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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 2: the Irish address.—1842. (search)
on of this ark of the covenant was certainly among the thrilling incidents of the three days of hightoned feeling, triumphant enthusiasm, and complete satisfaction, Jan. 26-28, 1842; Lib. 12.23. occupied by the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Society. It took place in Faneuil Hall, before a Jan. 28. great gathering, in which Jan. 28. great gathering, in which one seemed to discern large numbers of friendly Irishmen in a proper state of Lib. 12.18. excitement. Mr. Garrison, who presided, read the Address— with due emphasis, we may be sure. Colonel MillerJ. P. Miller: ante, 2.370. spoke to it, alleging Irish blood in his Vermont veins. Bradburn, confessing himself the son of an Irishmf the Union, and Lib. 12.34. to murmur what Webster termed those words of delusion and folly, Liberty first and Union afterwards. 2d speech on Foot's resolution, Jan. 26, 1830. The Southern colleagues of Mr. Adams on the Committee on Foreign Affairs, of which he was chairman, withdrew, and sundry other Southern members refused t
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 3: the covenant with death.1843. (search)
t will be short and decisive. Possibly, in that hour, the South may yield (and such a surrender would be to her victory and renown)--possibly, the spirit of desperation may triumph over her instinct of selfpreservation; but, in either case, the fate of slavery would be sealed, the character of the North redeemed, and an example given to mankind worthy to be recorded on the brightest page of history. Thus much, at least, I am bold to prophesy. At the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Jan. 27, 1843. Anti-Slavery Society in Faneuil Hall, he secured the passage of the following resolution, of his own phrasing, which was shortly hoisted at the Liberator masthead in place of the less pungent declaration which had hitherto been kept flying there: Resolved, That the compact which exists between the North Lib. 13.19. and the South is a covenant with death and an agreement with Isa. 28: 15; ante, pp. 52, 53. hell —involving both parties in atrocious criminality—and should be imm
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 4: no union with slaveholders!1844. (search)
gers. Garrison's favorite hobby of the Dissolution of the Union, Ms. Jan. 30, 1844, to R. D. Webb. as Quincy dubbed the doctrine slowly evolving in the abolition mind, was discussed in Faneuil Hall and at the State House at the twelfth annual Jan. 24-27, 1844. meeting of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society. Quincy himself reported, for the business committee, resolves deeming it the only true and consistent position to withhold support and sanction from the Constitution of the United SG. Birney, Lib. 14.19. as well as against Henry Clay, the predestined nominee of the Whig Party, and Calhoun and Van Buren, possible candidates of the Democratic Party. The behavior of the Society in all these circumstances was admirable, Ms. Jan. 30, 1844. wrote Edmund Quincy to R. D. Webb, and showed that it perfectly understood itself and what was going on. I never felt more relieved and satisfied at the adjournment of any meeting since that of 1839, when the real battle of New an
Chapter 5: Texas.—1845. Garrison joins in the Massachusetts movement of the conscience Whigs against the annexation of Texas, but their disunionism oozes away after the event. Formal assent to the Disunion doctrine was given, with a will, by the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Lib. 15.19. Society at its annual meeting in January, 1845. As a Jan. 24-26, 1845. consequence of this action, Ellis Gray Loring resigned his place on the Board of Officers. Poor Garrison, exulted the Boston Post, who appears to be broken down, mentally and physically, has taken such a rabid course that he is driving from him some of those who have heretofore been his most active supporters. Lib. 15.19. Mr. Loring hastened to notify this Democratic sheet that the alienation was not personal: Not concurring in the disunion doctrines adopted by the Lib. 15.19. Society, I thought I should misrepresent it by remaining an officer; but it is painful to me to have it intimated that an honest difference
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 7: first Western tour.—1847. (search)
hrink from anticipating that woman suffrage might ultimately be another. Some wild talk concerning the power of Congress to abolish slavery in the States, and the power of the President in disregard of the Supreme Court, was heard and noted by Mr. Wright. Two days and nights were consumed by the Convention Lib. 17.185. in adjusting differences. Joshua Leavitt led the Eastern wing, with the aid of Henry B. Stanton, whose politician's progress had been shown in January at a Liberty Party Jan. 20, 1847. Convention in Faneuil Hall, Boston, where he said openly that there were in the community a set of soulless scamps Lib. 17.19. that could only be brought into our cause by the prospect of office; and if the Liberty Party could only get 40,000 votes, as a capital to trade upon, they would soon have these miserable scamps jumping upon their backs to ride Cf. ante, 2.311. into office. Quite naturally at Buffalo he joined Leavitt in contending that the Liberty Party was not a perman
