Harper’s Ferry is a place of confluence....where the
Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers meet, as well as the states of West Virginia,
Maryland, and Virginia. We had the amazing privilege to visit this “hidden
treasure” while on a tour of the East Coast a while back and enjoyed a
picture-perfect yet drizzly day in the place best known for John Brown, the
abolitionist, and his raid upon the armory in 1859.
We ate our picnic lunch in the armory’s fire engine and guardhouse, all that’s
left of the original establishment.
In 1761, a colonist named Robert Harper started up a ferry
across the Potomac in this spot, making the town a starting point for settlers
moving into the Shenandoah Valley.
The town’s importance increased when the armory was commissioned
in then-state Virginia, about 1799. It was only the second U.S. armory and in
fact, was both armory and arsenal --an arsenal being the place for storage and
production of large arms such as cannons and howitzers. An armory mostly manufactures
and stores small caliber rifles and carbines. The first military arms started
production about three years later.
The armory helped transform the town into an industrial
powerhouse for sixty years, from 1801 to its destruction in 1861 to prevent its
capture during the Civil War. During these years the armory produced more than
600,000 firearms including the first breech-loaded rifle adopted by the army.
Progress continued when the railroad reached Harpers Ferry
in 1833, providing a link to Washington D.C.
Back to Mr. Brown (1800-1859). His raid on this armory
electrified the nation, got him tried for treason against the Commonwealth of
Virginia (where some proclaimed him a hero) and executed on December 2.
Although Abolition was a hot topic in the mid 1800’s, most Northerners supported
peaceful resistance to their Southern fellowmen who were pro-slavery.
John Brown, however, demanded violent action against slavery.
He claimed he was the instrument of God’s wrath” in punishing slave owners for
their sin of owning other human beings.
Under the name Isaac Smith, and with a small band of men
with minimal military training (supposedly 16 white men, 3 free blacks, 1 freed
slave and 1 fugitive slave) he attempted to seize the armory and use the weapons
to arm slaves. However, his attack on October 16, 1859 failed. Seven people
were killed, ten more injured. Thirty six hours later, his men had run off or
been killed and captured by pro-slave farmers, militia, and U.S. Marines led by
Robert E. Lee.
Historians agree that Brown’s raid played a major role in
the state of the Civil War.
The armory supplied arms to Virginia until its secession and
remained a strategic site for its place on the Potomac as well as proximity to
the Mason Dixon Line. Today the site of the armory is mostly railroad embankments.
The building that survives was the armory’s fire engine guardhouse.
The town itself is beautiful. From the commanding location
of St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church in the hills above Harpers Ferry, one can
see forever, it seems. The original 1833 church is the only church in Harpers
Ferry to escape the Civil War, but it was remodeled in the 1890’s into the Neo-Gothic
style popular at the time.
It was a great day in Harpers Ferry with its combination of
history and beauty.
Even if I'm not one much for stairs!
Thanks for the vicarious travel, Tanya. I long to visit that area. Maybe next year.
ReplyDeleteFor some reason unknown to me, I've always been interested in Harpers Ferry. I remember studying it in school. I stuck with me all these gazillion years since then. What a beautiful town - thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteHi Caroline, this was indeed such a treasure. One of the highlights of an already incredible trip. Hope you get there! xo
ReplyDeleteHi Paisley, I remember the John Brown info, too, and just being in West Virginia was incredible...being West Coasters, it's a state we never really think about. Thanks for posting.
ReplyDeleteTanya--I'm behind in reading blogs! Harper's Ferry still fascinates and intrigues us, as many authors have used it in novels--and film, I suppose.
ReplyDeleteThe photos were great. Those stone steps? I'd probably break a leg if I tried to go up or down on them.
I've been in that region of the rivers, but never saw the important things. Sometimes you glance at something on your way to something else-I'm sure that's what we were doing.
Very well done--thanks.
Hi Celia, oh, those stone steps were really scary, and it was drizzly to boot. But the view was stupendous. It truly was an almost Brigadoon-y place to see. And it's so down inside a state park, we'd never have found it on our own LOL. Thanks for the comment. xo
ReplyDelete