Browsing named entities in Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3. You can also browse the collection for Arnold Buffum or search for Arnold Buffum in all documents.

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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 4: no union with slaveholders!1844. (search)
r Sanger, William A. White, Of Watertown, Mass., a graduate of Harvard College in 1838, an ardent abolitionist, and most zealous and generous promoter of the temperance, as lecturer and journalist (Lib. 27: 92). etc., from the cause East; Arnold Buffum, from the West; Thomas Earle, with C. C. Burleigh and J. M. McKim, editors of the Pennsylvania Freeman, and Thomas S. Cavender of Philadelphia; and James S. Gibbons of New York. Mr. Child, in accordance with a notice already given, withdrew od, its fidelity to its principles, its readiness to be without reputation. We believe it now occupies the highest defensible ground against the enemy. 7. It is objected, that this is precisely the course which all Protest of T. Earle and A. Buffum. the crafty advocates of slavery would wish us to pursue. This is empty assertion—and the facts that have already transpired prove it to be equally fallacious. What rage and consternation were excited in Congress on the presentation of the fa
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 17: the disunion Convention.—1857. (search)
y of the founding of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society in Ante, 1.279. Belknap-Street Church; the other, a State Disunion Convention to be held at Worcester, Mass., on January 15. Two only of the twelve founders of the anti-slavery organization were visible at the festival—Mr. Garrison, who (with Edmund Quincy's aid) presided, and Oliver Johnson among the speakers. Two, if not four, were numbered with the dead, as Joshua Coffin recorded in a Lib. 27.5. letter to the festival. Arnold Buffum regretfully offered Lib. 27.5. his old age and his infirmities and distance from the scene as an excuse for non-attendance. Moses Thacher wrote that he had in his possession the original draft of the Lib. 27.10. Address which he was commissioned to prepare for the Ante, 1.281. new-born Society. Samuel J. May, as he had been compelled in 1831 to leave Boston before the agreement to Ante, 1.278. form a society was reached, so now was drawn homeward Lib. 27.5. from the same city on t
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 19: John Brown.—1859. (search)
inous rapidity. Ellis Gray Loring, best of counsellors Lib. 28.91. on the Massachusetts Board, and among the first and Ante, 1.223. truest of Mr. Garrison's supporters, had departed in May, Lib. 28.86, 91, 100; 29.83. In March, 1859, died Arnold Buffum, one of the founders of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society and Lib. 29.42, 48, 55, 71; ante, 1.280, 395, 398. signers of the Declaration of Sentiments at Philadelphia; to whom Mr. Garrison and the cause owed much in the day of small things. In September, 1859, almost simultaneously, Effingham L. Capron and Samuel Philbrick Lib. 29.150. passed away—both birthright Quakers (like Arnold Buffum), and Capron a fellow-signer of the Declaration, who first looked upon the editor of the Liberator with Ante, 1.398; Lib. 29.150. tears that forbade utterance; Philbrick, the prudent Treasurer, almost to the last, of the Massachusetts Lib. 29.130, 150. Society, and financial care-taker of the Liberator, and Ante, 2.332. generous friend