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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 13: Marriage.—shall the Liberator die?George Thompson.—1834. (search)
on the colored quarter in Philadelphia, among smaller disturbances), Ohio, Connecticut (the coup de grace to Miss Crandall's school), yes, in Michigan; and even the sacking of the Ursuline Niles' Register, 46.413, 436; 47.15, 92. Convent (August 11) at Charlestown, Mass., seemed part of the mania for violence which had its origin in the newspaper offices of Stone and Webb and the councils of the Lib. 4.119. New York colonizationists. Mr. Garrison, to whom these things give hope and t, and, during the slight interruptions which ensued, besought the chairman, Horace Mann, to do Lib. 4.127. his duty by the disturbers; though for his own part he regarded the Rev. John Breckinridge's speech as ferocious and diabolical. On August 11 he wrote to G. W. Benson: You will have seen by the Liberator, that a grand attack by Ms. all the combined forces of colonization and slavery has lately been made upon Boston, in relation to the Maryland scheme of expatriation. They h