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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 8: the Liberator1831. (search)
s abolishing slavery, I may be able to elevate our free colored population in the scale of society. Exceptions to this acclamation were not wanting in the writer's native New England, whose time-serving, Lib. 1.18. unprincipled and heartless editors were prompt to denounce his violent and intemperate attacks on slaveholders, and his mawkish sentimentality. That transplanted New Englander, George D. Prentice, newly put in charge of the Louisville (Ky.) Journal, wrote in his issue of January 25: Mr. Garrison knows that we Lib. 1.27. are his personal friend, and that we regard him as one of the ablest writers and warmest philanthropists of the age; but, after all, some of his opinions with regard to slavery in the United States are no better than lunacy. The American (Washington) Spectator regretted to Lib. 1.39. observe the late talented and persecuted Junior Editor of the Genius of Universal Emancipation in the dying ranks of this opposition [to African colonization]. We