The West Shoee. VOL. 7 No. 2. IL. Rftinuftl, PublUher, WashlngUM 81, Portland, Oregon, February, 1881. ft Annna, I Ulafla Mats tat, I s,U. WILLIAM STEEL. We give on this page the picture of one of na ture's noblemen, William Stkkl, who waslxirn ontheClyde, at Higgar, Scotland, in 1809. Hit. mother was a cousin of Rt. Hon. W. E, Gladstone, the present Premier of England. When but nine years of age Mr. Steel came with his parents to America. His first home on this side the Atlantic was at Winchester, Va. The family removed in a few years to Ross county, Ohio. When Mr. Steel was about 14 years of age, he went to live with his uncle, John Gibson, at Ilarnesville in S. E. Ohio, where he remained until t8jj, In which year he was married. In the same year he set tled In Woodsfield, Ohio, where he engaged in the mercantile business. In a short time he secured, and held for years, a leading position In trade, and became, for that day, a man of large means, which, added to his sterling qualities of character, gave him great influ ence and power throughout the entire south-eastern part of Ohio. In 1844 he removed to Stafford, In the same state. With the years came financial disaster. Ily the failure of friends for whom he had endorsed, Mr. Steel saw the fortune which he had spent a life time In accumulating, swept away as In a night. After his failure, he again spent a short time in Woodsfield, Ohio, in Pittsburg, and then a few years . in Kansas, and finally removed to Oregon in 187, where he spent the sunset days of his earn est, honest life with his sons. ' Wednesday, Jan. 5th, at 6:30 o'clock P. M., at the ripe age of three score and eleven years, he exchanged this earth for heaven. It is written of one of old time that he so lived that, " be ing dead he yet siwakelh." So lived William Steel. We do well to listen to such " voices from the grave." What were the characteristics of his life? He put raijtcirn murr. With a keen sense of justice, and a burning in dignation against wrong, however popular that wrong might be, his whole life was given to moral reforms. Benjamin West said that his mother's kiss made him a painter. The tears of William Steei'i ami her mad him a reformer. There lie before the writer a little pencil sketch, from his owa hand, in which be says 1 "I became an Ab olitionist when I was only nine years of age. One beautiful Sabbath morning. Urge coffle- gang of slaves, chained hand to hand, pasted our boas in Virginia j the front ones were forced to carry an American lug, them, like so many lieasts, through the street with heavy whips. When my mother saw it she wept very much, and those tears made me hale slavery intensely from that moment." When the years of manhood came, this hatred of slavery took a very practical form. Ho was one of the pioneers of the anii-slavery agitation, entering UMin this his great life-work wilh intense earnestness, and wilh undaunted courage, periling 111s 1 iic, anil pniierty, ami good name, licnring the trials, anil cares, and anxieties of tlmt unequal contest, when with Lundy, Cntrison, Phillips, l.nvejoy, and a few other brave souls the old " Ijlwrty Guard," fought the slave Kwcr single handed. William Steel soon became the recog nized leader and master spirit ol the Almliilon isls in south-eastern Ohio. In 1K41, Ohio passed a law making,!! a enal offense to aid or iurlmr fugitive slaves, Ihiisantc-daling the Fugitive Slave Ijiw. To disolicy the law was to fate the peni- v I J while two men drove WILLIAM STEEL. tertiary t tut William Steel openly defied the law, clinging to principle even though h imper illed hit dlrity. lie organised the famous "lln dergrnund Railway," became its "Susrrintendenl" and "Oneral Passenger Agrnt," ami aided hun dreds of fugitive to gain their lilierty. Some lave-owners in Virginia offered a reward of $5,000 for the arrest of William Steel on slave soiL William Steel boldly answered "that if they would dcimit half that sum in an Ohio hank to his credit he would meet them at any place named in Virginia." Tha deposit never was mule. In the darkest hour he never doubted the tri umph of right. Yean before it cam h predicted war, and the oufswpKnt downfall by (not of arms of the great slave power. When war came, though his heart bled for desolate homes and for his country, still he rejoiced. He felt, wilh the poet " Mow v hsve imh tha (lory of tha mating of tha Ixmli Ha iraiunlinf out iht viutae whwe Uu iaa of wrath ar storatl 1 Ha hslh lonaej lha fatsful lighlaiaa of hat lenlkl awifl sword, Hit truth Is Marching on," And he never diHibtctl the result of the war. He knew that principle must prevail, because Hod reigned, llul not to the negro alone, but to all the op. pressed, his heart was ovn and Ills hand ready to work. He was foremost in all moral reforms. Temperance found in him an early, earnest, consis. tent advocate and worker. He was the friend of education, and gave to It thought, time and money. The Chuich found in him a strong sup Mirt and steady worker. Hut everwhere, in all fields of active reform-work, prln clple guided his action. " Policy" was an unknown word to William Steel. His was also, a l icit or itmlt in tkumtv. No man living ever questioned William Sleel's honesty. For years an active politician, at one lime a candidate for Congress, he was that rarest of all men, aiat K'Mii fvlilt' tun. He told no lies, stuffed no ballot-boxes, ckeil no caucuses, bought no votes, and never used the gnv-shi. Ami yet he lived to see the party he hrld organ ic, sweep the country and holiilhe reins of Hier for twenty wars. In lb very hottest lit of lh old slavery contest, thutigh he was al ways at I he front, and was hated nunl bitieily for his energy, activity, and boldness, still, even his poliii. cal enemies honored him as a man, never questioned his Integrity, and were quick to tlo him a favor. As in politics, so la business H'i The leading business man of his county, and llie wealthiest, by Hi failure ol others n k-ll lh ground glv way, ami himself swept down to financial bankruptcy. The law gave him hisoimfurlabl homestead. Tlul William Steel counted honor of more worth than money or home. Taking his brave wife try the kind, he went out from hi home, In his old an, to begin lb ball I of lift anew, ennikna, but rich 111 the sight of God. William Steel was TftUI CIIKIBTIAN. So far a others were concerned, his Christianity was summed up in tlx (Mid Kul. Ho far as bis own heart was concerned he rested firmly in two thoughts 1 1. Himself a sinner a. Christ a Kavkir. Two of David's Psalms lb 51st, thai wunilerful penitential heart-throb, and the toy, that sung of IriumphaM assurance were written on hi memoir. Men saw hi Christianity In an earnestness that look lb form of deeds and nut words 1 la an vnns and elisenceof sisunsi in a cheerfulness, born of a living faith. The rich, full sheaf was at last ripe. God bar. The world will always be Utter becaes Wi. lUns Stosl lived in H. J-A.C,