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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 1: re-formation and Reanimation.—1841. (search)
with the old organization who might else have remained either indifferent or deceived. See Collins's letter to E. Quincy, Mar. 2, 1841 (Ms.). The attempt of the Executive Committee of the Glasgow Emancipation Society, under the influence of Captain Stuart, to follow suit in rebuffing Collins and disavowing the old organization, led to a division and reconstitution by which that important body was saved to the cause in America, at the cost of the resignation of a few members like Dr. Wardlaw (Ltool of his false friends; but there were many anonymous communications aimed at Mr. Garrison and the Board. The solitary issue of this paper being industriously Ms. Feb. 26, 1842, E. Pease to Wendell Phillips. circulated in England by Capt. Charles Stuart, Mr. Garrison was induced to give a very minute account of his entire business relations with Knapp, in a long letter to Ms. May 15, 1842; ante, 2.331. Elizabeth Pease, from which an extract has been already made. The decisive fact appea
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 15: the Personal Liberty Law.—1855. (search)
l Political Abolitionists and met in convention at Syracuse June 27, 28, took up a collection in response to an appeal from a Mr. John Brown, who had five sons in Kansas, and who Lib. 25.107. was desirous to join them. They had written for arms and means of defence, and declared in their letters that fighting suasion was the most important institution in the new Territory. See John Brown's own account of the Convention in Sanborn's Life of him, pp. 193, 194. Among the donors was Capt. Charles Stuart—a clear case of British Gold. In November, another homicide led to the siege of Lib. 25.195, 198, 199, 203. Lawrence by the Border-Ruffian army under Atchison and Stringfellow, and the so-called Wakarusa war. Lib. 25.203; 26.2. Governor Shannon summoned out the militia (i. e., the Missourians), and made demand on the President for Lib. 25.199. Federal troops. It would be a grave error to look upon the Kansas struggle—any more than upon the civil war of which it was the prelu