Tuskaloosa, May 17, 1869.

Item

Title
Tuskaloosa, May 17, 1869.
Source Type
Newspaper
Publisher
Pickens County Herald and West Alabamian
Publication Place
Carrollton, AL
Publication Date
6/2/1869
Transcript
Ed, Journal- In a recent number of your paper, (that of the 13th,) you present to the public what purports back by Messrs. Miller and Dalton, who had been dispatched hither by Gov. Smith, to enquire into certain lawless acts committed near this place. It is well known that I have acted for, now, two years with the Republican party, and that I established and edited a paper in the cause of reconstruction. Will this entitled my statement to be taken as free from any bias towards the Monitor and those whom it is represented as controlling? I am no little amazed at what you have published. Surely Messrs. Miller and Dalton have in some respects, been the victims of a senseless and spiteful hoax, for the statements, in great part, which you make, as “simple facts,” got from them, so far transcend the real facts as to be entirely beyond the bounds of even historical romance, and quite within the limits of pure fiction. It is a “simple fact,” that the outrages in question, had their origin in the aggressive and defiant acts of a bad and lawless negro who had challenged the whites around him, by bullying threats, and who, in company with his brother, pursued and drew upon the two half drunked white men, who, by the by, were not in earnest about carrying off the little boy. It is a “simple fact” that the whites were unarmed and the negroes were. In attempt made afterwards to chastise these negroes, Levi, and his brother, a white man was killed and two wounded. They were the kinsmen and friends of these men, living mostly about North Port, and not “Randolph’s Sipseyites,” who committed the subsequent outrages.
It is a “simple fact” that the editor of the monitor advised these men, when they came to his office, against any violation of the law, and especially against the killing of the negro then in jail, the brother of Levi. So far as all this is concerned you have merely colored freely; but when you inform us, here in Tuskaloosa, that the monitor has advised the murdering of several men and the burning of several houses, and that the advice has been promptly followed in every instance, you rise to that height of fiction which reminds us of the arabian nights. When you go further and state that Mr. Randolph is denounced by universal acclimation here, and that a shout of exaltation from nine-tenths of the community would hail his death, you take away our breath. There is not a shadow of truth in all this. On the contrary, while the extreme partisan bitterness of the monitor is condemned even by many democrats, its editor has an extended circle of warm personal friends. Its fierce editorials with pictures of hanging carpet-baggers, and all that , are not regarded as serious threats. These are dreadful “sipseyites,” I assure you, are simply the raw-head and bloody-bones of the monitor, whose editor, I venture to assert, is not acquainted with half-dozen of the population about Moore’s bridge, twenty-five miles distant, and the reported stronghold of the clan. You very pertinently suggest, that it is strange such a man as your “simple facts” represent the editor of the monitor to be, is permitted to live in this community. Is this an intimation, that, in your opinion, a little of the Ku-Klux code should be administered to him? Do you think there are some cases where an obnoxious person should be dealt with outside of the legal process?
Permit me to conclude with saying generally, that, in some respects, the whole matter has been greatly exaggerated, and in other entirely falsified to Messrs. Miller and Dalton.
Will those gentlemen have any objection to giving the names of a few of the great number of persons who communicated the facts to them?
Sources for
065-1871210-001
Item sets
Levi Cochran