Book-^BaMf-- Copyright N° - COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. » it? REV. HENRY WARD BEECHER. PLYMOUTH CHURCH, BROOKLYN, ON THE 28TH OF AUGUST, 1874. THE TBUE HISTOKT OF THE Brooklyn Scandal: BEING A COMPLETE ACCOUNT OF THE TRIAL OF THE REV. HENRY WARD BEECHER, OF PLYMOUTH CHURCH, BROOKLYN, UPON CHARGES PREFERRED BY THEODORE TILTON, INCLUDING ALL THE ORIGINAL LETTERS, DOCUMENTS AND PRIVATE CORRE- SPONDENCE, WITH BIOGRAPHIES OF THE LEADING ACTORS IN THE GREAT DRAMA. CONTAINING ALSO THE FULL STATEMENTS OF MOULTON, BEECHER, AND TILTON, AND Mii\Y ADDITIONAL FACTS, PRIVATE LETTERS, ETC., KEYER BEFORE PUBLISHED. BY CHAELES F. MAESHALL. it Illustrate! will numerous Fine Engrayiuss and Portraits. Issued by subscription only, and not for sale in the bookstores. Residents of auy State desiring a copy should address the Publishers, and an Agent will call upon tbcni. (See pago 611.) NATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA, Pa.; CHICAGO, III.; ST. LOUIS, Mo. ^ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 187 ', by J. R. JONES, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. PKEFACE The great and overwhelming interest manifested by the American people in the investigation of the charges preferred by Theodore Tilton against the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher cannot be credited to a national love for scandal, but rather to a desire that one who has for long years stood first in their regards as a religious teacher and counsellor should vindicate himself from the terrible accusations made against him. Men said : " If this man, whom we have loved and honored so long for his .pure life as well as for his great genius, shall be proven a hypocrite and a libertine, whom shall we trust ? " Mr. Beecher's reputation is esteemed a national honor, and his countrymen have watched every stage of the charges against him with the deepest interest, and have rejoiced in his triumphant vindica- tion as at the defeat of an effort to cast a stain upon the fair name of the Great Republic of the West. In spite of this great interest, the reports of the trial, and the statements of the principal actors in it, were presented to the great mass of the people in a very incomplete form. The testimony was so volumi- nous, and the statements so numerous and long, that even the great daily papers of the largest cities had not room in their columns for the whole case. The great majority of the newspapers of the Union were only 13 14 PREFACE. able to publish brief extracts from the statements and summaries of the investigation, so that the case has gone out to the public in a fragmentary and unsat- isfactory manner. The people at large have not yet had the means of learning the whole case, which alone can qualify them for forming an intelligent conclusion concerning the matters at issue. There has been a de- mand from all parts of the country for a connected and chronologically arranged account of the Brooklyn scandal, giving its history, and presenting all the docu- ments necessary to the forming of a fair opinion on the part of the reader. Such a work is offered to the public in the present volume. In these pages the history of the charges against Mr. Beecher is traced from their inception down to the acquittal of Mr. Beecher by the Investigating Committee of Plymouth Church, with such comments and explanations as are necessary to a proper under- standing of the matter. Every document bearing upon the case, including the statements of the principal actors in the controversy, the evidence of the principal witnesses examined by the Investigating Committee, the report of that committee, and the events that have occurred since the close of the investigation — all these are given in their proper order, together with biogra- phies of the principal personages concerned. In short, the case is presented complete, and in such shape as will enable the reader to decide it upon its own merits. While the compiler has a very decided opinion as to the reasonable conclusion to be drawn from this case, the facts speak for themselves, and have been left to do so in the main. THEODORE TILTON. CONTENTS I.— Mrs. Woodhull's Charges 17 II.— Plymouth Church Takes Action in the Matter 32 III.— The Congregational Council 35 IV.— Dr. Bacon's Speech 40 V.— Mr. Tilton's Reply to Dr. Bacon 42 VI.— Mr. Beecher Demands an Investigation 63 VII.— Life of Henry Ward Beecher 65 VIII.— Life of Theodore Tilton 93 IX.— Life of Mrs. Elizabeth R. Tilton 103 X.