Six men, known as the Turner brothers, beat, stabbed, and attempted to shoot Clay, but Clay managed to fight them off.Again, using his Bowie knife, he stabbed several of the brothers and then ran down Cyrus Turner, tackled him, and killed him with his knife. The office was eventually overrun with armed men and Clay was forced to relocate his printing operation to Cincinnati Ohio.Besides working as a politician, Clay was also a Captain with the First Kentucky Cavalry from 1846-1847 where he served in the Mexican American War because he opposed the expansion of slavery to the Southwest. TIL of Cassius M. Clay, a politician and rabid abolitionist. I will inherit it from my Mother, and will bequeath it to my daughter.Fascinating story, great history – really cool to be part of your personal family history Clay!KNIFE Magazine is an oversized, full color, glossy print publication — 50% larger than a standard magazine and dedicated to serving collectors, knifemakers and other enthusiasts. He was my Great-Great Grandfather.

Clay’s father, Green Clay, however, was a slave owner. This work didn’t go unnoticed and he made some serious personal and political enemies.During a political debate in 1843 a man named Sam Brown attempted to assassinate Clay, Brown pulled out a pistol and fired at Clay, the bullet was partially deflected by the Bowie knife Clay carried in a scabbard.Despite having been shot, Clay took out his knife, wrestled Brown to the ground, cut out his eyes, and threw him into a ditch. 14 posts • Page 1 of 1. jerryd6818 Gold Tier Posts: 33085 Joined: Sun Jan 04, 2009 5:23 am Location: The middle of the top of a bastion of Liberalism.

Despite being restrained by the assassin’s friends, Clay drew his Bowie knife and cut off the man’s nose and left ear, then gouged out his eye before throwing him over a wall and into a nearby riveI am a direct descendant of Cassius Marcellus Clay. Cassius Clay was a colorful character and he didn’t back away from his unpopular stance on slavery despite the danger it brought to him and his family. He later fended off 6 men, even though they had guns and he only had a bowie knife.

I am the Grandson of Brutus Junius Clay Marsteller, Son of Nancy-Clay Marsteller, and Father to Emery Clay Aalders.

He was a son of Green Clay, one of the wealthiest landowners and slaveholders in Kentucky. Both men lived during a time of political and social turmoil, and both men stood up and risked everything because they believed that their personal sacrifice, no matter how great, was worth enduring in order bring needed change to the world.Vincent Feigenbutz Defeats Jama Saidi - Boxing News https://t.co/amDYPm7kuMInvestigation Discovery Network Breaking News https://t.co/iL01EqxJv7Jack Culcay Beats Abass Baraou in a Close Fight - Breaking Boxing News https://t.co/3NwKAW5jnAHurricane Laura Devastates the South While POTUS Reallocates $44 Billion of FEMA’S Disaster Relief Funding the Week Prior to COVID https://t.co/e3fo7MGMjD He was my Great-Great Grandfather. He started an anti-slavery newspaper in 1845, when he received death threats, he armored the door and brought in cannons to fortify the newspaper office. Cassius Marcellus Clay bourbon provided a history lesson as I did not know this gentlemen’s backstory. He was a candidate to be Lincoln's VP. Those slaves were eventually inherited by Cassius Clay and he gave them their freedom allowing any of them who wanted to continue working for him to stay and earn a wage.Clay was a well-educated man, he attended Transylvania University and graduated from Yale College in 1832.

While at Yale his anti-slavery views really took root. He survived an assassination attempt in 1843 by using his knife and throwing the would-be killer over a wall. The rest was destroyed in a flood in the early 1990s. Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

The Clay name has carried on through the first born child in my family for generations. Clay was so infuriating to his pro-slavery opponents, they hired a political gun to assassinate him. Cassius Marcellus Clay (October 19, 1810 – July 22, 1903), nicknamed The Lion of White Hall, was a Kentucky planter and politician who worked for abolition of slavery.