. T propose now to let all hands do tbeir own voting', and for the white men of the county to have notliing- to do with it. Just let them get their tickets and vote as they damn pleased." lie says, "Tbey won't do that." I says, " Weil, when I meet my friends, I intend to talk to them, and try to get them to vote the Republican ticket, if any of them talk of voting the Democratic ticket." lie said that if we should interfere with them, and should attempt to do that, there would be a fuss on election day. I said, " I don't know what will be the result, but 1 intend to do it." 1 said, "1 understand there is to be an army of Alaba- mians over there;" and they said that they didn't know anything about that, if there was. 1 made my speech, though under strong excitement. I expect 1 made the bitterest speech that day that 1 made during the canvass; but 1 know that 1 didn't advise the negroes to anything except peace, because 1 told them all the time that they could not fight ; there was no use talking about their figliting ; if they had to fight to vote, by the Eternal, they could not vote ! But in my speech that day I told them every one to go to the polls and not be bluffed off; that I thought perhaps tbey were playing a bluti" game, and go and vote and go right off immediately. Dr. Gilmer made a speech that day. He was senator at that time from that district. He stated to them that lie would be there to give them their tickets, and that they intended to have a fair election. Notwitlistanding all this, it is a well known fact that no sooner did these men discover that tbey had sure enough lost their hold upon the negroes, whose votes they did not 212 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. had our pistols. Q. At the time you met this young man, before you got to Scooba, you say you got out of your buggy, ^Yith your I)istol in your hand. AVhy did you do that ? A. Because I saw him coining through the woods. Q. Had be any arms ? A. No, sir; nothing at all. Q. You disnu)unteil and drew your pistol I A. Yes, sir; I just took my pistol out of my buggy. I carried it lying on the seat. Q. And when you were at the meeting, wbcrc did you carry your pistol .' A. Behind me, in my pocket, where 1 have got it now. It is a little old ])istol — not very dangerous, but it is all right, you nniy bet (showing it). In this conflict of sworn evidence, Wells ])romptly comes to the aid of Ames, and says, speaking of Chisobn, at Scooba: "His life was threatened, and pistols -ivere drawn to carry the threat into execution. After repeated elTorts to quiet tlu^ mob, he was comi)elled to quit the stand in oi'der to save his life." Ami so 1 will leave it with the reader to settle the ques- tion of veracity between the three, Ames, Chisobn and his biographer, AVells. The wiiter has l)een totally unable to learn of a singlt! instance of intimidation in Kemper County on the part of the Deniocrats ; that they used every method of coaxing and persiuuling the negroes to vote w ith them, and niade a luost energetic canvass, is beyond KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 259 dispute, but that any one was frightened by the Democrats from a vohmtary exercise of his right to vote as his choice might dictate, has not the least foundation in fact. Yet, says Wells: " The Saturday before the election took place, Professor Thomas S. Gatliright, for many years one of the most iuHuential and ]iopular educators of the youth oft lie State, made a speech at Do KaU),within sight of Judge (Jhis- olm's house, in wliich he used words very nearly as follows. After repeating Judge Ciiisolm's name, he said: ' Genthv men, if you ever expect to have peace and harmony in your county, you must get rid of this man. I will not under- take to tell you how to get rid of him; that you know as well as I ; hid you must get rid of him P Then encircling his neck with a gesture, he raised his hand up and down several times in imitation of dangling some object from the end of a rope. This si^eech and pantomime were re- sponded to with loud and continued cheers. On the fol- lowing IMonday the same language was repeated at Moscow, a cross roads store, ten miles distant from De Kalb." From what source, if any. Wells obtained this story will, perhaps, remain unknown, save to himself and the members of the clan who concocted it. The well known character of Professor Gatliright, who is at this time president of the State Agricultural (College of Texas, will itself refute any such representations. There are many citizens of Ue Kalb who heard Professor Gathright's speech on the occasion referred to, and the writer, after conversing with many of them about this matter, is prepared to say that there is not to-day a man in