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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2 7 1 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 2: Germs of contention among brethren.—1836. (search)
f the 3d (Sunday) an effigy of straw was attached to a post on the Main Street, with a placard marked Garrison the Abolitionist: a fit subject for the gallows (Lib. 6.111). As a specimen of the growing wickedness of the times, take Ms. July 2, 1836. the fact that a military company is to arrive here by appointment to-morrow (the Sabbath), from New York, and that another military company is to turn out here to escort them through the streets! In the afternoon they are to march to the Rev. Dr. Crocker's meeting-house, where I suppose they have been specially invited. Guns, bayonets, swords, plumes, banners, epaulets in church on the Sabbath! It seems a studied, and is a most aggravated, profanation of the day. He began his criticism of Dr. Beecher by attacking the assertion that the Sabbath is the great sun of the moral world, as preposterous and extravagant, and not authorized by the Gospel. It was making the outward observance of one day in the week paramount. But the Sab
.'s, 2.158; opposes rebuilding Penn. Hall, 218; brother-inlaw of Rev. Dickey, 249. Crewdson, W. D., 2.368. Crittenden, John Jordan [1787-1863], 2.74. Crocker, —, Rev., 2.107. Crocker, William Goss [d. Liberia, 1844], missionary, friendship for G., 1.55, 56. Cropper, Capt., 2.361. Cropper, James [d. Feb. 26, 1840, in 6ainst J. Q. Adams and A. Jackson, 54; last days of apprenticeship, 55, 57; personal appearance, portrait by Swain, 55; particular in dress, 55; friendship with W. G. Crocker, 55, 56, Isaac Knapp, 56; Fourth of July oration before Franklin Club, 56; holds to Baptist tenets, familiar with Bible, 56; discovers his nearsightedness, 56;358; 1st of August, 1838, 209; to colored people, Boston, 407; at 20th anniversary Lib., 1.223, 232; at Dinner of Franklin Club, 36, 40. —poetry: Acrostics, to W. G. Crocker, 1.56, to P. Crandall, 321; Occasional verse, on his 21st birthday, 1.57, his 24th, 114, on Jackson's election, 107, Senator Frelinghuysen's speech, 182, Poor