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of City A. S. Society, 382-385, personally threatened, 384; attempt to mob him in Boston, 386; visit to Canterbury, 390, 426, indicted by Judson & Co. for libel, 391, 392; delegate to Nat. A. S. Convention, 395; summons G. W. Benson and Whittier, 393, introduces Kimball and Jewett, 394; debate en route to Philadelphia, 396; drafts Declaration, 399, 400; eulogistic speeches from his colleagues, 402-406, threatened by an outsider, 404; motion in favor of female abolitionists, 413; made Foreign Corr. Sec. Am. A. S. Soc., but resigns, 415; 1st ann. report N. E. A. S. S., 426; praise from Mrs. Child, 418 (1833)——Courtship, 1.422-427, marriage, 427; Roxbury home, 421, 427, home delights, 423, 428; appeal for support of Lib., 428-434; discouraged from speaking in Phila., 430; prints P. Crandall's defence, 431; urged to lecture for Lib., 434; patriotic censure of his country, 445; at Am. A. S. anniversary, 446, 447; interview with J. Breckinridge, 448, seeks fair play for colonizationists, 4<
endered to his countrymen on this side of the Atlantic some wholesome parting advice, but with a grave omission as to their duty towards slavery, which Mr. Garrison supplied by appending to the address in the Liberator the Irish Address of 1842. Father Lib. 21.185. Mathew left also his thanks to individuals—to a slaveholder, first of all: to Henry Clay, namely. To the same hollow friend alike of temperance and of freedom, he wrote on December 29, 1851, from Cork, sending good Colton's Private Corr. of Clay, p. 624. wishes and blessings for the New Year to the pride and glory of the United States, and writing himself down the most grateful of your admirers. Father Mathew had, nevertheless, witnessed on the spot the degradation of the North by the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law, thanks to Clay above all other men. He had seen the workings of that measure in all their atrocity —the land stirred as never before, in its good and bad elements. He had seen the suppression of free
Federal gunboats at West point. We learn that three Federal gunboats came up York river to West Point on Sunday morning last, and after remaining there a while took their departure. On the same day the Yankees landed a force a Corr's farm in King and Queen county.--The object of these movements is a matter of conjecture, though it is possible that troops are passing by that route from McClellan's army to the Rappahannock.