The Ghost at Harpers Ferry (November 1988 | Volume: 39, Issue: 7)

The Ghost at Harpers Ferry

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Historic Era: Era 5: Civil War and Reconstruction (1850-1877)

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November 1988 | Volume 39, Issue 7

 
At Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, the Shenandoah joins the Potomac after each river has made a final, splendid rush over boulders and through shallows. At their confluence a high, thin arrow of land points east toward the Blue Ridge Mountains. Three states come together here. Across the Shenandoah from the town, Virginia rises steeply; across the Potomac loom the hills of Maryland, with the old Chesapeake and Ohio Canal snaking along at their base. The whole effect is just as scenic as it sounds, and just as calm as a superseded fixture like the C&O Canal would suggest.

Initially, in fact. Harpers Ferry struck me as almost willfully picturesque and wholly remote from the world’s concerns. But the visitor who wants to find out what happened there will discover a place as disturbing as it is charming, for those steep, quiet streets hold an immense amount of history whose implications are very much with us today.

These implications extend beyond the famous raid that is the pivotal event in the town’s fortunes. John Brown chose Harpers Ferry as his target largely because there was a federal arsenal there; and at that arsenal various manufacturing techniques had been worked out that not only would help decide the outcome of the conflict Brown did so much to ignite, but would shape the way Americans live in the twentieth century.

But, before John Brown, before the arsenal, before there was a town, a place of extraordinary beauty—“one of the most stupendous scenes in nature,” wrote Thomas Jefferson, who found it “worth a voyage across the Atlantic.” An architect named Robert Harper thought so, too, and, in 1747, he built a gristmill there. The village that bore his name began to grow, and it got its definitive boost in 1796 When George Washington chose it as the site for an armory.

By 1810, the works at Harpers Ferry was turning out 10,000 muskets annually. A decade later, John Hall, a Maine gunsmith, won a government contract, set up shop in Harpers Ferry, and began experimenting with building muskets in a new way—one that combined a distant forebear of assembly—line techniques and a minimum of handwork with a high standardization of parts. There was the inevitable friction between disgruntled craftsmen and the new, less skilled workers, but, by the early 1830s, Hall had pioneered the techniques of mass production.

The abundant water that drove the musket works also powered a foundry, mills, and a machine shop. In the 1830s, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad and the C&O Canal both got there, and, by the 1850s, Harpers Ferry had become a busy industrial city. All the mills and shops and foundries are gone now; only some ruined turbines, the canal, the railroad edging the town with its wooden trestle, and the sense of falling water everywhere suggest the sometime vigor of the place. The armory, which, by 1859, had grown to twenty workshops, is gone