In 1837, Brown and his father attended a meeting to honor Elijah Lovejoy, she was …show more content…
Brown’s raid revealed a deep division between the North and the South. As a historical figure and symbol John Brown was complicated, debatable, and dangerous. Blacks had seen Brown as a hero believing his only rival was Lincoln, Brown was a white man who identified himself with enslaved Negroes and he showed no prejudice and he didn’t doubt putting his life at risk to liberate them. On another hand to white settlers Brown had forcefully taken the rule of law and had tried to spark a murderous slave revolt. By the 1900s. Negroes lived in the land and lived terribly scared in the white mind, as a “degenerated” race that the whites controlled through the separation of people by race and religion and by murder.
Meanwhile to liberal whites in the North that were more concerned about race relations, John Brown was glorious, he was more of a hero. Brown was really remembered for his direct Christian dignity he had showed during his incarceration and through his trial. Brown’s example was inspirational, it forced men and women to manage the work of reform; it was also an example one could safely invoke. Mostly, everyone had agreed that Brown had sacrificed and accepted his errors and made holy his sprit before his