the County of Kemper who would openly allege that he ever saw Professor Gatliright perlbrni any such gestures on any such occasion. He Avas, and is, well known to be a gentleman of mild, moral and conservative views, though a stanch Democrat and patriot, and against him the "barbed arrows" of this carpet bagger fall as harndess as they did when, on one occasion, in the town of Brandon, a negro, whom he had swindled, thrust his list in his face and publicly proclaimed him a G—d d d thieving scoundrel. In view of these representa- 2C0 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. tions of Wells, it is, indeed, strange that Chisolm, in his sworn testimony before the committee at Washington, shonld state (see Eeport, page 770), that he knew of no threat made against him during this canvass. But there were notable instances of intimidation on tlie part of the radicals, of which a notorious instance occurred in Scooba, during the canvass of 1875. Dick McCall was a negro wlio had announced himself a Democrat. Peaceable and harmless, he bore a good character in the village, among the white i)eople. On one occasion he was sitting quietly in the store of Captain J. K. Duulap, wiio was at that time the town marshal. Gilmer came in, ajul taking his seat in front of Dick, and pulling out a large knife, began to pitch it at Dick's bare feet, and finally thrust the knife into his foot. Dick, to avoid the ditliculty, and Avell knowing the character of Gilmer, quietly arose and left the room. Upon this Gilmer followed him, saying that he intended to kill him, if he Avas the last man ; but Dick by some means eluded his assailant, Avhen Gilmer, taking liis gun with him, and accompanied by his half brotlici', one M. Wood, proceeded to Dick's residence. Before reaching it, however, he overtook Dick, and fired two shots at him. Some one, in the meantime, had api)riscd Dick of his danger, and loaned him a gun, and being thus pre- l)ared for his defence, he returned the fire, firing two shots at Gilmer. This occurred just at dark, and Wood stated that the shot from Dick's gun entered the ground at Gilmer's feet. 1^0 legal notice whatever was taken of this matter, so utterly i)aralyzed was every nerve and sinew of the law ■when in contact with these men. It can scarcely be sup- posed that the man who, in cold blood, had deliberately shot the dying Dawson with impunity, could be reached by the arms of the law for pitching his knife into a poor negro's I'oot. To what extent this intimidation, and lliese threats and acts of bodily harm for allliHating with the Democrats, were practiced by these men upon the negroes, and by the KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 2G1 negroes upon each other, in their social relations, could not be ascertained, as tlie very nature of the acts pre- served til em ill secrecy ; while, on the part of the Demo- crats, the only semblance of force brought to bear upon the negro in the exercise of his choice, was that, in some instances, they were told by their employers that, in consequence of the high rate of taxation under radical rnle, and the consequent stagnation of business, which rendered their i^roperty a burden, and their agricultural operations totally unprofitable, if they voted the radical ticket and continued such a state of alfairs, they could not, and would not, give them employment any longer. This policy, however, which, in view of the circumstances, should have been general, was only put in practice here and there, and it, no doubt, had its eSect to some extent. In such cases these employers would say to the negroes, " Vote as you i)lease, but remember that if you vote the Republican ticket and maintain that party in jiower, I can- not employ you any more." A colored preacher residing in Kemper County, on being told this by his employer, made the following demonstrative reply : "I am a colored nniu, and I have to associate wdth my colored neighbors here, and if I do not go to the election, they won't let me go to my church. They will turn me out of the church, and they will not have anything to do with me ; and I cannot associate on social terms with you white people; and I have children growing up here. I vote the Republican ticket, not from choice, but from necessity." And this same sentiment was substantially expressed by many negroes in the county. It was mostly upon their private and social relations that these men sought, in this respect, to operate. The Republicans must have been driven to desperate straits for incidents of intimidation when they brought this charge against Southern planters and employers, when it is a public and notorious fact that the employers and owners of :S^orthern factories and manufacturing