<h3> CHAPTER X <br/><br/> WENDELL PHILLIPS AND THE BOSTON MOBS </h3>
<p>Phillips's speech had been all through one
to stir deep resentment. The atmosphere
of the Music Hall was seething with fierce passion,
and it seemed likely enough there would be a
rush for the platform when he had finished. If
it had come it would have been met. The little
band of armed men who concerned themselves
about his safety never left his side. But there
was no rush. The plans of the enemy were of a
different kind. The audience passed quietly out
of the hall. A police officer came to tell us
that there would be trouble outside. A mob—of
course a broadcloth mob—had assembled. What
the mob intended only the leaders of it knew,
but he assured us that the police were strong
enough to deal with it. But he said Mr. Phillips's
friends should go with him when he left the hall,
and keep with him.</p>
<p>There were, I think, not more than half a dozen
of us who were armed—Le Barnes, Hinton, Redpath,
Charles Pollen, and one or two others. We
told Phillips what he was likely to meet, and that
we should walk next to him. When we got to
the outer door we found the police disputing with
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P96"></SPAN>96}</span>
the mob the narrow passage, perhaps fifty yards
long, from the hall to Winter Street. It was slow
work thrusting these disturbers out, because
Winter Street was crowded with the main body
of rioters, and there was no room for more. But
the police knew their business, and meant to do
it, and did it. Inside the passage there was not
space enough for an effective attack, even had
not the police been too strong. But it took us,
I judge, some fifteen minutes to make our way
from the hall door to the street.</p>
<p>During this space of time the mob in Winter
Street roared at us. They seemed to think we
were afraid to go on, and they flung at Phillips such
insults as hatred and anger supplied them with—coward,
traitor, and so on: with threats besides.
Phillips met it all with a smiling face. His hand
was on my arm, so that if there had been any
nervousness I should have been aware of it. But
the pressure of the hand was firm and steady. He
was as cool—to use Mr. Rufus Choate's similitude—as
a couple of summer mornings. The police
who had been a rear-guard, satisfied they were
not needed there, had gone to the front.</p>
<p>At first the mob gave little heed to the police.
They expected the police, as in Tremont Temple,
December 3rd, to be on their side. But this time
an officer had command who knew only his duty
as policeman. No politics but to keep the peace
and protect peaceful citizens. The officer was
Deputy Chief Ham. I have since seen a great
deal of police work in many parts of the world;
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P97"></SPAN>97}</span>
in New York, London, Paris, Berlin, and elsewhere;
nowhere any better handling of a dangerous
mob than this by Deputy Chief Ham. His force
was none too large, but his mastery over the
mob was never in doubt. In their hand-to-hand
struggles in the little passageway the police
showed what they were made of. Of Phillips's
friends the number had increased as we passed
from the platform, but if we had been alone we
should have been swallowed up, or we should have
been driven almost at once to use our revolvers.
But the police were an impregnable wall.</p>
<p>Once out in Winter Street, they formed in a
solid square, Phillips and his friends in the centre.
The square was never broken. The mob were
many thousands strong. There were wild rushes,
there was the tremendous pressure of great masses
of men, but against it all the police held good.
Down Winter Street to Washington Street, along
Washington Street to Essex Street, and in Essex
Street to the door of Phillips's house, the mob
kept us company, oozing and surging slowly on,
reviling and cursing all the way. They thought
they would have a chance at the house, but the
Deputy Chief had taken possession there in
advance, and when the door opened we passed
comfortably in between the police lines. It had taken
us an hour or more from the hall to the house.
The distance is a short half-mile.</p>
<p>It had been a murderous mob. Phillips's life
was aimed at and had been in imminent danger
during that hour. The spirit of murder was
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P98"></SPAN>98}</span>
abroad. The police warned us. They thought
the peril over for the moment, but none the less
remained on duty near the house. Men were
stopped and asked to state their business. When
I returned in the afternoon an officer came up
to me but recognized me, nodded, and I went
in. I found Phillips as cool as usual, the usual
sunshine in his blue eyes. I told him what I had
heard from the police, and that I thought his
house ought to be garrisoned for the night.</p>
<p>"But who will undertake that?"</p>
<p>"Your friends know there is danger and will
gladly come."</p>
<p>He seemed a little sceptical and asked:</p>
<p>"Will you come?"</p>
<p>"Certainly." I explained to him our plans.
