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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 6: end of the Liberator.1865. (search)
d patriotism. He repeated the address in Lynn on the following Sunday to a great audience, and then June 4, 1865. made his annual pilgrimage to the Progressive Friends' Meeting at Longwood, with George Thompson as his June 8-10. companion. Think of six long, consecutive sessions, with the mercury ranging towards 90, and the meeting-house packed like a beehive in winter, he wrote to his wife. The laboring oar as to Ms. talking and speechifying fell, as usual, to my lot; in addition June 11. to which I had to preside as chairman. . . . I drew up nearly all the Testimonies that were adopted by the Yearly Meeting—on Peace, Temperance, the Rebellion, Slavery, etc. The remainder of June and the whole of July he spent quietly at Rockledge, At the end of August, 1864, the Garrison family left the house in Dix Place which they had occupied for eleven years, and removed to Roxbury, where a pleasant frame house, situated on high ground near the old Roxbury fort of Revolutionary
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 10: death of Mrs. Garrison.—final visit to England.—1876, 1877. (search)
e the strife of earth for a moment, though still, and more widely, beholding all that strife. From Liverpool, where he passed pleasant hours with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Crosfield. his friends, the Crosfields, Mr. Garrison went to Manchester for five days, enjoying the society of his hosts, June 6-11, 1877. Dr. Louis Borchardt and family, and of the Steinthals, Rev. S. A. Steinthal. and other friends. Thence he made a trip through Derbyshire, visiting Chatsworth and Edensor, and spending June 11. a day or two amid the lovely scenery about Mayfield and June 12, 13. Ashbourne, and at Dovedale, the favorite haunt of Izaak Walton, whither his friend and host, Joseph Simpson, drove him. At Oxford he was too late to see the throngs June 14-16. of graduation week, but enjoyed all the more the summer quiet of the fine old town, to which this was his first visit. He declined the urgent invitation of Prof. Jowett, who was Benjamin Jowett. just starting for London, to occupy his apartment