— The Investigating Committee 106 XL— Mr. Moulton's First Appearance 109 XII.— Mr. Tilton 's Sworn Statement 112 XIII.— Tilton's Cross-Examination 130 XIV.— Mr. Beecher's Denial 177 XV.— Mrs. Tilton's Statement 181 XVI.— Mrs. Tilton's Cross-Examination 18S XVII.— The Case in Court 214 XVIII.— Mr. Beecher Demands his Letters 223 XIX.— Mr. Moulton's Second Appearance 240 15 16 CONTENTS. XX.— Life of Francis D. Moulton 241 XXI. — Mr. Moulton's Third Appearance 245 XXII.— Mr. Beecher 's Defence 251 XXIII.— Cross-Examination of Mr. Beecher 286 XXIV.— Mr. Moulton's First Statement 307 XXV.— Bessie Turner's Evidence 390 XVI. — Kev. Mr. Halliday's Statement 400 XXVII.— The Eeport of the Investigating Committee 405 XX VIII.— The Scene at Plymouth Church 433 XXIX.— Mr. Moulton Explains His Action 438 XXX.— Mr. Tilton Sues Mr. Beeciier for Damages. . 446 XXXI.— Mr. Moulton's Last Statement 448 XXXII.— Mr. Moulton Sued for Libel 507 XXXIII.— Theodore Tilton 's Last Statement 515 XXXIV.— Public Confidence in Mr. Beeciier 597 XXXV.— Mr. Beecher Sues Tilton and Moulton for Malicious Libel 606 -A MRS. ELIZABETH R. TILTON. THE TRUE HISTORY OF THE BROOKLYN SCANDAL. I. MRS. WOODHULL'S CHARGES. In September, 1872, Mrs. Victoria Woodhull was re-elected President of the National Association of Spiritualists at Boston, and in her speech of acceptance made a bitter personal attack upon the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. The Boston newspapers suppressed the most of her remarks. At length, after giving out several vague hints of her charges, she published them in full in her journal known as Woodhull <£ Clqfflin* Weekly, on the 2d of November, 1872. In this article, after asserting that Mr. Beecher was a believer in the most advanced doctrines of free-love and the abolition of Christian marriage, as held and advocated by her- self, she asserted that Mr. Tilton had informed her that he had discovered a criminal intimacy between his wife and Mr. Beecher. The statements thus made public were given by Mrs. Woodhull in the form of a conver- sation between a reporter and herself. The following passages contain the substance of her story : 17 18 THE TRUE HISTORY OF It was brought up subsequently , in ail i ntimate con . versation between her and me, by Mrs. Pauline Wright Uavis, without any seeking on my part, and to my very great surprise. Mrs. Davis had been, it seems, a fre- quent visitor at Mr. T * * * house in Brooklyn-they having long been associated in the Woman's Rights movement-and she stood upon certain terms of inti- macy m the family. Almost at the same time to which 1 have referred, when I was in Washington, she called, as she told me, at Mr. T * * * Mrs. T * * * met her at the door and burst into tears, exclaiming: < Oh, Mrs. Davis ! have you come to see me? For six months I have been ' shut up from the world, and I thought no one would ever come again to visit me.' In the in- terview that followed, Mrs. * * * spoke freely of a long series of in- timate and so-called i . " criminal relations on her part with a certain clergyman- of th. / of the facts by Mr T * * * Tf / u T™* e „ff a c , > of tne abuse she had uffered from h.m in consequence, and of her hea t- thtrji t,on - „ She seemed to a,iude to «» *2 Jang a to something already generally known or -own ? . considerable circle, and impossible to' Z concealed, and attributed the long absence of Mr7 Mrs. Victoria C. Woodhull. THE BROOKLYN SCANDAL. 19 Davis from the house to her knowledge of the facts. She was, as she stated at the time, recovering from the effects of a miscarriage of a child of six months. The miscarriage was induced by the ill-treatment of Mr. T * * * in his rage at the discovery of such intimacy, and, as he believed, the great probability that she was enceinte, but not by him. Mrs. T * * * confessed to Mrs. Davis the intimacy with this clergyman, and that it had been of years' standing. She also said that she loved him before she married Mr. T * * *, and that now the burden of lier sorrow was greatly augmented by the knowledge that the clergyman was untrue to her. She had not only to endure the rupture with her husband, but also the certainty that, notwithstanding his repeated assurance of his faithfulness to her, he had recently had illicit intercourse, under most extraordi- nary circumstances, with another person. Said Mrs. Davis : ' I came away from that house, my soul bowed down with grief at the heart-broken condition of that poor woman, and I felt that I ought