establish- ments invariably control the political sentiments of their 202 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. cmi)loyees, and it is an established practice in tlic very departments of the government itself. The ])latf()i'm adopted by tlie Deaiocratic party of ^lissis- sippi, on the third of August, 187.">, contained an invitation to the voters of botli races to unite vigorously with them in the approaching canvass, to aid them in throwing off the intolerable yoke of radical rule, and to establi.sh good gov- ernment in the State, and promised them full protection in all their rights. This platform of principles contained every provision and i)rofession that the most fastidious negro rights man could desire, and gave the Democratic speakers the opportunity of meeting their antagonists fully on all the issues they might make. During tlie canvass of 1S75, the candidate for Congress, Coh)nel Singleton, made a si)eech to the negroes at Scooba, in wiiich he held up to them this ])latform of prhiciples Avitli gieat effect, and urged them for their own good and the welfare of the whole i)eople, to sui)port the Democratic ticket, and aid that party in restoring good government to the State — a government wliich would be honest, and dis- ])ensc impartial Justice to all its citizens, lie arraigned the corruption, extravagance and incompetency of tlie radical leaders, and depicted in a clear light the ruin brought upon the whole peo[)Ie by radical misrule. This si)eech was listened to by the large negro audience with profound and anxious attention. Chisolm was present taking notes. Yet, on being invited to speak, he declined doing so. The atmosphere of the occasion was, no doubt, | too lucid for his style of argiunent. The negroes were! gradually drawn to Democracy by an honest conviction, effected by the i)ortrayal of facts of which they had a l)ainlid exi)erien(;e. Jt has been charged that the Southern people committed a great error in not acqniescing, at first, in the ])olicy of congressional reconstruction, in not making politi«'al friends of the negroes, recognizing all tiieir rights, and anticipat- ing the radicals in gaining ascendency and control over them. Yet, however plausible this i)o!icy might have been KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 263 iu theory, apart from the hypocrisy of such a course, it is doubtful whether it coukl have been practiced without dragging with it a train of troubles more permaDeutly detrimental to society than the worst features of radical rule. The arrogance of the negro, at that time, engendered by his suddeu (nnancipation, and the teachings of the carpet baggers, could not have been bounded by the barriers of the most extended political horizon. He would have demanded as the price of his alliance, full social recognition ; and the commingling of the two races necessary to have satisfied him, iu this respect, would have degraded the white race and broken up the fountains of society. Thj3 negroes joined the Democratic party as soon as they were qualified to do so— as soon as they were capable of compre- hending the difl'erence between political and social equality. The experience necessary for this qualification was af- forded them by the corruption of the radical party, and the almost solid integrity of Southern sentiment through all the vicissitudes of reconstruction, during which period, and up to the liiU of 1S75, they were continually incited against the whites by Northern adventurers and vagabonds for purposes of their own, and who prowled about from church to church, school house to school house, and negro quarters to negro quarters, forming them into clubs, and binding them to their personal schemes by all sorts of oaths, and filling their ears Vvitli incendiary speeches. But having passed tlu'ough all this experience, the negro api)eared at the poll box, in the fall of 1875, a much wiser being, and fully convinced that all his rights and franchises were perfectly safe in the hands of the white people of Mississippi. And the election of 1875 will ever remain a notable epoch in tlie history of the State as the period of the termination of the most corrupt government tliat ever disgraced the annals of civilization. To show the vast increase of public expenditures in Mis- sissii)pi under Ivadical rule, as compared witli those of former and subsequent Demociatic administrations, the 264 KEMPER COUNTY VESDICATED. following: statistics arc introduced. They were compiled Iroin the reports of the auditor, and are perfectly- reliable : DEMOCRATIC COMPARISON OF STATE EXPENSES, The disbursements on account of the State government were : 1848 $344,717 00 1840 270,300 00 1850 295,932 00 1851 223,037 00 1853 229,288 00 