<h2><SPAN name="Page_245"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
<h2>PIONEER LIFE IN KANSAS—OUR NEWSPAPER, "THE REVOLUTION."</h2>
<br/>
<p>In 1867 the proposition to extend the suffrage to
women and to colored men was submitted to the people
of the State of Kansas, and, among other Eastern
speakers, I was invited to make a campaign through
the State. As the fall elections were pending, there
was great excitement everywhere. Suffrage for colored
men was a Republican measure, which the press and
politicians of that party advocated with enthusiasm.</p>
<p>As woman suffrage was not a party question, we
hoped that all parties would favor the measure; that we
might, at last, have one green spot on earth where
women could enjoy full liberty as citizens of the United
States. Accordingly, in July, Miss Anthony and I
started, with high hopes of a most successful trip, and,
after an uneventful journey of one thousand five hundred
miles, we reached the sacred soil where John
Brown and his sons had helped to fight the battles that
made Kansas a free State.</p>
<p>Lucy Stone, Mr. Blackwell, and Olympia Brown had
preceded us and opened the campaign with large meetings
in all the chief cities. Miss Anthony and I did the
same. Then it was decided that, as we were to go to
the very borders of the State, where there were no
railroads, we must take carriages, and economize our
forces by taking different routes. I was escorted by
<SPAN name="Page_246"></SPAN>ex-Governor Charles Robinson. We had a low, easy
carriage, drawn by two mules, in which we stored about
a bushel of tracts, two valises, a pail for watering the
mules, a basket of apples, crackers, and other such refreshments
as we could purchase on the way. Some
things were suspended underneath the carriage, some
packed on behind, and some under the seat and at our
feet. It required great skill to compress the necessary
baggage into the allotted space. As we went to the
very verge of civilization, wherever two dozen voters
could be assembled, we had a taste of pioneer life. We
spoke in log cabins, in depots, unfinished schoolhouses,
churches, hotels, barns, and in the open air.</p>
<p>I spoke in a large mill one night. A solitary tallow
candle shone over my head like a halo of glory; a few
lanterns around the outskirts of the audience made the
darkness perceptible; but all I could see of my audience
was the whites of their eyes in the dim distance. People
came from twenty miles around to these meetings,
held either in the morning, afternoon, or evening, as
was most convenient.</p>
<p>As the regular State election was to take place in the
coming November, the interest increased from week to
week, until the excitement of the people knew no
bounds. There were speakers for and against every
proposition before the people. This involved frequent
debates on all the general principles of government,
and thus a great educational work was accomplished,
which is one of the advantages of our frequent elections.</p>
<p>The friends of woman suffrage were doomed to disappointment.
Those in the East, on whom they relied
for influence through the liberal newspapers, were
silent, and we learned, afterward, that they used what
<SPAN name="Page_247"></SPAN>influence they had to keep the abolitionists and
Republicans
of the State silent, as they feared the discussion
of the woman question would jeopardize the enfranchisement
of the black man. However, we worked
untiringly and hopefully, not seeing through the game
of the politicians until nearly the end of the canvass,
when we saw that our only chance was in getting the
Democratic vote. Accordingly, George Francis Train,
then a most effective and popular speaker, was invited
into the State to see what could be done to win the
Democracy. He soon turned the tide, strengthened
the weak-kneed Republicans and abolitionists, and
secured a large Democratic vote.</p>
<p>For three months we labored diligently, day after
day, enduring all manner of discomforts in traveling,
eating, and sleeping. As there were no roads or guide-posts,
we often lost our way. In going through cañons
and fording streams it was often so dark that the Governor
was obliged to walk ahead to find the way, taking
off his coat so that I could see his white shirt and slowly
drive after him. Though seemingly calm and cool, I
had a great dread of these night adventures, as I was
in constant fear of being upset on some hill and rolled
into the water. The Governor often complimented me
on my courage, when I was fully aware of being tempest-tossed
with anxiety. I am naturally very timid,
but, being silent under strong emotions of either pleasure
or pain, I am credited with being courageous in the
hour of danger.</p>
<p>For days, sometimes, we could find nothing at a
public table that we could eat. Then passing through
a little settlement we could buy dried herring, crackers,
gum arabic, and slippery elm; the latter, we were told,
<SPAN name="Page_248"></SPAN>was very nutritious. We frequently sat down to a
table
with bacon floating in grease, coffee without milk,
sweetened with sorghum, and bread or hot biscuit,
green with soda, while vegetables and fruit were seldom
seen. Our nights were miserable, owing to the general
opinion among pioneers that a certain species of insect
must necessarily perambulate the beds in a young civilization.
