A report on ante-bellum violence in the nation's capital appeared in The New Monthly Magazine, published in London in 1856. Again, the English are appalled with what goes on in their former colonies.
There are not infrequently scenes on the floor of the House which threaten to end in personal violence. On a Saturday afternoon when I was present, members were questioning the candidates for Speaker as to their sentiments on various points in relation to slavery, and a Mr. Kennett "begged to add to the questions that had been put two others: Did they believe in a future state? and, if they did, did they think that state would be a free state or a slave state?"A southern gentleman named Barksdale thought these questions were meant to ridicule his own, so he jumped out of his seat, rolled up his coat-sleeves, and advanced towards Kennett, declaring that he "repelled the insult with scorn, and derision, and contempt," and much besides. He appeared as though he must annihilate at least half a dozen men before he could be pacified, but at last his friends succeeded in convincing him that he was mistaken.Kennett told him he was not to be frightened by him or anybody else, nor did he appear to be. Some Congressmen are known to carry pistols and bowie-knives about with them. The latter is a formidable weapon, the blade about a foot long, slightly curved at the point. It is kept in a case, and sometimes worn thrust down the back inside the coat, with the handle at the nape of the neck; so that the wearer can put his hand behind his head and draw it out in an instant.I saw an advertisement offering a reward for the recovery of a silver-hilted bowie-knife lost in the Capitol. In the session before last, the present clerk to the House, General Collum, who was then a representative, during debate was involved in a personal dispute with another speaker, when a pistol was drawn forth by one of the parties, and only the prompt interference of friends prevented bloodshed. I am sorry to say that out of doors, too, physical force arguments for subjects of opinion are often resorted to. One day, while at Washington, my English sense of legislative and literary propriety of behaviour was shocked by a public fight on the Avenue between a Congressman from Virginia and the editor of the Evening Star. The man of the quill got worsted, and had his finger bitten by the honourable member.A few days before I left the city, in the last week of the contest for the Speakership, Horace Greeley, the notable proprietor and editor of the New York Tribune, was grossly assaulted in front of the Capitol, after the adjournment of the House, by Mr. Rust, member of Congress from Arkansas. Mr. Greeley, being an ex-M.C., is entitled to a seat on the floor of the House, and he had been in the city, since the assembling of Congress, corresponding for his paper. A paragraph of comment in the Tribune on a speech of Mr. Rust's was the only provocation this enlightened representative of the people of Arkansas had to knock Mr. Greeley down with a loaded cane, repeating his blows, and inflicting serious injuries on the unfortunate and almost unresisting editor. Horace Greeley is a mild, amiable-looking old gentleman, and, merely from his appearance, you might guess he was of the peace sentiments of the Quakers. He declined to prosecute his brutal assailant, though some weeks after, at the instance of a gentleman of New York, who came forward of his own accord, Rust was arrested and held to bail to answer for the assault at the Criminal Court. When I heard of the assault, I thought that Rust must be blackballed everywhere, and that if he ventured into the House next day the affair would at least become the topic of indignant comment. "No, indeed," said a friend, "his party will think him a fine fellow for it: there will be plenty of men giving Greeley a cow-hiding now they see he's so tame."And truly I was mistaken. Nothing disgusted me so much with political cant about liberty on the American side the Atlantic as this occurrence, and the matter-of-course sort of way in which it was looked upon, — not by all, but at the least by a political party which in England would have hasted to purge itself of the disgrace of connexion with such ruffianism. John Bull before Jonathan still, for fair play and freedom of opinion.The following is a newspaper account of this transaction: "Yesterday afternoon, about four o'clock, soon after the adjournment of Congress, the Hon. Win. Smith, M.C. from Virginia, met Mr. Wallach, the editor of the Star, on the Avenue, near the corner of Eleventh Street, and accosting him, pronounced a statement in the Star of the day previous, in relation to himself, to be false. Mr. Wallach replied, that if Mr. Smith made that assertion, he pronounced his assertion false; whereupon Mr. Smith struck Mr. Wallach, and both combatants grappled each other, and contended manfully for the mastery. At length, they fell to the ground with a mighty shock; and by the force of the fall, as we are informed, Mr. Wallach's bowie-knife fell out of its hiding-place, and was thrown to some distance. When the parties fell, Mr. Wallach was uppermost, but Mr. Smith turned him, and maintained the upper hand until separated. After a minute or two of severe thumping and scratching, the belligerents were separated; Mr. Smith with his face badly bruised and marred, and Mr. Wallach with one of his fingers 'catawampously chawed up.' We have not heard that either of the parties concerned in this fight have been arrested.
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