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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 1: no union with non-slaveholders!1861. (search)
re only up to the level of Lexington and Bunker Hill; but they should be honored none the less for their loyalty to truth and freedom. On his return to Boston, Mr. Garrison delivered a Sunday morning discourse on the state of the country to an Nov. 10, 1861; audience that filled Music Hall and applauded his Lib. 31.182. strongest utterances. A week later, he and Mr. Phillips Nov. 18. conducted the funeral services of Francis Jackson, who passed away, after a long illness, on the 14th of November, in his 73d year. They were held in the same parlors of the old Hollis Street house in which the ladies of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society met after the mob of 1835, and received a new ally in Harriet Martineau (ante, 2: 52, 57, 60). Like Charles F. Hovey, he left a noble bequest to the cause so dear to them both, and provided a fund which lasted beyond the abolition of slavery and helped to swell the contributions for the education of the freedmen. The amount was $10,000,