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Faith to Freedom Daily: Rev. Charles Torrey

Posted on April 20th, 2010 by Chris McMahon

1813-1846

“As I am a living man, I believe that one hundred men like Charles T. Torrey, in courage and devotion to his object, would do more to deliver the slave speedily, than all our paper resolutions, windy speeches, presses and votes into the bargain.” – William L. Chaplin

Martyr for the cause

A graduate of Yale and an ordained Congregational minister, he disagreed with William Lloyd Garrison about the direction of the anti-slavery movement. He joined the Liberty Party and traveled into the South.

Torrey’s first arrest came in 1842 for trying to report for Liberty Party newspapers on a convention of slaveholders in Annapolis, MD. Then he started answering pleas from runaway slaves to help their families, still enslaved, join them in the North.

Torrey moved to Baltimore, a good location from which to help slaves escaping from Virginia. Some say he helped more than 400 break free. But in 1845, Torrey was arrested, tried, and convicted of helping runaways. He served a year or so on a six-year sentence of hard labor before dying from tuberculosis in the Maryland Penitentiary. Torrey was only 33 years old.

One of the people working with Torrey was Thomas Smallwood, a former slave who helped runaways escape. Smallwood later moved to Toronto, where he continued his fight against slavery in the U.S.



1813-1846

“As I am a living man, I believe that one hundred men like Charles T. Torrey, in courage and devotion to his object, would do more to deliver the slave speedily, than all our paper resolutions, windy speeches, presses and votes into the bargain.” – William L. Chaplin

 

Martyr for the cause

A graduate of Yale and an ordained Congregational minister, he disagreed with William Lloyd Garrison about the direction of the anti-slavery movement. He joined the Liberty Party and traveled into the South.

 

Torrey’s first arrest came in 1842 for trying to report for Liberty Party newspapers on a convention of slaveholders in Annapolis, MD. Then he started answering pleas from runaway slaves to help their families, still enslaved, join them in the North.

 

Torrey moved to Baltimore, a good location from which to help slaves escaping from Virginia. Some say he helped more than 400 break free. But in 1845, Torrey was arrested, tried, and convicted of helping runaways. He served a year or so on a six-year sentence of hard labor before dying from tuberculosis in the Maryland Penitentiary. Torrey was only 33 years old.

 

One of the people working with Torrey was Thomas Smallwood, a former slave who helped runaways escape. Smallwood later moved to Toronto, where he continued his fight against slavery in the U.S.

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