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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 9: organization: New-England Anti-slavery Society.—Thoughts on colonization.—1832. (search)
derrate their value: they were obsolete as soon as uttered. Protests were raised against the charge in the Boston Com- Lib. 2.69. mercial Gazette, and, after its appearance in full in the quarterly American Jurist, in the newly-founded Boston Atlas; the former writer pointing out that if a mere tendency, apart from intent, was sufficient to make a misdemeanor, the same doctrine was applicable to the tariff discussion and even to the Massachusetts Bill of Rights. The writer in the Atlas, wAtlas, who signed himself Z. Z., and was, we are told, a highly estimable and Lib. 2.118. intelligent member of the bar, dissected the charge in five well-considered articles, which were successively Lib. 2.118, 122, 125, 130, 149. reproduced in the Liberator. In conclusion it was shown why the North might lawfully examine the subject of slavery, by which it was affected in so many ways—as, in its liability to help put down revolt, its exposure to kidnapping, its share in the regulation of the Di
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 14: the Boston mob (first stage).—1835. (search)
Letters and Times of the Tylers, 1.576). Nowhere was this question more seriously pondered than in Boston, where the Atlas at once called for a Lib. 5.130. meeting in the same Faneuil Hall that had been denied the abolitionists, and urged ty popular tumults. But in some places he meets favorable reception, and makes converts. . . . There are now calls in the Atlas (the Webster paper) and the Morning Post (the Jackson and Van Buren paper) for a town-meeting to put down the abolitioniso libel the abolitionists, saved their dignity from being deeply wounded. To the editors of the city press, and to Boston Atlas, Oct. 22, 1835; Right and Wrong in Boston, 1836, (1) p. 57. the public at large so far as the letters could reach them meets his eyes relative to our subject. To the same and Knapp jointly he writes, August 29, that he has received the Atlas containing the Faneuil Hall speeches. They are all bad, but Sprague's is truly Ms. diabolical. I have sent you a let