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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2 10 0 Browse Search
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3 8 0 Browse Search
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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 6: the schism.—1840. (search)
Many excited. To discuss the character of political candidates seems the great object of Myron Holley, Gerrit Smith, Wm. L. Chaplin Of Farmington, N. Y., formerly of Groton, Mass. and others, but the great body of the Abolitionists are sound. Thom the State Society, and form a society for Western New York. They are not willing that Myron Holley, Gerrit Smith, Wm. L. Chaplin, and Wm. Goodell should any longer be regarded as fit representatives of the abolitionism of Western New York. I htools, Myron Holley and others, to call it. So at a county convention at Arcade, near Rochester, they (Holley, Smith and Chaplin) got a resolution passed to this effect. There has been no general concert among the friends. It is to be a kind of pag (Maine); Thomas Davis (Rhode Island); Rowland T. Robinson (Vermont); Amos A. Phelps, Abby Kelley (Massachusetts); William L. Chaplin, Lewis Tappan (New York); Charles C. Burleigh, Charles W. Gardiner (Pennsylvania); and Charles W. Denison (New Jers
ting, 188, speech, 189, letter to abolitionists, 191, 205; peace lecture, 222; letter to Clay, 282; at Chardon St. Convention, 424; impulse to Brook Farm experiment, 205.— Letters front G., 1.214, 464, 2.90; Follen, 2.205.—Portrait (best copy) in C. T. Brooks's Memorial vol. Channing, William Henry, Rev. [1810-1884], member Cambridge A. S. S., 1.463, calls Chardon St. Convention, 2.422. Chaplin, Jeremiah, Rev. [1776-1841], host of G., 1.290, letter to Nat. A. S. Convention, 399. Chaplin, William L., Third Party worker, 2.339-341, at N. Y. anniversary 348. Chapman, Ann Greene [d. Boston, Mar. 24, 1837, aged 35], at mobbed A. S. meeting, 2.12; death, 208.—Letter to G., 2.207. Chapman, Henry, merchant, 2.49; house used for A. S. fair, 68; liberality to cause, 84, to G., 207. Chapman, Henry Grafton [b. Boston, May 3, 1804; d. Oct. 3, 1842], descent, 2.49; gives information to Mayor Lyman, 32; witnesses Boston mob, 13; helps Thompson depart, 50; host of G., 96; meets H. Mart<
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)
uted to his support (Lib. 11: 159; Mss. Sept. 29, 1841, J. S. Gibbons to W. L. G., and Oct. 9, 1841, J. C. Jackson to Abby Kelley). Just before Mr. Garrison's arrival, Jackson had publicly advertised a Liberty Party lecturing partnership with W. L. Chaplin, on the independent contract system— i. e., not as agents for any society or organization, and neither salaried nor living off the field; but on special terms for their services in every instance. This was as near as the Liberty Party in Newnt of numbers, and by some of the choicest spirits in the land. In the evening, they were crowded to overflowing. They were held in the Second Presbyterian Church. The deepest interest was manifested in them from the opening to the close. W. L. Chaplin A grandson of Colonel William Prescott, who commanded at Bunker Hill. For his subsequent prominence as a victim of the Slave Power, see Lib. 21: 66; Wilson's Rise and Fall of the Slave Power, 2: 80-82. was present, and endeavored to act th
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 6: third mission to England.—1846. (search)
e stationary stage were not quickly escaped—Joshua Leavitt himself Lib. 16.57. being present, and discounting the impending catastrophe by denying that the party and the ballot-box were the sole Cf. ante, 2.310. means of abolishing slavery. Bailey gave a discouraging account of the Ohio section, and predicted that all would be over with it if it manifested no strength in the coming gubernatorial election. Gerrit Smith lamented in New Lib. 16.77. York a falling away on all sides, and W. L. Chaplin and J. C. Jackson confirmed his statements. Only one dollar was raised to ten formerly. Edmund Quincy judged it at Lib. 16.174, 175. this time to be on its last legs; and the fall elections showed that it could send only five Representatives out of Lib. 16.194. 232 to the Massachusetts lower House, polling a total vote of about 10,000. In New York it cast but 12,000 votes, Lib. 17.11. against 16,000 in 1844. Quincy was quite right in Lib. 16.194. assuring Webb that— There a
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 7: first Western tour.—1847. (search)
hile Mr. Garrison is overtaking his companion at Buffalo, we may pause to consider the state of the Liberty Party about to meet in that city, for the last time in its collective capacity. Rather it was a question whether the organization was not already done for. In the second week in June a Fourth Party had gone out from it, June 8-10, 1847. forming a Liberty League at Macedon Lock, N. Y., under the auspices of J. G. Birney, Gerrit Smith, William Lib. 17.106. Goodell, Beriah Green, William L. Chaplin, James C. Jackson, and others. Its twenty articles consisted of those extraneous topics which began to press for admittance as soon as the Third Party had been launched Ante, 2.435. on the nominal basis of immediate emancipation,—as, for example, free trade, direct taxation, abolition of the Government monopoly of carrying the mails, The hobby of Lysander Spooner, now—superseding Goodell (Lib. 17.170)—the high priest of the doctrine of the unconstitutionality of slavery. See hi