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279]
Index
Throughout the Index G. stands for the subject of the memoir.
Abolition, Southern view of, 24, 48; and Antislavery societies, 48; new type of, 49, 50; opposed by official classes in North, 50, 51; in history, 61, 62;
J. Q. Adams and, 91, 92; in 1830 and 1840, 97; an accepted fact, Io3; really a servile uprising, 119; progress of, 128, 134ff.; and Woman's Rights, 153, 154; conservative opponents of, 199, 200; leaders in,200;a disease, 228; G. the leader of, 242.
And
see Abolitionists, Anti-slavery,Channing,
Emerson, R. W., May, S. J.
Abolitionists, and free speech, 27;
W. E. Channing and, 27, 28, 88; and
Turner's rebellion, 51, 52; paradoxical fate of, 59,60; and G.'s
Thoughts on African Colonization, 65; attempt to put down, in 1835-6, 99
if.; how viewed by the average man, 005; persecution of, 105
if.; in
Boston, 112, 113; and
T. Lyman, 122; and the murder of
Lovejoy, 129
ff.; in New York, course of, 147
ff.; conservative, form the New Organization, 153; quarrels among, 177
ff.; discovered the horrors of slavery, 188; and
Emerson, 226, 227; certain ante-bellum doings of, 244
if.; and English liberals, 249, 250.
And
see Abolition, Antislavery, Lunt Committee, National Anti-Slavery Society, Rynders Mob,
Thompson.
Adams, Charles Francis, 250.
Adams, John, 49.
Adams, John Quincy, not an Abolitionist, 88, 89; character of, 89, go; his service in Congress in old age, 90-92; and
Massachusetts, 92; 7,50.
African Repository, The, 63, 64.
agitator, what is an?
10.