Few opponents of slavery prior to the Civil War in Congress were more outspoken or more courageous than Joshua Giddings. Born on October 6, 1795. Giddings moved with his family to Ashtabula County, Ohio in 1806, part of the Western Reserve in Northeastern Ohio. Living in a sparsely settled pioneer region, Giddings had little formal education, but spent a great deal of time as he grew reading and studying. In 1821 he was admitted to the Ohio bar. From 1838-1859 he served in the House of Representatives.
He quickly became known as a fierce opponent of slavery, taking every opportunity to attack it. He came to national notice in 1842 when he defended in Congress the slaves who had mutinied aboard the brig Creole. Sailing to Nassau, the slaves were freed by the British. The American government demanded the return of the slaves on the grounds that they were property. The British refused to return the slaves. Giddings proposed resolutions in Congress defending the right of the slaves to rebel and regain their God-given right to liberty. This aroused a furor among pro-slavery members of Congress and Giddings was censured by the House. Nothing daunted, he resigned from the House, and was re-elected by his constituents with a large majority.
Unlike most abolitionists, Giddings had no problem calling for violence to be used to free the slaves. He constantly called for slave insurrections, and stated that the people of the North had a moral duty to assist such insurrections.
Naturally this made him a marked man. In the House in 1846 he was threatened by a representative from Georgia with a pistol and a sword cane. Giddings yelled out to him, Come on! The People of Ohio don’t send cowards here! (more…)