One night, after traveling over prairies all day,
eating nothing but what our larder provided, we saw
a light in a cottage in the distance which seemed
to beckon to us. Arriving, we asked the usual question,—if
we could get a night's lodging,—to which
the response was inevitably a hearty, hospitable
"Yes." One survey of the premises showed me what
to look for in the way of midnight companionship, so I
said to the Governor, "I will resign in your favor the
comforts provided for me to-night, and sleep in the
carriage, as you do so often." I persisted against all
the earnest persuasions of our host, and in due time I
was ensconced for the night, and all about the house was
silent.</p>
<p>I had just fallen into a gentle slumber, when a chorus
of pronounced grunts and a spasmodic shaking of the
carriage revealed to me the fact that I was surrounded
by those long-nosed black pigs, so celebrated for their
courage and pertinacity. They had discovered that
the iron steps of the carriage made most satisfactory
scratching posts, and each one was struggling for his
turn. This scratching suggested fleas. Alas! thought
I, before morning I shall be devoured. I was mortally
tired and sleepy, but I reached for the whip and plied it
lazily from side to side; but I soon found nothing but a
constant and most vigorous application of the whip
<SPAN name="Page_249"></SPAN>could hold them at bay one moment. I had heard
that
this type of pig was very combative when thwarted in
its desires, and they seemed in such sore need of relief
that I thought there was danger of their jumping into
the carriage and attacking me. This thought was more
terrifying than that of the fleas, so I decided to go to
sleep and let them alone to scratch at their pleasure. I
had a sad night of it, and never tried the carriage again,
though I had many equally miserable experiences
within four walls.</p>
<p>After one of these border meetings we stopped another
night with a family of two bachelor brothers and
two spinster sisters. The home consisted of one large
room, not yet lathed and plastered. The furniture included
a cooking stove, two double beds in remote
corners, a table, a bureau, a washstand, and six wooden
chairs. As it was late, there was no fire in the stove
and no suggestion of supper, so the Governor and I
ate apples and chewed slippery elm before retiring to
dream of comfortable beds and well-spread tables in the
near future.</p>
<p>The brothers resigned their bed to me just as it was.
I had noticed that there was no ceremonious changing
of bed linen under such circumstances, so I
had learned to nip all fastidious notions of individual
cleanliness in the bud, and to accept the inevitable.
When the time arrived for retiring, the
Governor and the brothers went out to make astronomical
observations or smoke, as the case might
be, while the sisters and I made our evening toilet, and
disposed ourselves in the allotted corners. That done,
the stalwart sons of Adam made their beds with skins
and blankets on the floor. When all was still and dark<SPAN name="Page_250"></SPAN>ness
reigned, I reviewed the situation with a heavy
heart, seeing that I was bound to remain a prisoner in
the corner all night, come what might. I had just congratulated
myself on my power of adaptability to circumstances,
when I suddenly started with an emphatic
"What is that?" A voice from the corner asked, "Is
your bed comfortable?" "Oh, yes," I replied, "but
I thought I felt a mouse run over my head." "Well,"
said the voice from the corner, "I should not wonder.
I have heard such squeaking from that corner during
the past week that I told sister there must be a mouse
nest in that bed." A confession she probably would
not have made unless half asleep. This announcement
was greeted with suppressed laughter from the floor.
