In the decade leading up to the American Civil War, pro-slavery activists infiltrated Kansas Territory from the neighboring slave state of Missouri. To abolitionists and other Free-Staters, who desired Kansas to be admitted to the Union as a free state, they were collectively known as Border Ruffians.
Notably, few of the Border Ruffians actually owned slaves; they were too poor. What motivated them was hatred of the Yankees and abolitionists and the prospect of free blacks living in neighboring areas. Southerners were driven by the rhetoric of leaders such as David Rice Atchison, a Missouri senator, who proclaimed the Northerners to be "negro thieves" and "abolitionist tyrants." He encouraged Missourians to defend their institution "with the bayonet and with blood" and, if necessary, "to kill every God-damned abolitionist in the district." Additionally, the presence of bands of both Kansan and Missourian combatants in the area made it difficult for families on the border to retain neutrality, and Missourians on all ends of the political spectrum ultimately joined up with the Border Ruffians.
The Border Ruffians at times also engaged in larger battles with Free-State forces. On December 1, 1855, a small army, composed mainly of Border Ruffians, laid siege to Lawrence, Kansas in the nearly bloodless climax to the "Wakarusa War." On May 21, 1856, Border Ruffians in conjunction with proslavery settlers and officers of the territorial legislature, again attacked Lawrence. (See Sacking of Lawrence.)
After Kansas was admitted to the United States as a free state and the Civil War commenced in 1861, pro-slavery partisans from Missouri continued to attack Kansas and Kansans. (See Bushwhacker.)
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"Border Ruffian".
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