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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 1: no union with non-slaveholders!1861. (search)
e only up to the level of Lexington and Bunker Hill; but they should be honored none the less for their loyalty to truth and freedom. On his return to Boston, Mr. Garrison delivered a Sunday morning discourse on the state of the country to an Nov. 10, 1861; audience that filled Music Hall and applauded his Lib. 31.182. strongest utterances. A week later, he and Mr. Phillips Nov. 18. conducted the funeral services of Francis Jackson, who passed away, after a long illness, on the 14th of Nov. 18. conducted the funeral services of Francis Jackson, who passed away, after a long illness, on the 14th of November, in his 73d year. They were held in the same parlors of the old Hollis Street house in which the ladies of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society met after the mob of 1835, and received a new ally in Harriet Martineau (ante, 2: 52, 57, 60). Like Charles F. Hovey, he left a noble bequest to the cause so dear to them both, and provided a fund which lasted beyond the abolition of slavery and helped to swell the contributions for the education of the freedmen. The amount was $10,000,
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 3: the Proclamation.—1863. (search)
, and they felt the weight of the Administration against their radical measures. The reluctance of the President to press upon the Border States the immediate abolition of slavery which he had decreed for the rebellious States, and his readiness to allow a small Lib. 33.202. fraction of the (white) voting population in the latter to form new State governments and legislate for the freedmen, will be, and have been already in large measure, forgotten, while the brief address which he gave at Nov. 19. Gettysburg, between his interview with the Missourians and his transmission to Congress of the Amnesty Message, In his anxiety to disintegrate the rebel Confederacy politically, and to reestablish loyal State governments, Mr. Lincoln proposed, in this message, to allow one-tenth of the voters of 1860 (excepting the prominent leaders of the rebellion, and certain other classes) to organize such new governments, provided they took the oath of allegiance to the Constitution, and to the p
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 6: end of the Liberator.1865. (search)
mber and the first week of December. The trip, which began at Lockport, N. Y., was a hard and Nov. 2. exhausting one for Mr. Garrison. He gave his lecture (a two hours discourse on The Past, Preentions from old and new friends; beyond Michigan all was new to him, and he saw Chicago and the Nov. 16-20. Mississippi River (at Quincy) for the first time. Unexpected Nov. 22. glimpses of GeorgNov. 22. glimpses of George Thompson (also on a Western lecture tour), at Detroit, and Gerrit Smith, at Chicago, were among the pleasant incidents of the journey. At Princeton, Illinois, he paid his respects to the widow and children Nov. 20. of Owen Lovejoy, and at Springfield was the guest of W. H. Herndon, Lincoln's law partner, with whom he visited Nov. 26. the tomb of the martyr-President. On his return journey Nov. 26. the tomb of the martyr-President. On his return journey he travelled with members of Congress on their way to Washington for the opening of the new session. I am constantly urging the importance of not admitting any of the rebel States into the Union un
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 9: Journalist at large.—1868-1876. (search)
the lecture on his summer's experiences in Europe which he gave a few weeks later at Music Hall, Nov. 29, 1867. and repeated in other places, he predicted a speedy reaction in favor of the law in Mad Labor parties for Governor in the fall of 1870, he expressed his disbelief in third-party Ind. Nov. 24, 1870. movements, in an article on Moral and Political Action. Time had only confirmed the o. evoked by the Liberty Party. I trust not to be misapprehended. I am not for divorcing Ind. Nov. 24, 1870. moral from political action, nor do I deprecate an earnest interest in the results of profound. Likewise, when Judge Pitman was the Prohibition Robert C. Pitman. Boston Journal, Nov. 4, 1871. candidate in 1871, Mr. Garrison deprecated a movement which could only draw votes from warmly commended the action of the Board, deeming it as reasonable to insist that only the Ind. Nov. 11, 1869. Protestant religion shall be tolerated in the land as that our Protestant Bible shall
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 10: death of Mrs. Garrison.—final visit to England.—1876, 1877. (search)
pecial meeting of adherents at her house to bid him Aug. 23. farewell, and to present him with the following Address, written by herself and signed by eighteen representative women in different parts of the kingdom. This, beautifully engrossed and illuminated, Mr. Garrison had carefully framed on his return home, and it is doubtful if he left any heirloom to his children in which he took greater pride and pleasure. Woman's To William Lloyd Garrison of Boston, U. S. A. Woman's Journal, Nov. 17, 1877. dear and honored friend: We, the undersigned, members of the Executive Committee of the Ladies' National Association for the Abolition of the State Regulation of Vice, desire, before you leave this country, to tender to you the expression of our deep gratitude for the invaluable service you have rendered the sacred cause of Liberty and of Social Purity, by the repeated public expression of your sympathy with and approval of the principles and labors of the Repeal Association.