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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 2: the Irish address.—1842. (search)
ay, October 2, Channing breathed his last at Lib. 12.159. Bennington, Vt., In the present Walloomsac House. close beside the printing-office in which Garrison had pledged himself to Lundy to make the cause of abolition his life-work. His last public effort had been in behalf of the slave, for at Lenox, on August 1st, he delivered an admirable address in eulogy of West India emancipation and of the anti-slavery enterprise in his own country. The next day, in Boston, Henry G. Chapman Oct. 3, 1842; Lib. 12.159. died in his thirty-ninth year, with Roman philosophy: I happened, wrote Edmund Quincy to Richard Webb, to Ms. Jan. 29, 1843. call not long after his departure, and was invited, as one who had long stood in the relation of a brother to the family, to the chamber of death. It was the most striking scene I ever beheld. The body was surrounded by the surviving family; Maria standing, with all the composure and peace of a guardian angel, at Mrs. H. G. Chapman. its he