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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 1 1 Browse Search
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or, 220. Mercury (Charleston), news as to Walker's Appeal, 1.240; favors a hostile Southern Confederacy, 2.76. Meredith, Jonathan, 1.168. Methodists, N. H. bishops' pro-slavery pastoral letter, 1.477; Gen. Conference censures abolitionists, 2.78, rules out slave testimony, 350; growth of A. S. sentiment, 243.—See also W. Fisk, L. Lee, O. Scott, G. Storrs, La Roy Sunderland, D. Wise. Miller, —, Rev. (N. Y.), 1.317. Miller, Jonathan P., at World's Convention, 2.370, 382. Miller, Tobias H., Rev., 1.41. Milligan (Millighan), a Louisiana planter, 1.169, 197, 198. Miner, Charles [1778-1865], 1.111. Minot, Harriet, Mrs. I. Pitman, 1.330.— Letters to G., 1.330; from G., 1.331, 332, 338, 342. Mississippi, doctors and gamblers hung, 1.485, 501. Missouri, admission as a slave State, 1.88, 2.106; compromise, 1.90, 92, 2.80, 106; refuses State aid to colonization, 1.148. Mitchell, Charles [d. 1831], counsel for G., 1.68, plea, 170, motion in arrest of judgment, 171. <
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 3: Apprenticeship.—1818-1825. (search)
, Boston. Oct. 14, 1878. without any errors, and therefore my proofs were very clean, as the technical phrase is. I recollect with great pleasure one who was in the office for a considerable portion of my apprenticeship, who has now gone to his reward, who was, I think, a journeyman at that time; but who, by his beautiful spirit and fine example, had a great influence upon my mind; and I feel grateful to him and shall ever cherish his memory with deep feeling. I allude to the late Rev. Tobias H. Miller, a city missionary in Portsmouth. My acquaintance with him began when I entered the office Letter to Frank W. Miller, Apr. 30, 1870, published in Portsmouth (N. H.) Weekly, May 31, 1879. of the Newburyport Herald as an apprentice to learn the art and mystery of printing; and great was my indebtedness to him in regard to my initiation and on the score of neverfailing kindness. I was drawn to him magnetically from the beginning; and whether working side by side at the case or th
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 10: Prudence Crandall.—1833. (search)
erefore he thinks I shall injure myself in the undertaking. If you have not yet sent on to New York the information you intend, I would thank you if you would do it immediately, for I am expecting to take the next boat for New York The service was semi-weekly—Tuesdays and Thursdays from Providence, Wednesdays and Fridays from New York. and shall be in the city early on Friday morning. I have not the least acquaintance there, but a friend of mine will give me an introductory letter to Mr. Miller, one of the colored ministers in the city. The evening after I left Boston I called on Mrs. Hammond, I. e., in Providence. Mrs. H. was the mother of Ann Eliza Hammond, a fine girl, aged seventeen years, who became one of Miss Crandall's colored pupils, and was made the object of the revival of an obsolete vagrant law, of which the final penalty was to be whipped on the naked body not exceeding ten stripes (May's Recollections, p. 51; Lib. 3.78). who soon collected some of her friends,