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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 10: the Rynders Mob.—1850. (search)
e to execute any law of Congress until the people of the States shall cooperate. Lib. 20.46. He did not despise the influence of the Garrisonians: he had seen its working Lib. 20.41. since 1835 [and longer, but he naturally remembered by Cf. ante, 2.59. landmarks of mob violence], and witnessed the beginning of disunion in the rending of the great religious Ante, 2.152. denominations—the Episcopal alone remaining intact. This encomiastic exception was merited. Mr. Garrison wrote in June, 1850 (Lib. 20: 104): The conscience of the Episcopal Church of this country, so far as the colored population are concerned, whether bond or free, is harder than adamant. On Sept. 26, 1850, the Protestant Episcopal Convention in New York city refused to admit delegates from its own colored churches (Lib. 20: [158]). Save the Rev. E. M. P. Wells of Boston, who early withdrew from the cause (ante, 2: 54, 85, 252), we recall no Episcopal clergyman—as no Catholic priest—who ever identified himself<