1857 345,502 00 1858 401,032 00 1859 400,015 00 The following was for the ordinary i>urposes of the government, for the administration immediately' succeeding the war : October 10, to May 1, 18G5 $290,285 00 May 1, 1805, to May 1, 1867, 2 years 555,027 00 May 1, 1868, to May 1, 1869 502,723 00 May 1, 1869, to May 1, 1870 302,138 00 UNDER REPUBLICAN RULE. Jan. 1, 1870, to Jan. 1, 1871 $1,001,259 00 Jan. 1, 1871, to Jan. 1, 1872 1,329,046 00 Jan. 1, 1872, to Jan. 1, 1873 1,500,828 00 Jan. 1, 1873, to Jan. 1, 1874 1,400,000 00 Jan. 1, 1874, to Jan. 1, 1875 1,319,000 00 Under radical rule the expenses of the executive department were, in 1875 $33,974 30 Those of the legislative department were 118,624 00 Those of the jndicial department 230,025 00 The cxi)enditures on account of the executive depart- ment under Democratic rule were : 1848 $8,003 00 18.j4 8,008 00 1858 11,225 00 Yvoiu M:iy 1, ISlM, to ?.Iay 1, 18G0 10,129 00 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 2G5 That was tlic last year of the rule of the citizens before the Eepublicaus took charge of the State goverumeut. The expenses of the same department — the executive dei>art- ment — under Ilc})ublican rule, were as follows : 1S70 $24,200 00 1871 34,000 00 1872 32,834 00 1873 34,973 00 1874 54,900 00 1875 33,947 30 From January 1, 1870, to January 1, 1871, under Alcorn's administration, $54,000 were expended on that account and as a secret fund. The gross amount of expenditure for the year 1875 was $1,430,102 83 For the judicial department under Democratic rule : 1848 $74,741 00 1849 83,280 00 1855 99,527 00 1858 139,824 00 1850 147,000 00 October 1, 18G5, to May 1, 1800 49,775 00 May 1, 18GG, to May 1, 1807 103,349 00 May 1, 1807, to May 1, 1808 191,440 00 • The expenditures of the same department under radical rule were : 1870 $320,399 00 REPUBLICAN RULE. 1871 $328,000 00 1872 434,973 00 1873 300,221 00 1874 308,854 00 1875 230,025 00 The appropriations by the Democratic legislature, for the year 1S7G, for this department, were $70,000. 2G0 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. The following statements arc taken from the annual mes- sage of liis excellency' James JI. Stone, tlie present gov- ernor oi" ]\Iississip[)i, made to the legislature at its session of 1877, an,7!I0 Of wlii(tli (he total valuation is $95,0()7,i80 00 Slate lax on Ilie same 023,371 00 EEMPEE COUNTY VINDICATED. 2G7 The total valuation of personal prop- erty in 1870, four counties being- omitted, the assessment rolls from Avliicli Laving been returned for correction and not yet re-returned to the auditor, is $35,702,040 00 On this the State tax is 232,078 00 The subjoined statement will show at a glauce, and in detail, some of the substantial results accomplished by the change from Radical to Democratic rule in Mississippi. The decrease of expenditures under the administration of the latter is strikiugly exemplified : Dcpartaieiit. 1875. 1876. Decrease, 1876. Legislature $118,624 30 $100,854 73 $17-, 769 06 Judiciary 230,025 98 89,943 45 140,082 53 Executive 33,947 30 30,340 09 3,006 61 Library 4,528 87 1,888 73 2,040 14 Ex. Con. Fund 10,000 00 4,400 00 5,000 00 Deaf and dumb and blind institutions, 25,000 00 18,350 00 0,050 00 renitentiary 06,040 20 19,109 75 47,476 45 Public printing 50,803 02 21,080 05 29,122 97 Lunatic asylum 97,000 00 68,730 00 28,270 00 Com. immigration.. 5,210 65 440 13 4,770 52 Express and post- age 2,559 01 1,718 42 840 59 Com. for assessing.. 34,588 03 14,53105 20,050 38 Militia 5,000 00 5,000 00 Total $573,939 45 .$202,047 60 $311,89155 Embraced in tlie statement of the expenditures for 1870, there was an appropriation of three thousand four hun- dred and eight dollars for printing, and sixteen thousand dolhirs for the penitentiary, to cover deficiencies in those departments for the year 1875. It will be observed by an inspection of the tables, tliat tlie expenditures daring the year 1875 were the most economical of radical rule. The action of the tax payers in the early part of that year, together with the defec- tional si)irit then beginning to be manifested by some of 2G8 KEMPER COUNTY VmDICATED. the radical leaders, forced upon their legislature for the first time even the thought of economizing. In 1870 the Democratic legislature levied, for State i)ur- ])oses, a tax of six dollars and lifrj' cents on one thousand dollars. In 1872 the levy was thirty i)er cent, greater than the levy for 1870; in 1873 it was ninety-two per cent, greater ; in 1874, one hundred and fifteen per cent, greater, and in 1875 it was forty-two per cent, greater. So that the expenditures for the last named year were necessarily somewhat curtailed in order to conform to the reduction of the taxes to which the