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Lycoming
Remembers Muncy Abolition Riot
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
Williamsport Sun-Gazette
The issue of the abolition of slavery excited great passions
throughout the United States during the pre-Civil War period.
Lycoming County was no exception. This was amply demonstrated
in a little-known incident in April 1842 known as the "Muncy
Abolition Riot of 1842."
It is usually assumed (incorrectly) today that the people
of the North were of one mind about the abolition of slavery,
condemning it and working hard for its elimination. But
this just was not so.
The New England states were the real hotbed for abolition,
and people in states such as Pennsylvania were much more
divided on the issue. A large body of opinion in this state
was openly hostile to the doctrine of abolition. It was
those who were openly hostile to abolition who were at the
center of the "Riot of 1842."
Enos Hawley was a Quaker, a tanner by trade and one of Muncy's
most prominent citizens. He later became its postmaster.
His Quaker heritage provided him the moral base to be a
strong hater of the institution of slavery. He was not shy
about his revulsion of this "peculiar institution."
In the spring of 1842 Hawley invited a speaker, whose name
is lost to history, to speak in Muncy about abolition. This
unknown, itinerant abolitionist speaker's appearance was
not welcomed by all. Eighteen individuals in particular
met this appearance with violent anger. These men riotously
attacked the schoolhouse where the abolitionist speaker
was delivering an address. They pelted the schoolhouse with
rocks and various other missiles, knocking out all of the
windows and causing some bodily injury to the speaker and
his sponsor, Hawley.
After Hawley and the speaker left the building, the men
continued to pelt them with eggs. When the two got to Hawley's
house, these rowdies continued to throw objects.
The roughnecks were indicted on charges of "riotously,
and tumultuously assembly to disturb and disturbing the
peace of the Commonwealth in August 1842. They were placed
on trial in September. That jury found thirteen of the18
guilty of the charges after much wrangling during the deliberations.
One member of the jury, ardent abolitionist Abraham Updegraff,
later wrote about his experience on this jury. He described
a long and contentious process in which he had to use all
of his persuasive powers. The initial jury ballot came in
at 11 for acquittal and one against. Updegraff argued to
the other jurors that "we have been sworn to try this
case according to the law and the evidence presented and
that if no contradictory evidence offered by the defendants
than we could nothing more but to convict them."
Updegraff used his knowledge of German to persuade three
other jurors in their native tongue to see things his way.
Another poll was taken and the result showed nine for conviction
and three for acquittal. Finally, on the third try, the
jury reached a decision to convict
The jury's painfully reached decision was basically annulled
when Pennsylvania Gov. David Rittenhouse Porter pardoned
the convicted defendants several days after the trial. His
pardon message said, in part, "It is represented to
me by highly respected citizens of Lycoming County, that
this prosecution was instituted more with a view to the
accomplishment of political ends than to serve the cause
of law and order."
Porter's pardon message blamed the abolitionist speaker
for the disorder stating that the content of the speaker's
speech was "notoriously offensive to the minds of those
to whom they were addressed and were calculated to bring
about a breach of the peace."
As the result of cases like his pardon of the "Muncy
Riot' defendants, Porter was given the derisive nickname
of "The Pardoning Governor."
It is clear that the case of the "Muncy Riot"
defendants had larger social and political implications.
Cases like that didn't usually receive the intervention
of the governor.
This case also demonstrates the hazards that anyone involved
in the Underground Railroad in the area could potentially
encounter.
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