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 8: the Anti-Sabbath Convention.—1848. (search)
the preaching or evangelizing. You will understand, of course, that there was nothing like unkindness between us. We agreed to differ as to the measure, as far as we did, in the most catholic and merriest spirit. There will be fun at the Convention, I doubt not. The movement has made a great stir in the community, and especially among the devouter sort of Unitarians! Lib. 18.22. The Call for an Anti-Sabbath Convention in Boston had Ms. Jan. 8, 1848, Thos. McClintock to W. L. G. Ms. Jan. 10, 1848. begun to be sent out for signatures late in December, 1847. The author of it advised S. J. May that it had been drawn up with great care and deliberation, and sanctioned by a large committee of our best reformatory spirits; but Mr. May could not yield entire sympathy or allow his name to be appended. I am sorry, he responded on January Ms. to W. L. G. 15, 1848, you are going to have a Convention, because it will help rather than hinder the project of the Sabbatarians. Oppositio
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 10: the Rynders Mob.—1850. (search)
850 as in 1835, in the person of Mr. Garrison. He began the year in poor health, though still in the lecture Lib. 20.2, 7, 19, 21. field, and taking some, if not his usual, part in the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society in Jan. 23-25, 1850. Faneuil Hall. He there offered a resolution condemning Longfellow's newly published ode to the Union, which he had already characterized in the Liberator as a eulogy dripping with the blood of imbruted humanity. Lib. 20.11. He now Henry C. Wright, of Abby Kelley Foster, of Frederick Douglass, of Mr. Garrison—against whom his menaces were specially directed. Never was a human being more out of his element. Isaiah Rynders, a native American, of mixed German N. Y. Times, Jan. 14, 1884. and Irish lineage, was now some forty-six years of age. He began life as a boatman on the Hudson River, and, passing easily into the sporting class, went to seek his fortunes as a professional gambler in the paradise of the Southwest.
any countenance to the Magyar's ostensible mission. Alarmed by this new peril, Kossuth made haste to repudiate, as he justly but not honorably could, all responsibility for his late associate. He was now in Washington, where he never could have Jan. 7, 1852. gone as an avowed opponent of slavery. He not only stated, through his secretary, the precise facts in regard to his relations to the Voelkerbund; he pronounced Mr. Gyurman's occupying himself with a question of domestic American policy, said the editor of the Liberator, in January, 1849, can be more superficial or more destitute of principle than the Free Soil movement Lib. 19.6, 7.; and at the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society in the same month, Wendell Jan. 24-26. Phillips moved a resolve that abolitionists could not look Lib. 19.19. on the Free Soil Party as an anti-slavery party in any proper sense of the term. Of the Liberty Party papers which had turned Free Soil in order to survive, Mr. Garri
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 17: the disunion Convention.—1857. (search)
er 17: the disunion Convention.—1857. The Massachusetts Anti-slavery Society celebrates its twenty-fifth anniversary. Garrison takes part in a disunion Convention held at Worcester under the auspices of T. W. Higginson and other residents of that city. Another and more representative Convention at Cleveland is projected, but is abandoned in view of the financial panic. The Dred Scott decision of the U. S. Supreme Court intervenes. The opening number of the twenty-seventh volume of Jan. 2, 1857. the Liberator contained two notices, significant in themselves, but more particularly from their juxtaposition. The one appointed a festival at Faneuil Hall on January 2, 1857, to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society in Ante, 1.279. Belknap-Street Church; the other, a State Disunion Convention to be held at Worcester, Mass., on January 15. Two only of the twelve founders of the anti-slavery organization were visible at
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 19: John Brown.—1859. (search)
stown, Va., Nov. 26, 1859: I once set myself to oppose a mob at Boston where she [Lucretia Mott] was. After I interfered, the police immediately took up the matter, and soon put a stop to mob proceedings. The meeting was, I think, in Marlboroa Street Church, or Hotel, perhaps (Sanborn's Life of Brown, p. 605). Does this point to the dedication of the Marlboroa Chapel on May 24, 1838 (ante, 2: 218, 219)? one Sunday evening in January, 1857, in Theodore Parker's parlors. He saw in the famous Jan. 4, 11, 18? Kansas chieftain a tall, spare, farmer-like man, with head disproportionately small, and that inflexible mouth which Ibid., p. 628. as yet no beard concealed. They discussed peace and nonresistance together, Brown quoting the Old Testament against Garrison's citations from the New, and Parker from time to time injecting a bit of Lexington into the controversy, which attracted a small group of interested listeners. In May, 1859, Brown attended the New May 25, 26. England Anti-