Closing Argument of Calvin A. Warren, 28 May 1845 [State of Illinois v. Williams et al.]
Source Note
, Closing Argument, [, Hancock Co., IL, 28 May 1845], State of IL v. Williams et al. (Hancock Co., IL, Circuit Court 1845). Copied [ca. 28 May 1845]; handwriting of ; docket by , [, Hancock Co., IL, ca. 28 May 1845]; six pages; Columbia University, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, New York.
The circumstances attending the case you are called upon to try is <are> of peculiar character— not on account of the situation of the Defendants— but of the character of the prosecution— The The People’s [2 words illegible]
We are met here by a gentleman from the other side of the river, with a Commission from the — Finding Having come upon the ground and went into gone into the case he finds himself compelled though very reluctantly, to abandon a part of the filthy means of persecuting these men— If these men are guilty then are every man woman & child in the guilty The Same evidence that has been given against the defts could have been given against hundreds of others—
Who were the witnesses —
[William] Daniels—
And a weak frail sister—
Where is the light by which you trace these men to the Carthage jail that day, nowhere unless it is by Daniels light— [p. [1]]