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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)
son inquired: Once consecrated to the anti-slavery enterprise—where are Lib. 11.59. they? Stanton has retired from the field, and is said to be H. B. Stanton. aiming for a seat in Congress. Stanton—like Birney, who had gone to rusticate at Peterboroa, N. Y. (Lib. 12.127)—had prudently declined a secretaryship under Lewis Tappan's alias (Lib. 11: 47), and had betaken himself to the law to W. L. G.; Lib. 12: 127), of which he would begin the practice in Boston the following year (Stanton's Random Recollections, 2d ed., p. 58). He was supposed to be aiming at a seat in Congress (Lib Torrey in his Vigilance Committee (ante, p. 37). He was admitted to the bar while a student in Stanton's office (Stanton's Random Recollections, 2d ed., p. 65), and became the author of many well-knStanton's Random Recollections, 2d ed., p. 65), and became the author of many well-known legal treatises. and that it has been sent to a great number of persons in all parts of the country. A copy was sent to our venerable friend Seth Sprague, at Duxbury (the superscription being i