John Brown Exhibiting His Hangman, 1863
by Photo Researchers
Title
John Brown Exhibiting His Hangman, 1863
Artist
Photo Researchers
Medium
Photograph - Photograph
Description
Allegorical illustration dating from 1863 entitled "John Brown exhibiting his hangman." The illustration shows Brown rising from the grave to accuse Jefferson Davis (dressed in women's clothing), who sits imprisoned in a birdcage hanging from a gallows. Below, stereotypical minstrel figures frolic about joyously. Davis had nothing to do with Brown's execution, but is used in this context as a symbol of the morally bankrupt, pro-slavery Confederacy. John Brown (1800-1859), a white abolitionist, attempted to start an armed slave revolt by seizing a military arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia in 1859. He was defeated by a detachment of Marines led by Colonel Robert E. Lee. John Brown was the first white man to use violence in an attempt to end slavery. The raid alarmed many in the South and led to militarization in preparation for a Northern invasion. Brown was tried and executed for treason, murder, and conspiracy.
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March 7th, 2013
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