Browsing named entities in Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4. You can also browse the collection for Lloyd Garrison or search for Lloyd Garrison in all documents.

Your search returned 6 results in 1 document section:

Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 4, Chapter 57: attempts to reconcile the President and the senator.—ineligibility of the President for a second term.—the Civil-rights Bill.—sale of arms to France.—the liberal Republican party: Horace Greeley its candidate adopted by the Democrats.—Sumner's reserve.—his relations with Republican friends and his colleague.—speech against the President.—support of Greeley.—last journey to Europe.—a meeting with Motley.—a night with John Bright.—the President's re-election.—1871-1872. (search)
I am free to express my indignation at the onslaught which it has pleased Mr. Lloyd Garrison to make on you. James Freeman Clarke wrote: I do not know that I agree w There was, however, one exception to this fair treatment of his position. Mr. Garrison had written him in recent years, as these pages show, the most earnest tribulitics was at the age of thirty-four in an Antislavery meeting in company with Garrison himself. Ante, vol. III. pp. 103, 104. One observer attributed Mr. Garrison'Mr. Garrison's intemperate criticisms of the senator to a feeling of rivalry as to what shall be the verdict of history, and what is the estimation of contemporaries as to the hisrtraits, pp. 366, 367.) The Springfield Republican, March 10, 1873, ascribed Mr. Garrison's comments on Sumner at this time, as well as his later action concerning thling with old coadjutors. He thus wrote to Whittier:— I have not read Mr. Garrison's letter. Some one said it was unkind, and I made up my mind at once not'to