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Lydia Maria Child, Isaac T. Hopper: a true life 4 0 Browse Search
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Lydia Maria Child, Isaac T. Hopper: a true life, Contents. (search)
f Friends in New-York, 386 to 399. Visit to his Birth-place, 399. Norristown Convention, 400. Visit from his Sister Sarah, 401. Visit to Boston, 401. Visit to Bucks County, 406. Prison Association in New-York, 409. Correspondence with Governor Young, 413. Preaching in Sing Sing Chapel, 415. Anecdotes of Dr. William Rogers, 417, 459. Interesting Cases of Reformed Convicts, 419 to 443. Letter from Dr. Walter Channing, 444. Anecdotes of William Savery and James Lindley at the South, 446. Sonnet by William L. Garrison, 448. His sympathy with Colored People turned out of the Cars, 448. A Methodist Preacher from the South, 452. His Disobedience to the Fugitive Slave Law, 455. His Domestic Character, 249, 377 to 380, 458 to 464. He attracts Children, 460. His Garden described in a Letter to L. M. Child, 461. Likenesses of him, 464. Letter concerning Joseph Whitall, 466. Letters concerning Sarah his wife, 466, 467. Letter to
Lydia Maria Child, Isaac T. Hopper: a true life, The two young offenders. (search)
time. He says: This landlord was the most abominably wicked man that I ever met with; full of horrid execrations, and threatenings of all Northern people. But I did not spare him; which occasioned a bystander to express, with an oath, that I should be popped over. We left them distressed in mind; and having a lonesome wood of twelve miles to pass through, we were in full expectation of their waylaying, or coming after us, to put their wicked threats in execution. As early as 1806, James Lindley, of Pennsylvania, had a large piece of iron hurled at him, as he was passing through the streets, at Havre de Grace, Maryland. Three of his ribs were broken, and several teeth knocked out, and he was beaten till he was supposed to be dead. All this was done merely because they mistook him for Jacob Lindley, the Quaker preacher, who was well known as a friend to fugitives from slavery. In view of these, and other similar facts, Friend Hopper was never disposed to blame abolitionists for