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r to, 583-4; Davis writes to, with regard to the privateersmen, 599 ; Magoffin's letter, and the President's reply, 610-11; directs the formation of army corps, 619. Livingston, Edward, 95. Locke, John, on the Slave-Trade, 28. Loguen, Jerry, a fugitive slave, 215. London Times, The, Russell's estimate of our forces prior to Bull Run, 550. Lone Star, order of the, 270; 350. Longstreet, Gen. Jas., at Blackburn's ford, 539. Lopez, his intrigues and death, 270. Loring, Ellis Gray, his church mobbed, 126. Louis XIV., decides to acknowledge our Independence, 265. Louisiana, 53; purchase of, 84-5; Whig or Union party triumph in, 211; withdraws from the Dem. Convention, 314; legislative instructions to her delegates. 316; secession of, and the votes thereon, 348; population in 1860, 351; seizure of Federal property in, 412; surrender of the cutter McClellan to the authorities of, 413. Louisville, Ky., dispatch from, announcing the order of the Montgomery War
8; Recollections of, 134-135; and emancipation, 136-149; and Missouri Compromise, 139; message to Minister Dayton of Paris, 140; proposed constitutional amendment, 144; special message to Congress, December, 1863, 144; emancipation policy, 145; and Abolitionists, 147; and Free-Soilers, 172; Congressional sentiment toward, 177; antagonism to, 177-180; Life of, by I. N. Arnold, 177. Lincoln, Sumner, 205. Longhead, Joseph, 203. Lovejoy, Elijah P., shooting of, 32, 89, 14-115, 161. Lowell, Ellis Gray, 204. Lundy, Benjamin, 27, 50-54; meeting with Garrison, 54. Lyon, Nathaniel, 188. M McCrummil, James, 203. McCullough, John, 203. McKim, John, 203. Mace, Enoch, 203. Manumittal, arguments against, 34-35. Marshall, Tom, 70. Massachusetts Legislature and slavery, 105. May, Samuel J., 203. May, Rev. S. T., Recollections, 08. Mexican War, 44. Missouri, 157-185; Compromise, 6, 12, 139-140; admission to Union as slave State, 43; slavery contest, 67 ;andtheUnion, 159-160; Radicals,
, reunion, 52; kindness from a colored woman, 38; illness, 37-39, 44, 48, 53; death, 53.—Letters to husband's parents, 1.19. M. Farnham, 1.32, son Lloyd, 1.33, 37, 38, 44, 48, 51, son James, 1.35, daughter Elizabeth, 1.39, E. W. Allen, 1.50; from her husband, 1.16, 23, Lloyd, 1.49, Mrs. T. Pickering, 1.38. Lloyd, William, namesake of G., 1.20. Longfellow, Stephen [1775-1849], 1.302. Longley, Thomas, 2.103. Lord, Nathan, Rev. [1792-1870], 2.135. Lord, Tobias, 2.103. Loring, Ellis Gray [b. Boston, April 14, 1803; d.. May 24, 1858], lawyer, 1.273, career, 2.55; Unitarian, 138; aid to Liberator, 1.224; part in founding New Eng. A. S. Soc., 278-280; catechises A. Lawrence, 455; opposes Am. Union for the Relief, etc., 469; commends Channing's Essay,: 55; host of H. Martineau, 56, 98; of G., 69; counsel in Med. case, 79; speech before Senate (Mass.) committee, 55, 96, 97, in State House, 126; at Mrs. Chapman's, 105; calls Lovejoy meeting, 187, A. S. prompter of Channing as to
p. Camb. Old Parish, 10 Apr. 1774. She was half-sister of Isaiah Thomas, the celebrated printer, whose mother-Fidelity Grant of Rhode-Island—m. a Blackman, and settled in Cambridge.—See Lincoln's Hist. Worcester, 287, 294. Widow Fidelity Blackman of Camb. sold to Lemuel Blanchard in 1778, land with dwelling-house and barn, bounded on country road, the school-house lot or proprietors' lands, and west on Menotomy Pond. Blake, James, of Boston, and Susanna Fillebrown, m. 29 Nov. 1773. Ellis Gray, m. Ann Elizabeth Wyman, 15 Nov. 1821, and d. 25 June, 1841, a. 45. Oliver W. m. Sarah J. Warren, 17 Aug. 1842. (Oliver W. Blake d. 12 Oct. 1848, a. 29.) Blanchard, Lemuel, o. c. Menot. 2 May, 1779, had Thomas, b. 20 Apr., bapt. 2 May, 1779, and a son, b. 27 Apr. 1783. Lemuel the father m. Lydia, dau. of Thomas Adams, and is styled trader in deeds. Mrs. Lydia m. Joseph Thorndike of Jaffrey, N. H., 30 July, 1795. 2. Samuel, d. 3 Sept. 1790, a. 70—see Cutter Book, 89. Alan-son,