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ed by my friend Mr. Charles C. Burleigh.
Besides Mr. Burleigh and Mr. Garrison, the only gentlemen present were Mr. Henry G. Chapman and Dr. Amos Farnsworth, of Groton.
The two latter retired from the hall with the expelled ladies. It was deemed mbered, that Mayor Lyman had every reason to expect, and ample warning to prepare for, a disturbance,
His friend, Henry G. Chapman, the husband of Mrs. Chapman, had frequently brought him information to this effect, only to be told by the city mar in prose and in verse, in the Liberator, the Liberty Bell, the Standard, etc. She was born in 1806; her husband, Henry Grafton Chapman, in 1804.
He was the son of Henry and Sarah Greene Chapman of Boston.
The elder Chapman was the only one of thoe to moralize—you will feel deeply, without the aid of my comments.
Suffice it to say, Mr. Chapman took Mr. T. down
H. G. Chapman. to the wharf in a carriage, saw him safely on board the packet, and the vessel move down the harbor.
So we trust he
what our hands find to do. So, come along! . . .
Bro. May speaks of his visit to Brooklyn with a great deal
Rev. S. J. May. of pleasure.
He will be at the Sabbath Convention. . . .
No adequate report of the Convention was ever made.
It met at the Chardon-Street Chapel on November 17,
Lib. 10.190. 1840, and sat for three days, without arriving at any conclusion or adopting any resolutions.
The roll of members embraced, besides the persons already enumerated, Francis Jackson, Henry G. Chapman, Samuel Philbrick, William Adams, Andrew Robeson, James Russell Lowell, George Ripley, C. P. Cranch, and not a few ladies.
Among the interested but passive spectators
Lib. 10.194. Weiss's Life of Parker, 1.158. were Dr. Channing, who, as Theodore Parker reports, doubted the propriety of the Convention, since it looks like seeking agitation, and [he] fears the opinion of Garrison, Quincy, and Maria W. Chapman; and R. W. Emerson, who has left the best—indeed, an ideal— summary view of
t, 277, on Lib. finance com., 33; interview with J. Q. Adams, 311; edits Non-Resistant, 326; at Non-Resistance meeting, 327; surrenders his commission as justice of the peace, 328; goes A. S. journey, 334; on transfer of Emancipator, 343; on non-resistants in Mass.
delegation to N. Y., 347; at Groton Convention, 426; calls Chardon St. Convention, 422, and disquiets Channing, 424, presides, 425, reports the convention, 426; lectures in New Bedford, 433.— Letters to G., 1.436, 2.223, 234, H. G. Chapman, 2.194, 195, H. C. Wright, 2.254, 426, 427, J. A. Collins, 2.420, 421, 426, 432.—Portrait in Harper's Monthly, Jan., 1880.
Quincy, Josiah [1744-17751, 2.189. Father of Quincy, Josiah [1772-1864], 2.194. Father of
Quincy, Josiah [1802-1882], picture of Miss Marshall, 1.78; at Prescott trial, 514; witnesses Boston mob, 2.22. Brother of E. Q. of Dedham.
Raleigh (N. C.), Grand Jury indict Garrison and Knapp, 1.240.
Rand, George C., apprentice of J. L. Homer, 2.10, 11, 35.
Rand