not to leave Brooklyn until I had stripped the mask from that infamous, hypocritical scoundrel/ " * * It seems that Mr. T * * * in agony at the discovery of what he deemed his wife's perfidy and his pastors treachery, retreated to Mrs. Stanton's residence at Tenafly, where he detailed to her the entire story. Said Mrs. Stanton : < I never saw such a manifestation of mental agony. He raved and tore his hair, and seemed upon the very verge of insanity.' ' Oh ! ' said he, that that damned lecherous scoundrel should have de- filed my bed for ten years, and at the same time have professed to be my best friend ! Had he come like a man to me and confessed his guilt, I could perhaps 20 THE TRUE HISTORY OF have endured it, but to have him creep like a snake into my house, leaving his pollution behind him, and I so blind as not to see, and esteeming him all the while as a saint — oh ! it is too much. And when I think how for years she, upon whom I had bestowed all my heart's love, could have lied and deceived me so, I lose all faith in humanity. I do not believe there is any honor, any truth left in anybody in the world.' Mrs. Stanton continued and repeated to me the sad story, which it is unnecessary to recite, as I prefer giving it as Mr. T- * * * himself told it to me, subsequently, with his own lips." Keporter. — "Is it possible that Mr. T * * * con- fided this story to you ? It seems too monstrous to be believed ! " Mrs. Woodhull. — " He certainly did. And what is more, I am persuaded that in his most inmost mind he will not be otherwise than glad when the skeleton in his closet is revealed to the world, if thereby the abuses which lurk like vipers under the cloak of social con- servatism may be exposed and the causes removed. Mr. T * * * looks deeper into the soul of things than most men, and is braver than most." Keporter. — " How did your acquaintance with Mr. T * * * begin ? " Mrs. Woodhull. — " Upon the information received from Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Stanton I based what I said in the Weekly, and in the letters in the Times and World referring to the matter, I was nearly deter- mined — though still not quite so — that what I, equally with those who gave me the information, believed, but for w T holly other reasons, to be a most important social circumstance, should be exposed, my reasons being, as FRANCIS D. MOULTON, "THE MUTUAL FRIEND." THE BROOKLYN SCANDAL. 21 I have explained to you, not those of the world, and I took that method to cause inquiry and create agitation regarding it. The day that the letter appeared in the World Mr. T * * * came to my office, No. 44 Broad street, and, showing me the letter, asked : ' Whom do you mean by that?" 'Mr. T * * *,' I said, 'I mean you and Mr. * * *.' I then told him what I knew, what I thought of it, and that I felt that I had a mission to bring it to the knowledge of the world, and that I had nearly determined to do so. I said to him much else on the subject ; and he said : ' Mrs. Woodhull, you are the first person I have ever met who has dared to, or else who could, tell me the truth.' He acknowledged that the facts, as I had heard them, were true, but declared that I did not yet know the extent of the depravitj* of that man — meaning Rev.- * * *. ' But,' said he, ' do not take any steps now. I have carried my heart as a stone in my breast for months, for the sake of * * *, my wife, who is broken-hearted as I am. I have had courage to endure rather than to add more to her weight of sorrow. For her sake I have allowed that rascal to go unscathed. I have curbed my feelings when every impulse urged me to throttle and ■ strangle him. Let me take you over to my wife, and you will find her in no condition to be dragged before the public ; and I know you will have compassion on her.' And I went and saw her, and I agreed with him on the pro- priety of delay." Reporter. — " Was it during this interview that Mr. T * * * explained to you all that you now know of the matter?" Mrs. Woodhull. — " Oh, no. His revelations were made subsequently at sundry times, and during months 22 THE TRUE HISTORY OF of friendly intercourse, as occasion brought the sub- ject up." Mrs. Woodhull then resumed, saying : " Mr. T * * * first began to have suspicions of Mr. * * * on his own return from a long lecturing tour through the West. He questioned his little daughter privately, in his study, regarding what had transpired in his absence. ' The tale of iniquitous horror that was revealed to me was/ he