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Many famous people have lived in Kent, but
perhaps one of the most well-known was anti-slavery crusader John
Brown. John was born in Torrington, Connecticut on May 9, 1800 and
moved to the Western Reserve with his family in 1805.
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He grew up in Hudson and there he learned how
to be a tanner or leather maker. He married his first wife, Dianthe
Lusk, in Hudson. |

John Brown's Birthplace,
Torrington, Connecticut |
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John Brown Home, Hudson |
Afterward, he moved to Pennsylvania, but his
tannery there did not succeed. His first wife, Dianthe, died there
and the widowed John married Mary Ann Day.
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He and Mary moved to Franklin Mills where
John entered into a partnership with Zenas B. Kent in 1835, with the
idea of building a tannery along the banks of the Cuyahoga River. |

Mary Ann Brown |
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The John Brown Tannery in
Kent
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Unfortunately, John Brown and Zenas Kent did
not have a good partnership, and eventually they stopped doing
business together. |
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Around this same time, though, something
exciting seemed to be about to happen in Franklin Mills. A number of
investors planned to start a new company, the Franklin Land Company,
with the goal of turning Franklin Mills into a major industrial
city. The idea was to raise silk worms here and create an American
silk industry. After all, the silk worms' major food source, the
mulberry tree, grew extremely well here. (Later, of course, they
would discover that silk worms do not thrive in our cold Ohio
winters.) Then other industries would follow and the economy would
boom. |

Zenas Kent
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In any case, John Brown believed that real
estate in Franklin Mills was going to be extremely valuable, and
that by investing early, he would end up a wealthy man. Brown
borrowed large sums of money, bought over 95 acres of land, and
waited for his investment to pay off.
Instead, in 1837, the entire nation was
caught up in an economic crisis. Franklin Mills never developed into
a major industrial metropolis, and John Brown was driven to
bankruptcy. Eventually, Brown would leave Franklin Mills, returning
to Hudson, then Richfield. |

John Brown
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John Brown's Home in
Richfield |
He switched his career from tanning leather
to raising sheep. While at Richfield, he was offered Employment by
Simon Perkins of Akron and moved his family there.
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Brown's story is not just one of economic
failure, though. He had been brought up to believe that slavery was
wrong, and following the example of his father, Owen Brown, John
worked to try to help free slaves. |

John Brown Tenant House, Akron |
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Akron, Brown formed a partnership with Simon
Perkins. Representing the firm of Perkins
and Brown, he went to Massachusetts to try
and sell Western Reserve wool.
The venture was soon in trouble, and Brown
traveled to Europe to try and salvage the business. He failed,
Perkins fired him, and John and his wife Mary moved to the
Adiorondack Mountains in New York, building a farm in the hamlet of
North Elba. |
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Eventually, Brown would end up involved in a
bloody conflict in Kansas Territory between those who hated slavery
and those who favored it. |

John Brown's Farm, North
Elba, New York |
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John Brown's Cabin in Kansas |
Brown began using violence to reach his goal,
which led him to the infamous slaughter of pro-slavery advocates at
Osawatomie. |
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Brown ended up fleeing the country, taking
refuge at Chatham, Ontario.
By the summer of 1859, John Brown decided to
do something about slavery once and for all. Returning to the United
States, he and a group of others decided to raid a federal arsenal
in a place called Harpers Ferry, Virginia, which is now in West
Virginia. |

John Brown in Kansas |
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John Brown Rides to His Death |
The raid, which took place on October
16, 1859, was a failure. Brown was captured, put on trial, and
condemned to death for his actions. |
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On December 2, 1859, John Brown was
hanged at Charles Town, Virginia. His body was sent to New York
State to be buried on the grounds of his farmhouse in North Elba.
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Brown's Execution,
December 2, 1859 |
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John Brown's Grave |

Statue at the John Brown
Gravesite
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| While John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry
failed, it did force the nation to pay attention to the slavery
issue. The national controversy over Brown's trial helped fracture
the Democratic Party, which helped Republican candidate Abraham
Lincoln win the election of 1860. Unhappiness with the results of
that election led, in part, to South Carolina deciding to secede
from the United States, an action which led in turn to the Civil
War. When Union soldiers marched into battle during that war, many
of them sang about John Brown, a man who spent much of his life in
what is now called Kent.
John
Brown's Ancestors
John Brown's Parents & Siblings
John
Brown's Children
The Underground Railroad in Our Area
Underground Railroad Sites in Hudson, Ohio
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