radicals had been reluctantly driven. The change of administration under Democratic rule was no less beneficially operative upon the credit of the State than upon the economy of its expenditures. In January, 1875, the warrants of the State were sold on the streets of Jac^c- son at seventy-three cents on the dollar, and sales of them were made at that rate by public ofiicers. On the 1st of January, 187(>, when the first Democratic legislature met, tliey were sold at from eighty to eighty-five cents, and during this session they advanced to ninety-five cents, and in the succeeding dull months of summer, when there were but few taxes to be paid, and but little occasion for financial oi)erations, they rose to ninety-seven cents on the dollar ; and in the Ibllowing Xovember they advanced to ninety-nine cents, since which time the warrants of the State have been virtually at par. Such are some of the substantial and visible fruits of "home rule" in Missis- sippi. From the tables it will be observed that the cost of administering the diflerent branches of the State gov- ernment was, in 1876, the first year of Democratic rule, less than one half of the jinblic expenditures in 1875, the last year of the radical administration. The moderate tax of six dollars and fifty cents on one thousand dollars, im- posed by the legislature of 1870, has been, in 1877, reduced to five dollars on one thousand dollars, while the taxes levied by the counties have been reduced in like ratio, causing a decrease of taxes on realty of one hundred and forty-eight thousand six hundred and fourteen dollars and KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 269 four-cents, and on personalty of one liundrecl and fifty-nine thousand nine liundred and forty-three dollars. On the 1st of January, 1870, the entire indebtedness of the State proper Avas one million one hundred thousand two hundred and forty-two dollars and twenty-one cents. This sum, on the first day oi" January, 1877, had been re- duced to something" over six hundred thousand dollars. The indebtedness of the counties has likewise been greatly reduced, and when the indebtedness of the State and the counties incurred under radical rule shall have been dis- charged, the taxes in the State of Mississippi will be as low, perhaps, as in any other State in the Union ; and, as seen from the preceding statement, this object is being vigorously pursued by the present administration, and will be accomplished at no distant day. 270 ICEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. CHAPTEll XI. On the 3d day of November, 1875, Ihc moruing sun rose upon i\Iis.si.ssippi redeemed from licr long and terrible thraldom of radieal rule. The angel of i)eace and prosper- ity again smiled in her skies, and all nature seemed, to the rejoicing eyes of her people, to wear a brighter aspect. Hope again beamed forth from behind the clouds of de- spair that liad hung so long like a pall over their heads. Nearly every vestige of radical power had been swept away from the State government, save in the executive department, and the people thought tliat now the machin- ations of that party would cease forever — but not so in Kemper County. It is true that there was a lull here, but it was the pause of Apollo, sighting his arrows at the Gre- cian cami)s on the plains of Troy. Chisolm again gath- ered his clan, and early in the spring of 187G, appeared again upon the stage as candidate for Congress. In this canvass he was the only candidate of the clan, as the election was to be for members of Congress only. Every effort was now made in the old way to organize clubs and again band the negroes together on the Eepublican side, but all secret elforts of this kind failed. The negroes had now had a taste of Democratic rule, and all the illusions with which the radicals had heretoiore veiled their minds were forever dispelled. Gilmer admit- ted that there Avas no chance for his party in this cam- paign, and took but little part in it. And Chisolm was also well aware that his ])rospects were hopeless, yet there might be some chance in a contested election, should the House of llepresentatives remain iJ(>])ublican, if he could make a showing of intimidation and violation of the en- forcoincnt acts. The next elfort was to gather the negroes in large crowds at public si)eakings, as they had been wont to do, but this i)lan also failed. The negroes would not turn out. The next thing, then, was to create circuni- KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 271 stances out of which they couhl fashion some semblance of intimidation, which, as we shall see, was a i)olicy vigor- ously jmrsued on every occasion where there was an op- portunity. Chisolm sought to bandy