said, ' enough ^ to turn the heart of a stranger to stone, ' to i )P, MS^ sa y n °thing of a hus- i^K^ band and father/ It was not the fact of the intimacy alone, but, in addition to that, the terrible orgies — so he said — of which his house had been made the scene, W/WmWw anc * tne boldness with which matters had ytfl JlJffW been carried on in the presence of his mrs. euzajbeth cady stanton. children — J. hese things drove me mad/ said he, ' and I went to my wife and confronted her with the child and the damning tale she had told me. My wife did not deny the charge nor attempt any palliation. She was then enceinte ; and I felt sure that the child would not be my child. I stripped the wedding-ring from her finger. I tore the picture of Mr. * * * from my wall THE BROOKLYN SCANDAL. 23 and stamped it in pieces. Indeed, I do not know what I did not do. I only look back to it as a time too horrible to retain any exact remembrance of it. She miscarried the child and it was buried. For two weeks, night and day, I might have been found walking to and from that grave, in a state bordering on distrac- tion. I could not realize the fact that I was what I was. I stamped the ring with which we had plighted our troth deep into the soil that covered the fruit of my wife's infidelity. I had friends, many and firm and good, but I could not go to them with this grief, and I suppose I should have remained silent through life had not an occasion arisen which demanded that I should seek counsel. Mr. * * * learned that I had discovered the fact, and what had transpired between my wife and myself, and when I was absent he called at my house and compelled or induced his victim to sign a statement he had prepared, declaring that so far as he, Mr. * * *, was concerned, there was no truth in my charges, and that there had never been any criminal intimacy between them. Upon learning this, as I did, I felt, of course, again outraged and could endure secrecy no longer. I had one friend who was like a brother, Mr. Frank Moulton. I went to him and stated the case fully. We were both members of * * * Church. My friend took a pistol, went to Mr. * * *, and demanded the letter of Mrs. T * * . * under pen- alty of instant death." Mrs. Woodhull here remarked that Mr. Moulton had himself also since described to her this interview, with all the piteous and abject beseeching of Mr. * * * not to be exposed to the public. " Mr. Moulton obtained the letter," said Mrs. W., 21 THE TRUE HISTORY OF " and told me that he had it in his safe, where he should keep it until required for further use. After this, Mr. T * * *'s house was no house for him, and he seldom slept or eat there, but frequented the house of his friend Moulton, who sympathized deeply with him. Mrs. T * * * was also absent days at a time, and, as Mr. T * * * informed me, seemed bent on destroying her life. I went, as I have said, to see her, and found her indeed a wretched wreck of a woman, whose troubles were greater than she could bear. She made no secret of the facts before me. Mr. * * *'s selfish, cowardly cruelty in endeavoring to shield him- self and create public opinion against Mr. T * * * added poignancy to her anxieties. She seemed in- different as to what should become of herself, but labored under fear that murder might be done on her account. " This was the condition of affairs at the time that Mr. T * * * came to me. I attempted to show him the true solution of the embroglio, and the folly that it was for a man like him, a representative man of the ideas of the future, to stand whining over inevitable events connected with this transition age and the social revolution of which we are in the midst. I told him that the fault and the wrong were neither in * * * nor in Mrs. T * * *, nor in himself; but that it was in the false social institutions under which we still live, while the more advanced men and women of the world have outgrown them in spirit; and that, practically, every- body is living a false life, by professing a conformity which they do not feel and do not live, and which they can not feel and live any more than the grown boy can re-enter the clothes of his early childhood. I recalled TILTON AND MOULTON CONSULTING WITH GENERAL BUTLER. THE BROOKLYN SCAXDAL. 25 to his attention splendid passages of his own rhetoric, in which he had unconsciously justified all the freedom that he was now condemning, when it came home to his own door, and endeavoring, in the spirit of a tyrant, to repress. •$» $$S JjS •{• *$•