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John Jay Chapman, William Lloyd Garrison, Chapter 3: the figure (search)
to by the Southern statesmen to protect them against the circulation of Abolition literature. It was in 1829 that Otis was first called on to do something about Walker's appeal, a fierce, Biblical pamphlet, full of power, written by a colored man in Boston and urging the slaves to rise. Otis replied that the author had not made himself amenable to the laws of Massachusetts, and that the book had caused no excitement in Boston. Garrison had had nothing to do with Walker's pamphlet, and had publicly condemned its doctrines. None the less, Walker's appeal was an outcrop of the same subterranean fire that coursed through Garrison,--and when Nat Turner's SWalker's appeal was an outcrop of the same subterranean fire that coursed through Garrison,--and when Nat Turner's Slave Rebellion broke out (1831) and a dozen white families were murdered in Virginia, the whole South was thrown into a panic, and attributed the insurrection to the teachings of the Abolitionists. This puny rebellion was easily put down. Turner was hanged, his followers were burnt with hot irons, their faces were mutilated, t
John Jay Chapman, William Lloyd Garrison, Index (search)
d on, 93-96; what he stood for, 96; plot to tar and feather, 113; 107, 118, 227, 245,247, 251. Ticknor, George, 199. Tocsin of Liberty, the, quoted, 178. Todd, Francis, libeled by G., 46, 47. Tuckerman, Bayard, Life of Wm. Jay, quoted, 151. Turner, Nat, heads Slave Rebellion, 51, 52. Union, the, peaceful dissolution of, advocated, 155, 156. United States, slavery question in, 1830 to 1865, 2 f., 6, 7; state of, 1850 to 1860, 01, 11; a slave republic, 17. Virginia, 23. Walker's appeal, 51. Ward, Samuel R., 217. Washington, George, 215. Webb, Richard D., quoted, 195. Webster, Daniel, his Reply to Hayne, 14; Channing and, 28; and the Fugitive Slave Law, 235, 236, 238; Abolitionists and, 239; 138, 140, 199. Weld, Theodore D., 69, 187. Wells, E. M. P., 200. white, James C., quoted, 56. Whittier, John G., 43. wise, Henry A., 187. wise, John S., The End of an Era, 187, 188. Woman's Rights, and Abolition, 153, 154; 167. Woolfolk, Austin, 42.