vrords with drunken men at his apj^ointments, for the purpose of aggravating them to use harsh expressions toward him, while the other members of the clan present would inform him of pending- danger should he attempt to speak. These, with other devices, furnished the stories which they concocted for their purpose, and presented in their sworn statements be- fore the congressional investigating committees, to which reference will be made in the progress of this narrative, and it was from those that Wells draws the inspiration of his libels. But he rnns counter to the verdict of history when he seeks to fashion the following sentiment by the mould of slander. He says, quoting from the Vicksburg Herald, in reference to the canvass of 1875 : " A few weeks preceding the election the ' great and gifted ' Lamar de- livered an address at Aberdeen, which the Vicksburg Ucr- aid, a leading Democratic paper, commented upon as fol- lows : ' At Aberdeen, last Saturday, Colonel Lamar made an eloquent speech. A better Democratic speech we do not care to listen to; and in manly and ringing tones ho declared that the contest involved ' the supremacy of the unconquered and unconquerable Saxon race.' We were glad to hear this bold and manly avowal, and it was greeted with deafening plaudits. We have never seen men more terribly in earnest, and the Democratic white lino speech made to them by Colonel Lamar aroused them to white heat.' * * * in auother place, the same paper makes use of the following language, which is calculated to serve well in connection with ' Lamar's great speech :' ' The wanton killing of a few poor negroes is something unworthy of our people. If the killing of anybody is necessary, we rejieat what we have heretororc said : let the poor negro pass, and let the white scoundrels who have lired his heart with evil passions be the only sufferers.' The utterances quoted were repeated verbatim by Lamar, at Scooba, in Kcm])er Count3\ a few days after." 272 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. So far from being the subject of reprobation, if tlic policy advised, and the principles inculcated in the preceding quo tation, bad been early, i)ronipt]y and universally practised throughout the Southern States, it would have saved theiu JVoiu seas of trouble and gulfs of ruin ; and would have met with the applause of all fair minded nuinkind. It will ever be a ■svonder to the historian, when he attempts to in- terpret the character of men, how to account for the extreme passiveness exhibited by the Southern people under the opi)ressive rule of radicalism. That a peo[)lc who at the first alarm of war had si)rung forward solidly to meet the issue, who had for four years waged the fiercest and bloodiest war of modern times, and all ibr the sake of a principle, should so long submit to the infamous govern- ment of ignorant and degraded negroes, led by adventurers from the slums and cessjiools of a foreign society, is a question ui)on which history will, for all time, place her l>rivate seal ; the solution of which can oidy be found in a rare exercise of the supreme qualities of honor. The^" had laid down their arms from weariness of the strife, and, for the sake of i)eace, had accepted the situation 5 and to £omporfc themselves in good faith became as sacred to them now as were the claims of duty and chivalry and lionor on the held of battle. For it cannot be denied that, notwithstanding the defeat of their two main arnnes, there Avere resources yet remaining sufllcient to have prolonged indefinitely a desultory warfare ; but this was spurned by the Southern soldiery. When it became impossible ap[)a- rently to accom})lish the establishment of the Confederacy by a grand, open and honorable means, they were willing to accept an honorable peace, and abide with honor its terms. And there is no question that nuich of the old aft'ection of the Southern i)eople for the government of their fathers would have been speedily revived had the Federal goverinnent pursued a just ])oli('y toward them. AVhether or iu)t patience is a i)eculiar phase of chivalry may be an oi)en question, yet it is doubtful which is en- titled to the greater admiration— the gallantry which the KEMTER COUNTY VINDICATED. 