But it was no laughing matter to me. Alas! what a
prospect—to have mice running over one all night.
But there was no escape. The sisters did not offer to
make any explorations, and, in my fatigue costume, I
could not light a candle and make any on my own account.
The house did not afford an armchair in which
I could sit up. I could not lie on the floor, and the
other bed was occupied. Fortunately, I was very tired
and soon fell asleep. What the mice did the remainder
of the night I never knew, so deep were my slumbers.
But, as my features were intact, and my facial
expression as benign as usual next morning, I inferred
that their gambols had been most innocently and decorously
conducted. These are samples of many similar
experiences which we encountered during the three
months of those eventful travels.</p>
<p>Heretofore my idea had been that pioneer life was a
period of romantic freedom. When the long, white-covered
wagons, bound for the far West, passed by, I
<SPAN name="Page_251"></SPAN>thought of the novelty of a six-months' journey
through
the bright spring and summer days in a house on
wheels, meals under shady trees and beside babbling
brooks, sleeping in the open air, and finding a home, at
last, where land was cheap, the soil rich and deep, and
where the grains, vegetables, fruit, and flowers grew
bountifully with but little toil. But a few months
of pioneer life permanently darkened my rosy ideal
of the white-covered wagon, the charming picnics
by the way, and the paradise at last. I found many
of these adventurers in unfinished houses and racked
with malaria; in one case I saw a family of eight,
all ill with chills and fever. The house was half a
mile from the spring water on which they depended
and from which those best able, from day to day, carried
the needed elixir to others suffering with the usual
thirst. Their narrations of all the trials of the long
journey were indeed heartrending.</p>
<p>In one case a family of twelve left their comfortable
farm in Illinois, much against the earnest protests
of the mother; she having ten children, the
youngest a baby then in her arms. All their earthly
possessions were stored in three wagons, and the
farm which the mother owned was sold before
they commenced their long and perilous journey.
There was no reason for going except that the husband
had the Western fever. They were doing well in Illinois,
on a large farm within two miles of a village, but
he had visions of a bonanza near the setting sun. Accordingly
they started. At the end of one month the
baby died. A piece of wood from the cradle was all
they had to mark its lonely resting place. With sad
hearts they went on, and, in a few weeks, with grief for
<SPAN name="Page_252"></SPAN>her child, her old home, her kindred and
friends, the
mother also died. She, too, was left alone on the far-off
prairies, and the sad pageant moved on. Another
child soon shared the same fate, and then a span of
horses died, and one wagon, with all the things they
could most easily spare, was abandoned. Arrived at
their destination none of the golden dreams was realized.
The expensive journey, the struggles in starting
under new circumstances, and the loss of the mother's
thrift and management, made the father so discouraged
and reckless that much of his property was wasted, and
his earthly career was soon ended. Through the heroic
energy and good management of the eldest daughter,
the little patrimony, in time, was doubled, and the children
well brought up and educated in the rudiments of
learning, so that all became respectable members of
society. Her advice to all young people is, if you are
comfortably established in the East, stay there. There
is no royal road to wealth and ease, even in the Western
States!</p>
<p>In spite of the discomforts we suffered in the Kansas
campaign, I was glad of the experience. It gave me
added self-respect to know that I could endure such
hardships and fatigue with a great degree of cheerfulness.
The Governor and I often laughed heartily, as we
patiently chewed our gum arabic and slippery elm, to
think on what a gentle stimulus we were accomplishing
such wonderful feats as orators and travelers. It was
fortunate our intense enthusiasm for the subject gave
us all the necessary inspiration, as the supplies we
gathered by the way were by no means sufficiently invigorating
for prolonged propagandism.</p>
<p>I enjoyed these daily drives over the vast prairies, lis<SPAN name="Page_253"></SPAN>tening
to the Governor's descriptions of the early days
when the "bushwhackers and jayhawkers" made their
raids on the inhabitants of the young free State. The
courage and endurance of the women, surrounded by
dangers and discomforts, surpassed all description.
