[The Anti-Slavery Crusade by Jesse Macy]@TWC D-Link book
The Anti-Slavery Crusade

CHAPTER XIV
17/46

He strove to inaugurate a revolution which would extend to all pro-slavery States and result in universal emancipation.
John Brown was in Kansas only one year, and he never made himself at one with those who should have been his fellow-workers but went his solitary way.

Only in three instances did he pretend to cooperate with the regular freestate forces.

He could not work with them because his conception of the means to be adopted to attain the end was different from theirs.

Probably before he left the Territory in 1856, he had realized that his work in Kansas was a failure and that the law-and-order forces were too strong for the execution of his plans.
Certain it is that within a few weeks after his departure he had transferred the field of his operations to the mountains of Virginia.
Kansas became free through the persistent determination of the rank and file of Northern settlers under the wise leadership of Governor Robinson.

It is difficult to determine whether the cause of Kansas was aided or hindered by the advent of John Brown and the adventurers with whom his name became associated.
During the fall of 1856 and until the late summer of 1857 Brown was in the East raising funds for the redemption of Kansas and for the reimbursement of those who had incurred or were likely to incur losses in defense of the cause.


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