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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1 3 1 Browse Search
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2 2 0 Browse Search
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d. Providence, R. I., Sept. 16, 1859], convert to abolition, 1.398; delegate to Nat. A. S. Convention, 397; officer of Peace Convention, 2.227; president of Non-Resistance Society, 229, 328. Carey, Mathew [1760-1839], 1.296. Carlyle, Thomas [1795-1881], 2.77. Carroll, Charles [1737-1832], 1.297. Carver, John, 2.198. Cassey, Joseph [b. West Indies], 1.342; aid in buying Thoughts on Colon., 312; agent of Lib., 325.—Letter to I. Knapp, 1.325. Centinel (Boston), 2.5. Chace, Elizabeth Buffum, 1.398. Chace, William M., a Providence abolitionist, 1.314, brother-in-law of T. Davis, 2.340; call from G., 46; visits N. Y., 348, 359; speaks at Springfield Convention, 419.—Letter to G. W. Benson, 2.354. Chandler, Elizabeth M. [d. 1834], 1.145. Channing, William Ellery, Rev. [1780-1842], his person, 1.357, uncle of W. H. Channing, 2.422, pastor of Chapmans, 49; church attended by G., 1.78, 2.98, private A. S. appeals from G., 1.214, 464, 2.90; A. S. stimulus from Mrs. Chi
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 9: organization: New-England Anti-slavery Society.—Thoughts on colonization.—1832. (search)
ng their schools, and endeavoring to establish others, &c., &c. Should I go on such a mission, (and I earnestly desire to prosecute it,) I shall aim first at the great cities, and thus have the pleasure of seeing my Philadelphia friends in the course of a few months. I can leave the Liberator in excellent hands. To Henry Egbert Benson, July 21, 1832: Start, if you can, an auxiliary Anti-Slavery Society in Ms. Providence. And why may you not? There are at least friends Brewer, Chace, your brother and yourself, all seeing, thinking, acting alike. You need no more to begin with. Four men may revolutionize the world. Besides, the mere fact that such a society has been formed will help us here in Boston hugely. To Samuel J. May, December 4, 1832: Our cause goes on prosperously. Indeed, when I consider Ms. the brevity of the period in which we have been engaged, and the nature and number of the obstacles which towered in our path, I am surprised to observe th
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 12: American Anti-slavery Society.—1833. (search)
etts, Arnold Buffum and Effingham L. Capron; Effingham L. Capron was a Friend, of the straitest kind. At first he was no abolitionist, and was very much prejudiced against William Lloyd Garrison. Persuaded by my father [Arnold Buffum], he took the Liberator, and concluded that slavery was wrong. He went to the Liberator office, and talked with thy father without knowing him; and when he learned that the man so gentle and peaceful was the man he had supposed a monster, he wept (Mrs. Elizabeth Buffum Chace to F. J. G., Ms. August, 1881). This story is told, anonymously, in the fifth of Angelina Grimkeas Letters to Catherine Beecher (Lib. 7.123). Pennsylvania, Thomas Shipley, the intrepid foe of slaveholders and kidnappers, Edwin P. Atlee, whose end, like Shipley's and Evan Lewis's, was lamentably near at hand, Thomas Whitson, James Mott, Bartholomew Fussell, and other less known (Hicksite) Friends. But the variety of character and talent gathered together in that upper story would