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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 4: Pennsylvania Hall.—the non-resistance society.—1838. (search)
heir present course, the first thing I shall do will be to serve our Peace Societies as I have done the Colonization Societies. On May 30, 1838, at a meeting of friends of peace Lib. 8.111. in Boston, William Ladd being in the chair, a committee was appointed to call a convention in that city for the purpose of having a free and full discussion of the principles of Peace, and of the measures best adapted to promote this holy cause. The committee, consisting of the Rev. S. J. May, of South Scituate, Henry C. Wright, of Newburyport, the Rev. George Trask, of Warren, and Edmund Quincy and Amasa Walker, of Boston, fixed on September 18 as the date, and the Marlboroa Chapel as the place, of holding the proposed convention, to which all were invited without regard to sect or party, and without being committed to any programme. Each of the five committeemen was a Garrisonian abolitionist, but they were not equally agreed in their views of peace. You and brother Wright have startled me
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 5: shall the Liberator lead—1839. (search)
d discomfiting the enemies of the Liberator and the Board; and closed his labors in Rhode Island, on the eve of embarking for New York, whither the scene of conflict next shifted. On May 1, Samuel J. May wrote (with unabated affection) from South Scituate as follows: I was very sorry to leave Boston, week before last, not Ms. having called to see Helen and her mother. But every hour Mrs. Garrison. of my time was occupied, excepting Friday afternoon; and then, on my way to your house, nited States, or convicted of crime and sentenced to deportation, or for sale ( Letters and Times of John Tyler, 1: 570). Tyler was a leading colonizationist. Mr. Garrison made Mr. Adams's vagaries the subject of a Fourth of July discourse at South Scituate before the Lib. 9.113, and pamphlet. Old Colony Anti-Slavery Society. Still, the old man eloquent established abundant claims upon the gratitude of the abolitionists by his unrelaxed efforts to recover their right of petition, by his suppor