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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2 12 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 1: the Boston mob (second stage).—1835. (search)
the Boston Female A. S. Society, and from 1840 her administrative energy maintained the organ of the American A. S. Society, and so virtually the Society itself. She was, in her Right and Wrong series (1836-40), the chronicler of a critical epoch, and in countless other ways her pen was effectively employed, both in prose and in verse, in the Liberator, the Liberty Bell, the Standard, etc. She was born in 1806; her husband, Henry Grafton Chapman, in 1804. He was the son of Henry and Sarah Greene Chapman of Boston. The elder Chapman was the only one of those then reckoned the Boston merchants par excellence to make the anti-slavery cause his own: his wife paid, through the Boston Female A. S. Society, the counsel fee in the Med case (see hereafter). Both Mrs. M. W. Chapman and her husband joined the ranks of the abolitionists against the earnest remonstrances of their pastor, Dr. Channing, and under the condemnation of all their friends and acquaintances. and they speak of you in the
ed 75], at A. S. Fair, 2.68; at Mrs. Chapman's, 105.— Letter from W. Phillips, 2.413. Chapman, Sarah Greene, 2.49. Chardon Street Convention, 2.421-431. Charleston (S. C.), bonfire of A. S. doterary style, 1.461; accompanies Thompson to N. Y., 2.3; describes Reign of Terror, 1.490; at Mrs. Chapman's, 2.105; at Miss Sargent's, 106; defines Transcendentalism and Perfectionism, 204; at Non-Reat legislative hearing, 97, 102; meets H. Martineau, 99; loses Harvard professorship, 102; at Mrs. Chapman's, 105; praise of the Grimkes, 205; at Peace Convention, 228; death, 335.—Letter to Channing,87; d. Brookline, Mass., Jan. 26, 1860], born Cabot, 2.55; at legislative hearing, 96, 97, at Mrs. Chapman's, 105.—Portrait in Hudson's Hist. Lexington, Mass. Folsom, Abigail, Mrs. [b. England; d. Rs Channing, 94, hears him preach, 98, 106; sonnets to his first-born, 100; attends meeting at Mrs. Chapman's, 105; hung in effigy at Fall River, 107; criticises Dr. Beecher's Thanksgiving sermon, 106,<