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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 1: the Boston mob (second stage).—1835. (search)
e Rev. Amos A. Phelps and by Henry Benson, he visited southern New Hampshire and Portland, Maine, still enjoying the hospitality of the churches and promoting new antislavery organizations. Thence he proceeded in the same month to New York, where he spoke for the first time since his arrival in America, in the Rev. Dr. Lansing's church, without molestation or disorder of any kind; in March, to Philadelphia, giving an address in the Reformed Presbyterian Church, after an introduction by David Paul Brown. Repairing to Boston for lectures and debates in the Anti-Slavery Rooms, he returned to New York in company with Mr. Garrison. In April he was again in Boston, using the only church open to him (the Methodist Church in Bennett Street) for a Fast-Day and other discourses, and a third time in New York, forming en route a female anti-slavery society in the Providence Pine-Street Baptist Church; and then, once more with Messrs. Phelps and Benson for companions, he journeyed to Albany and
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 4: Pennsylvania Hall.—the non-resistance society.—1838. (search)
elf nobly. She spoke about ten minutes, and was succeeded by A. E. G. Weld, who occupied Ibid., p. 123. nearly an hour. As the tumult from without increased, and the brickbats fell thick and fast, (no one, however, being injured), her eloquence kindled, her eye flashed, and her cheeks glowed, as she devoutly thanked the Lord that the stupid repose of that city had at length been disturbed by the force of truth. Here may fitly be cited another passage from Mr. Garrison's censure of David Paul Brown on the previous morning (Tuesday, May 15): I know, indeed, that some will consider the remarks of that gentleman as adapted to please all parties—to allay, in some measure, the prejudice that prevails against us and our holy cause. These are your men of caution, and prudence, and judiciousness. Sir, I have learned to hate those words. Whenever we attempt to imitate our great Exemplar, and press the truth of God, in all its plainness, upon the conscience, why, we are very imprudent; b
pel, 356. Pringle, Thomas, 1.226. Providence (R. I.), colored petition for suffrage, 1.256.—See Rhode Island. Pugh, Sarah [b. Washington, D. C., 1800; d. Philadelphia, Aug. 1, 1884], 2.353. Puritan (Lynn), 2.424. Purvis, Robert [b. Charleston, S. C., Aug. 4, 1810], 1.342, 404; host of G., 283, aid in buying Thoughts on Colon., 312, has G. sit for portrait, 342, drives him to Trenton, 343; delegate to Nat. A. S. Convention, and late survivor, 397, 398, eulogy of G., 404; turns D. P. Brown from colonization, 413; aids G.'s escape from Philadelphia, 2.27.—Letters to G., 1.283; from G., 1.284, 311, 323, 314, G. Thompson, 1 433, 434—Portrait in Smedley's Underground R. R., p. 353. Putnam, George, 1.330. Quakers, A. S. Societies at South, 1.90, 95, 136; A. S. petition in Virginia, 251; English and American contrasted as abolitionists, 350; represented at Nat. A. S. Convention, 397; aversion to abolition, 479, 2.78; flattered by Van Buren, 82; declared pro-slavery by G., 33<