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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 5: shall the Liberator lead—1839. (search)
lition in Massachusetts and Ohio, not only, but between the friends of the cause in New York and Ohio, etc. You are told that the letter of Mr. Wright fell into the hands of the writer of the first page accidentally—i. e., it was in a package of letters handed him to examine to see if there was anything contained in them (in his judgment) advisable for the Cleveland Meeting to act upon. Yours, with sincere regard, Lyman Crowl. Mr. Garrison's call for the letter in the Liberator of November 29 compelled Mr. Wright to recover and Lib. 9:[191]. publish it in his own paper, from which it was quickly transferred to the Liberator, and reprinted week after Lib. 9.199, etc. week. The Executive Committee of the Mass. Abolition Society promptly disavowed it in their organ before the full text had become known (Lib. 9: 195). They had caught a Tartar, as Mr. Garrison had predicted (ante, p. 300). The writer's charge that it was pilfered (repeated in his Life of Myron Holley in 1882