and one of these men shown here is dangerfield newby. he's a virginia-born slave who has recently been freed when his owner moved to ohio, but his wife, um, and children are still in bondage in virginia, and he raises the price letters from virginia slaves in this era. and i'll just read you a little from one of her letters. oh, dear dangerfield, come this fall without fail, money or no money, she writes in the summer of 1859. if you do not get me, somebody else will, and then all my bright hopes for the future are blasted. if i thought i should never see you again, this earth would have no charms for me. do all you can for me, which i have no doubt you will. your affectionate wife, harriet. newby heeds this plea, goes from ohio to brown's mountain hideout in maryland carrying harriet's letters with him, and finally that october of 1859 brown leads 8 of his men -- 18 of his men across the potomac and into harper's ferry sparking this savage street battle, and the first of his men gunned down is dangerfield newby, shot dead in the street,