He went into the back parlour and brought out an
ugly-looking pike. "It was John Brown's," he
said. No weapon could be more unfit for use
in a narrow hall or on winding stairs. It might
have a moral effect. It was agreed that three
of us whose names are above, should camp out
that night in the parlour. When we arrived
about ten o'clock we found the table laid, with
food and drink for a much larger army. The
night passed without alarm, as did following
nights, but neither our vigilance nor that of the
police relaxed.</p>
<p>During these days, and long after, Phillips
walked the streets of Boston with his hand on his
revolver. I was sometimes with him. I said one
day:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P99"></SPAN>99}</span></p>
<p>"I am more afraid now they will try insult than
injury."</p>
<p>"Don't trouble about that. I can see over my
shoulder, and before a man can touch me I shall
shoot."</p>
<p>He was a quick and good shot, as I found out
next summer, when I used to stay with him in
Milton, and we practised at a target.</p>
<p>But the memorable 21st of January drew on,
when the annual meeting of the Massachusetts
Anti-Slavery Society was to be held in Tremont
Temple. Rumours again filled the air, and
something more than rumours. I have already said I
had friends in the other camp. One of them came
to me to beg me to let it alone. "I care nothing
about Phillips," he said, "but you are my friend
and I must tell you what I know, though I am
betraying my own party." "Then don't tell
it." But he insisted.</p>
<p>His story came to this: That, knowing we had
organized in December for defence, they had
organized for attack. A group of men outnumbering
ours would go to the Temple on the 21st, well
led and well armed. Under the new Mayor,
Wightman, a more subservient tool of the mob
than his predecessor, Lincoln, the police would no
longer be allowed to protect the Abolitionists. This
hostile band would wait on events a little, but if
Phillips and his friends were in the same mood as
at the Music Hall, they would be driven out of the
Temple. "What do you mean by driven out?" He
answered, gravely, "It would be truer to say
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P100"></SPAN>100}</span>
carried out. We are determined to put down this
mad agitation. They will not leave the Temple
alive."</p>
<p>My friend spoke in perfect good faith, but
it is needless to say I did not believe him. I told
him so.</p>
<p>"Your friends talk, but they will not act. They
well know that if they murder Phillips they will be
hanged for it."</p>
<p>"But will you not advise Phillips to stay away,
or at least to be moderate?"</p>
<p>"No, I will not. If I did, it would be useless."</p>
<p>"But if you tell him what I say?"</p>
<p>"He would disbelieve it, as I do."</p>
<p>Our talk ended. I thanked him, but said his
friends would find us ready; that I should, of course,
consider what he had said confidential, but it would
not alter our purpose. He wished me to tell
Phillips, mentioning no names, and I might tell any of
our party who could be trusted. Evidently he
hoped they would be more impressed than I was.
I did tell Phillips, who said, "You seem to have
queer friends." I said something also to the two
men who were to be stationed at the ends of the
platform where the steps were, leading to the
platform from the body of the hall, the two most
dangerous points. The only change they made
in their plans was to double the number of these
outposts.</p>
<p>From morning, when the Convention assembled
till the noon recess, and then all through the
afternoon the Temple was a scene of confusion, disorder,
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P101"></SPAN>101}</span>
uproar; rioting even, but of no violence. The
deep gallery opposite the platform was thronged
by the rioters. The formal business of
organization once over, they broke in upon every
speech. Nobody was heard. Phillips, with all his
tact in dealing with such gangs, could do little.
Now and then a sentence rang clear. A message
had gone from the Temple to the State House,
where Governor Andrew sat waiting, and watching
the course of events. An answer had come back
by word of mouth, and had been misunderstood,
as oral messages commonly are.</p>
<p>In a lull, Phillips's voice was heard in a direct
appeal to the gallery mob: "We have a message
from the Governor. The State Militia is on its way
to the Temple and will sweep that rabble where
it belongs—into the calaboose." The rabble
thought it over for a while in silence, but began
again. When the adjournment came Phillips
said to me: "I am going to Governor Andrew.
Come."</p>
<p>We found Governor Andrew in his room at the
golden-domed State House of Massachusetts. He
greeted us cordially and listened while Phillips
stated his case. Phillips urged that the
Anti-Slavery Society had a right to meet, a right to
transact business, a right to the free use of that
free speech which was a right attaching to citizenship
in Massachusetts; and a right to be protected
when that right was denied. Primarily, he said,
it was the business of the police to keep order and
give protection, but the police, acting under the
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P102"></SPAN>102}</span>
orders of Mayor Wightman, refused to do their
plain duty.</p>
<p>"Therefore," said Phillips, "I come to the
Governor of the State to safeguard citizens of the
State in the exercise of their rights."</p>
<p>Said Governor Andrew:</p>
<p>"Mr. Phillips, what do you wish me to do?"</p>
<p>"Send a sufficient force of troops to Tremont
Temple to put down the rioters and protect law-abiding
citizens in the legal exercise of their legal
rights."</p>
<p>The Governor sat behind a table on which lay
a copy of the Revised Statutes of Massachusetts.
He opened it, handed it to us, and said:</p>
<p>"If you wish me, as Governor, to act, show me
the statute which gives me the power."</p>
<p>But Phillips was not to be turned aside. He
answered, in tones slightly less cool than before:</p>
<p>"Free speech is a common law right. The
power to which I appeal is a common law power,
inherent in the Governor as the Chief Magistrate
of the State."</p>
<p>But Andrew said again:</p>
<p>"Show me the statute."</p>
<p>And again:</p>
<p>"Show me the statute."</p>
<p>And from that he was not to be moved. Seeing
that his mind was made up, Phillips turned away
abruptly, saying to me, "Come," and we departed.
As we went downstairs Phillips said:</p>
<p>"I will never again speak to Andrew as long as I
live."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P103"></SPAN>103}</span></p>
<p>And we went back to the Temple, knowing at
last we had nothing to depend on but ourselves
and our revolvers.</p>
<p>Again during the interval my friend came to me.
He said: "You will be allowed to hold your meeting
this afternoon, though not without interruption.
But the attack I have warned you of will be made
this evening, and I once more beseech you to stay
away." He knew, of course, it was impossible.
What took place after that in the councils of the
rioters I know not. I have always supposed that
my friend, a man well known in Boston, went to
the Mayor and laid the case before him. I do not
know. What is known is that before the hour
when the Society was to assemble in the evening,
the Mayor closed the Temple. His decision was
not imparted to us. Phillips and I drove to the
Temple, and only on arriving heard what the
Mayor had done. He was a weak Mayor, disloyal,
incompetent. But he had perhaps prevented a
tragedy. I think Governor Andrew, aware of the
probable course of events in the South and at
Washington, desired to avoid anything like a
conflict in Massachusetts. He said as much to
me afterward. That was his excuse.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN id="chap11"></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P104"></SPAN>104}</span></p>
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