273 Southern people displayed iu the contest, or the patience with which they bore the process of radical reconstruction. So iirottiiuent was this feature of their conduct, and so aggravating- the circumstances under which it was so sublimely exercised, that, in the minority report of the Senatorial committee appointed to investigate the alfairs of Mississippi, in 1875, Senators Bayard and McDonald could not refrain from making the following observations, which evidently sprang from the depths of conviction, and are set forth in the spirit of candor: "A condition of afl'airs which would be incredible and utterly intolerable in any of the Northern States exists in many of the black counties of Mississippi, where tho property, intelligence and character of the community is trodden to the earth, insulted and ignored by the most ignorant and sometimes vicious members of the com- munity. Things are of daily occurrence, and were proven almost daily before the committeeT which, if attempted iu the States of Massachusetts, "Wisconsin, Minnesota, or, in- deed, any of the Northern States, would be met by a poi])ular uprising and speedy overthrow. In such a con- dition of affairs, the forbearance and self subordination exhibited by the white population demands and should receive the strong sympathy and high respect of every just and well regulated mind." Yet such sympathy and respect would have been a i)Oor condolence, coming from those who established this state of affairs, and were strenuously endeavoring still to i)er- petuate it, be their minds never so well regulated. It was the reconstruction policy that the people of the South blamed for all their evils and wrongs, not so much the vile wretches who availed themselves of the opportu- nities it aflbrded them. So long as it was impossible for them to reach the cause, they spurned to vent their spleen upon the effect, otherwise than to maintain a state of ostracism and a feeling of scorn toward the carpet bag- ger and his (U;graded white allies of the South. It was the high sense ol' honor and self respect of the Southern peo- 16 271 KEIMPER COr^'TY VINDICATED. pie tliut tolerated tliis class. As heretofore remarked, it had been the practiee of the radical si)eakers to play upon the i.i;noraiice and crednlity of t!ie ne;;ro. They would tell them all manner of thinj^-s, such as what the President of the United States said they mast do, and wliat the general of the army said, what Congress desired of them, and l)ictnred to them in gloomy colors what would be the result of their non compliance. Subsidiary to this, they constantly represented the Southern whites to be hostile to every pro- ; gress of the negro, aud were even eutertaiuiug designs against their freedom. Such discourse had its effect u])ou their untutored minds; aiul the white people determined, during the canvass of 187(1, to attend the radical meetings for the purpose of preventing the repetition of these false- hoodsj and this their very i)resence, in most cases, effected. Where this was not the case, as it was not with Chisolm, and as they were allowed no division of time, or any chance of being heard on such occasions, they, in some instances, adopted the i)lan of interrupting tlie .sjjeaker, in the midst of such falsehoods, with to death. You see 1 was then Just being initiated. Others of our family had KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. 281 often seen the like when I was away at school. Tliey brought the old cannon right in front of the door, and I devoutly prayed that it might burst and blow them all into the ^ fiery furnace^^ where I am certain they will even- tually land." * * * * * ii Weli, they left after finding- how little they had accomplished, got some more men and whiskey, and came back about twelve o'clock at night and tried it over again. But all the family had to console and comfort me. I tell you, I thought I should die. I hardly slept one bit all night. By the next morning- at daylight, papa's friends came in from all parts of the county, including- four gentlemen from Macon. They were all at our house — about fifteen good, true, white Eepublicaus, who swore they would die by their leader and best friend. There were hundreds of negroes in town, and nothing but papa's constant and vigilant efforts kept them from firing upon the bloodthirsty demons as they passed by on their march. They had the Democratic flag, the band plaj'ing ' Dixie ' and the ' Bonnie Blue Flag,' a few ragged old negroes, and hundreds of villanous white scoundrels, half of whom w^ere owing papa for the clothes that CO veered their backs. He stood on the steps, and cursed them in language m^vc forcible than elegant. The first time, they yelled like the savages they were, and one man shot oif a pistol in the air; the next time, two or three fired, and a few more each time, until the shooting became incessant, and several shots struck the wall just by the door. At this time nearly all the gentlemen Avho had been Avith us were over at Mr. Gilmer's and Captain Rush's, to get Mrs. Gilmer and her baby and Mrs. Eush and her daughter to come to our house, as all of them had been insulted and frightened nearly to death while their men folks were with us. Several