I count it a great privilege to have made the acquaintance
of so many noble women and men who had passed
through such scenes and conquered such difficulties.
They seemed to live in an atmosphere altogether beyond
their surroundings. Many educated families from
New England, disappointed in not finding the much
talked of bonanzas, were living in log cabins, in solitary
places, miles from any neighbors. But I found Emerson,
Parker, Holmes, Hawthorne, Whittier, and Lowell
on their bookshelves to gladden their leisure hours.</p>
<p>Miss Anthony and I often comforted ourselves mid
adverse winds with memories of the short time we spent
under Mother Bickerdyke's hospitable roof at Salina.
There we had clean, comfortable beds, delicious viands,
and everything was exquisitely neat. She entertained
us with her reminiscences of the War. With great self-denial
she had served her country in camp and hospital,
and was with Sherman's army in that wonderful march
to the sea, and here we found her on the outpost of
civilization, determined to start what Kansas most
needed—a good hotel. But alas! it was too good for
that latitude and proved a financial failure. It was, to
us, an oasis in the desert, where we would gladly have
lingered if the opposition would have come to us for
conversion. But, as we had to carry the gospel of
woman's equality into the highways and hedges, we left
dear Mother Bickerdyke with profound regret. The
seed sown in Kansas in 1867 is now bearing its
<SPAN name="Page_254"></SPAN>legitimate fruits. There was not a county in the
State
where meetings were not held or tracts scattered with
a generous hand. If the friends of our cause in the East
had been true and had done for woman what they did
for the colored man, I believe both propositions would
have been carried; but with a narrow policy, playing off
one against the other, both were defeated. A policy
of injustice always bears its own legitimate fruit in
failure.</p>
<p>However, women learned one important lesson—namely,
that it is impossible for the best of men
to understand women's feelings or the humiliation
of their position. When they asked us to be silent
on our question during the War, and labor for the
emancipation of the slave, we did so, and gave
five years to his emancipation and enfranchisement.
To this proposition my friend, Susan B. Anthony,
never consented, but was compelled to yield because
no one stood with her. I was convinced, at
the time, that it was the true policy. I am now equally
sure that it was a blunder, and, ever since, I have
taken my beloved Susan's judgment against the world.
I have always found that, when we see eye to eye, we
are sure to be right, and when we pull together we are
strong. After we discuss any point together and fully
agree, our faith in our united judgment is immovable
and no amount of ridicule and opposition has the
slightest influence, come from what quarter it may.</p>
<p>Together we withstood the Republicans and abolitionists,
when, a second time, they made us the most
solemn promises of earnest labor for our enfranchisement,
when the slaves were safe beyond a peradventure.
They never redeemed their promise made during the
<SPAN name="Page_255"></SPAN>War, hence, when they urged us to silence in the
Kansas
campaign, we would not for a moment entertain the
proposition. The women generally awoke to their
duty to themselves. They had been deceived once and
could not be again. If the leaders in the Republican
and abolition camps could deceive us, whom could we
trust?</p>
<p>Again we were urged to be silent on our rights, when
the proposition to take the word "white" out of the
New York Constitution was submitted to a vote of the
people of the State, or, rather, to one-half the people, as
women had no voice in the matter. Again we said
"No, no, gentlemen! if the 'white' comes out of the
Constitution, let the 'male' come out also. Women
have stood with the negro, thus far, on equal ground as
ostracized classes, outside the political paradise; and
now, when the door is open, it is but fair that we both
should enter and enjoy all the fruits of citizenship.
