Elijah P. Lovejoy: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Zur Navigation springen Zur Suche springen
256 Bytes hinzugefügt ,  00:07, 3. Dez. 2014
keine Bearbeitungszusammenfassung
Zeile 1: Zeile 1:
Der für die Abschaffung der Sklaverei eintretende presbyterianische Pastor und Zeitungsverleger '''Elijah Parish Lovejoy''' (*9.11.1802 in Albion, Maine; gest. 7.11.1837 in Alton, Illinois) starb in Verteidigung seiner Meinungs- und Pressefreiheit durch fünf Kugeln.
Der abolitionistische Pastor und Zeitungsverleger ("The Observer") '''Elijah Parish Lovejoy''' (*9.11.1802 in Albion, Maine; gest. 7.11.1837 in Alton, Illinois) wurde für sein Eintreten für die Abschaffung der Sklaverei in den USA und durch seinen Märtyrertod im Kugelhagel seiner Gegner - aufrecht stehend an der Tür zu seiner Druckerei - bekannt.


:He graduated from Waterville College (renamed Colby) in 1826 and, after a brief period of school teaching and newspaper work in St. Louis, Mo., studied for the ministry at Princeton. On receiving his license to preach he returned to St. Louis to edit a Presbyterian weekly, the Observer. His editorials on slavery soon brought protests from his readers, for even the '''gradual''' abolition of slavery that Lovejoy proposed was controversial. A meeting of citizens in 1835 warned him to desist, but Lovejoy refused to modify his position. On March 4, 1835, he married Celia Ann French.
Lovejoy schloss 1826 sein Studium am Waterville (später Colby) College ab. Nach einer kurzen Zeit als Schullehrer und Zeitungsredakteur in St. Louis, Mo., begann sich der Sohn eines presbyterianischen Pastors in Princeton auf seine seelsorgerische Tätigkeit vorzubereiten. Zurück in St. Louis, begann er ein presbyterianisches Wochenblatt herauszugeben, den "Observer".  


:In early 1836 Lovejoy published a full account of the brutal lynching of a free African American in St. Louis, including a report of the trial that acquitted the mob leaders. Threats of personal harm and lack of support by the Presbyterian General Assembly soon led him to move to Alton, Ill., 25 miles away. When the Observer's press, left unguarded on the Alton dock, was smashed and thrown into the Mississippi River, local citizens pledged money for a new one.
:His editorials on slavery soon brought protests from his readers, for even the '''gradual''' abolition of slavery that Lovejoy proposed was controversial.
 
1836 zog Lovejoy nach Alton, Ill., 25 Meilen von St. Louis entfernt. Grund waren die Drohungen der Anti-Abolitionisten, die nun auch seine (seit 1835) Frau betrafen und die Tatsache, dass er nach der Veröffentlichung eines Berichts (1836) über den Lynchmord an einem freien Afro-Amerikaner in St. Louis (einschließlich eines Berichts über das Strafverfahren, das mit dem Freispruch der Mob-Anführer) einerseits immer stärker angefeindet, zugleich aber von der Presbyterian General Assembly immer weniger unterstützt worden war.  
 
:When the Observer's press, left unguarded on the Alton dock, was smashed and thrown into the Mississippi River, local citizens pledged money for a new one.


:Lovejoy's abolitionism, however, grew increasingly aggressive, and his press was destroyed again in 1837, 2 months before he helped form the Illinois auxiliary of the American Antislavery Society. When his third press was thrown into the river, Lovejoy wrote in his paper, "We distinctly avow it to be our settled purpose, never, while life lasts, to yield to this new system of attempting to destroy, by means of mob violence, the right of conscience, the freedom of opinion, and of the press." By this time his uncompromising abolitionism and defense of free speech had received national attention.
:Lovejoy's abolitionism, however, grew increasingly aggressive, and his press was destroyed again in 1837, 2 months before he helped form the Illinois auxiliary of the American Antislavery Society. When his third press was thrown into the river, Lovejoy wrote in his paper, "We distinctly avow it to be our settled purpose, never, while life lasts, to yield to this new system of attempting to destroy, by means of mob violence, the right of conscience, the freedom of opinion, and of the press." By this time his uncompromising abolitionism and defense of free speech had received national attention.
31.738

Bearbeitungen

Navigationsmenü