of the gentlemen were worn out or crippled in the canvass, and so you see papa and brother were about the only ones who could shoot to do any good, and but for mamma's entreaties, they would have made some of the beggarly dogs bite the dust. I kept close to papa's side all day, and when he told mo that .282 KEMPER cou^"^Y vindicated. if anotlicr shot Avas tired ho inteuded to kill some of them, lie bcii'ged ine to leave him, because those who did not nm would lire at him, and he feared some of the shots might hit me. I told liiin tluit 1 ])ri;yed the same shot which killed him mi.i,''ljt al.so hiy my lifeless body by his side. 3Iy dear , 1 once tli()u.t;!!t tliat 1 never wouhl tire of life; but if sucii i.s to be miiu', death, if I could share it Avilh my dear ones, would i:r,leed be a sweet relief." That this letter was written in the light of subsequent events, there can bo but little (juestion, and there can also be little question as to what will be the verdict of the fair minded reader against this man who introduces an inno- cent girl in such a clmracter, in order to give import ami authenticity to traducement. iS"o one can read tbis letter, with a knowledge of the events that followed, without being convinced that portions of it, at least, were dictated to conform with those events, and no reader of relinement, should he view them as genuine, can read the expressions used by this young lady, in this letter, without entertainnig at least a feeling of pit y for one ai)[)arently so lost to all sense of refinement. Hut let us return to the letter. She says : " Colonel Mock and John W. Gully headed the procession. At one time JMeek passed by, witii his arms around the neck of a ragged, filthy and degradee Kalb to give exjires- sion, in some substantial wny, to the public indignation. It is not believed, as one might supi)osc, that this call was for the i)urposc of organized resistance to the Federal authorities. There was an object ahead far more signifi- cant, and one which might be realized with less trouble and expense to themselves. It was the determination of the leaders then to assemble a large crowd of ruftians at De Kalb, and take the life of Judge Cliisolm and all his associates ; for by so doing they hoped to destroy the last chance for a successful prosecution of their clan in the United States court. The lirst of January came ; but, owing to a heavy fall of snow the night before — an unusual ocL'iu'rence for that climate — and the bad condition of the ](>:i(ls, the 'meeting' was not well attended. Besides, Judge Cliisolm, knowing their intent, had quietly called around him on that day a sufficient number of his friends 290 KEMPER COUNTY VINDICATED. to guard against the possibility of an attempt being maclo upon liis lile. Ten men like Cbisolm, when prepared, were able at all tinu's to Iiold llie 'citizens' to a carei'ul consid- eration of their acts.'' After this gush of llumniery and balderdash, it would be: a matter of surprise that Chisolm, in his testimony giveui Defore the subconr.nittee on i)rivileges and elections, at Washington, just six weeks after this occurrence, nowhere alludes to this instance of jeopardy, although he was called I upon to relate every threat that had ever been made against mm in word or deed, if the reader had not already dis-i covered that whenever Chisolm leaves any gap down, im tins respect, his consentaneous biographer has no ditliculty m tilling it. But there is another fact observable, and thafc: IS, that these criminal intentions have now been shifted f from John W. Gully to the shoulders of the thirty-one | indicted citizens. This circumstance, at least, relieves the usual monotony of his tale, and introduces variations which it will be more excursive to trace. As to Chisolm and Jiis ten armed clansmen causing the citizens to be carelul of their acts, that circumstance will doubtlessly ex[)lain liieir consideration manifested on another and subsequent occasion. These thirty-one citizens, arrested purely through tiu> malice of Chisolm and (iihner and their clan, were all ])laced under a heavy bond for their ap])earance at the next term of the Federal court, to be held at Jackson, in the following JMay. In tlie meantime, another meeting of the ]>eoi)le of tiie county was lield at De Ivalb, on the 10th of January, for the purpose of perfecting the arrangements for allbrding pecuniary aid to the persecuted citizens. On this occasion Clusolm again summoned his armed clan. They went about the village, however, without their guns, until (liliner, taking exceptions to some remark" made by a g(Mitleman na;ned McNN'liorter, placed himself upon the door stei)s of a store, and, with his i)istol in his hand, began to cui'se an