Heretofore ranked with idiots, lunatics, and criminals
in the Constitution, the negro has been the only respectable
compeer we had; so pray do not separate us
now for another twenty years, ere the constitutional
door will again be opened."</p>
<p>We were persistently urged to give all our efforts to
get the word "white" out, and thus secure the enfranchisement
of the colored man, as that, they said,
would prepare the way for us to follow. Several editors
threatened that, unless we did so, their papers should
henceforth do their best to defeat every measure we
proposed. But we were deaf alike to persuasions and
threats, thinking it wiser to labor for women, constituting,
as they did, half the people of the State, rather
than for a small number of colored men; who, viewing
<SPAN name="Page_256"></SPAN>all things from the same standpoint as white
men, would
be an added power against us.</p>
<p>The question settled in Kansas, we returned, with
George Francis Train, to New York. He offered to
pay all the expenses of the journey and meetings in all
the chief cities on the way, and see that we were fully
and well reported in their respective journals. After
prolonged consultation Miss Anthony and I thought
best to accept the offer and we did so. Most of our
friends thought it a grave blunder, but the result proved
otherwise. Mr. Train was then in his prime—a large,
fine-looking man, a gentleman in dress and manner,
neither smoking, chewing, drinking, nor gormandizing.
He was an effective speaker and actor, as one of his
speeches, which he illustrated, imitating the poor wife
at the washtub and the drunken husband reeling in,
fully showed. He gave his audience charcoal sketches
of everyday life rather than argument. He always
pleased popular audiences, and even the most fastidious
were amused with his caricatures. As the newspapers
gave several columns to our meetings at every
point through all the States, the agitation was widespread
and of great value. To be sure our friends, on
all sides, fell off, and those especially who wished us to
be silent on the question of woman's rights, declared
"the cause too sacred to be advocated by such a charlatan
as George Francis Train." We thought otherwise,
as the accession of Mr. Train increased the agitation
twofold. If these fastidious ladies and gentlemen had
come out to Kansas and occupied the ground and provided
"the sinews of war," there would have been no
field for Mr. Train's labors, and we should have accepted
their services. But, as the ground was unoccupied, he
<SPAN name="Page_257"></SPAN>had, at least, the right of a reform "squatter"
to cultivate
the cardinal virtues and reap a moral harvest
wherever he could.</p>
<p>Reaching New York, Mr. Train made it possible for
us to establish a newspaper, which gave another impetus
to our movement. The <i>Revolution</i>, published by
Susan B. Anthony and edited by Parker Pillsbury and
myself, lived two years and a half and was then consolidated
with the New York <i>Christian Enquirer</i>, edited
by the Rev. Henry Bellows, D.D. I regard the brief
period in which I edited the <i>Revolution</i> as one of the
happiest of my life, and I may add the most useful. In
looking over the editorials I find but one that I sincerely
regret, and that was a retort on Mr. Garrison, written
under great provocation, but not by me, which circumstances,
at the time, forbade me to disown. Considering
the pressure brought to bear on Miss Anthony
and myself, I feel now that our patience and forbearance
with our enemies in their malignant attacks on our
good, name, which we never answered, were indeed
marvelous.</p>
<p>We said at all times and on all other subjects just
what we thought, and advertised nothing that we did
not believe in. No advertisements of quack remedies
appeared in our columns. One of our clerks once published
a bread powder advertisement, which I did not
see until the paper appeared; so, in the next number,
I said, editorially, what I thought of it. I was alone in
the office, one day, when a man blustered in. "Who,"
said he, "runs this concern?" "You will find the
names of the editors and publishers," I replied, "on
the editorial page." "Are you one of them?" "I am,"
I replied. "Well, do you know that I agreed to pay
<SPAN name="Page_258"></SPAN>twenty dollars to have that bread powder
advertised
for one month, and then you condemn it editorially?"
"I have nothing to do with the advertising;
Miss Anthony pays me to say what I think."
"Have you any more thoughts to publish on that bread
powder?" "Oh, yes," I replied, "I have not exhausted
the subject yet." "Then," said he, "I will
have the advertisement taken out. What is there to
pay for the one insertion?" "Oh, nothing," I replied,
"as the editorial probably did you more injury than the
advertisement did you good." On leaving, with prophetic
vision, he said, "I prophesy a short life for this
paper; the business world is based on quackery, and you
cannot live without it." With melancholy certainty,
I replied, "I fear you are right."</p>
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