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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 10: the Rynders Mob.—1850. (search)
ffrage in this country. The order of topics recalls the subsequent attitude of the Lancashire cotton-operatives during our civil war—Freedom first for America, employment then for ourselves. See, for reports of the Glasgow meeting, with its appeal to the workingmen of America, Lib. 21: 5. Otis was dead and Sprague dumb; but all H. G. Otis. the moral callousness of their class, and all their legal idolatry of the Constitution, was typified in Benjamin Ante, 1.501. R. Curtis, rising in December, 1850, to address another Union-saving meeting in the Cradle of Liberty, and Lib. 20.201, 202. pronouncing fugitive slaves foreigners to us [in Massachusetts], with no right to be here, and to be repelled on the same ground that foreign paupers and criminals were excluded. Thompson's welcome, clearly, was to come, now as before, from the abolitionists alone. The Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society had extended theirs in January, Jan. 25, 1850; Lib. 20.19. on an intimation of his intentio