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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)
1. Convention. The defence of the old organization was imposed upon him from the start, and this, of course, involved a special vindication of its leader—a task made doubly difficult after Colver's slanders had been Ante, 2.429. industriously put in circulation under the official cover of the Lib. 11.174; Ms. Mar. 2, 1841, Collins to E. Quincy. Executive Committee of the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. The Sabbath [Chardon-Street] Convention, wrote Collins to Mr. Garrison, from Ipswich, the home of Clarkson, on January 1, 1841, has completely changed the issue. Woman's rights and non-governmentism are quite respectable when compared to your religious views. Ms. In a recent interview, procured with much difficulty, and only in an unofficial capacity, with Clarkson, his family were unwilling to have Collins touch on the subject of the division among the American abolitionists. Allusion to this or to Mr. Garrison led the venerable philanthropist to speak of the evils res
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 6: third mission to England.—1846. (search)
America, Lib. 16.167, 199, 201. and renounced fellowship with any church that sanctioned slavery. In the interval between the two meetings of the League, Mr. Garrison had begun the whirl of journeying, lecturing, and visiting, which was not to cease while he remained in the United Kingdom. On August 20, in company with Thompson and Douglass, he was most affectionately Lib. 16.170, 173; 18.29; London Patriot, Oct. 1, 1846; Life of Douglass, 1882, p. 246. received by the aged Clarkson at Ipswich, whom he found weak in body but active in mind, and who gave him, on parting, a paper, Hints for the American People in the Event of a Dissolution of the Union—a consummation which he welcomed as a means to the abrogation of the legal sanction of slavery. I consider, then, he wrote, the dissolution of the Union, by affording the opportunity of making such a change, among the greatest blessings; and, in all probability, nothing but a dissolution of the Union could produce such a glorious o