Browsing named entities in Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3. You can also browse the collection for Louis Kossuth or search for Louis Kossuth in all documents.

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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)
Pastorate, p. 31. Cf. ante, p. 19. The audience responded with a thunderous affirmative, which Captain Rynders sought to break by exclaiming: You are not a black man; you are only half a nigger. Then, replied Mr. Douglass, turning upon him with the blandest of smiles and an almost affectionate obeisance, I am half-brother to Captain Rynders! Nat. A. S. Standard. 10.199, 207. He would not deny that he was the son of a slaveholder, born of Southern amalgamation; a fugitive, too, like Kossuth— another half-brother of mine (to Rynders). He spoke of the difficulties thrown in the way of industrious colored people at the North, as he had himself experienced—this by way of answer to Horace Greeley, who had recently complained of their inefficiency and dependence. Criticism of the editor of the Tribune being grateful to Rynders, a political adversary, he added a word to Douglass's 50th Anniversary of a Pastorate, p. 32. against Greeley. I am happy, said Douglass, to have the asse
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 11: George Thompson, M. P.—1851. (search)
antislavery sentiment of the town, by reference to the early mass meetings in defiance of the Fugitive Slave Law, over which the Mayor presided. There had subsequently been a State Convention in the same sense at Syracuse on January 7, 1851 (Lib. 21: 14). Edmund Quincy dwelt on the Lib. 21.81. impudence of the outcry against foreign interference, by a nation helped into existence by Lafayette and Kosciusko. Thompson, who spoke repeatedly, referred to the contemplated bringing over of Kossuth to the United States in a national vessel, and said he should doubt the patriotism Lib. 21.82; 22.10. and love of liberty of every man who comes from revolutionary Europe to these shores to accept the hospitality of slaveholders. If he be a patriot, a lover of liberty, whether he fly from the banks of the Danube, the Seine, or the Tiber, let him go to New England, and find a home with the persecuted and maligned abolitionists of the country! Let him throw in his lot with them; let him ra
ing a vessel of the Mediterranean squadron to Kossuth and his fellow-exiles, if they were disposed yor of Southampton, desired him to lay before Kossuth considerations why, in visiting America, he sed American fashion. On December 12, 1851, Kossuth issued a formal Lib. 21:[203]. manifesto, to.6. the land should be equal before the Law. —Kossuth. It represented the old bell Of Independe Independent of a clerical committee visiting Kossuth at quarantine, and catechising him as to his y. Pardon me for this trespass. I confess Kossuth has touched Lib. 22.13. and fascinated me; brt of knowing wink Lib. 22.3. on the part of Kossuth in the midst of reiterated protestations of h persisted Mme. Pulszky, if any friend of Governor Kossuth—even if he himself—converses with a persotrality signified under the rule of slavery. Kossuth had brought from England letters of introduct being a citizen of the United States. To Kossuth the last word, the measure of the man. In Jul[40 more...