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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4 12 0 Browse Search
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3 2 0 Browse Search
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n. from you this morning, and which I am glad to possess, and for the valued expression of your regard accompanying your autograph. How heartily I reciprocate it, how entirely I confide in you, I cannot tell you. I wrote to Mr. E. Quincy the other day about Kossuth, and asked him to show you what I said. He may not have thought it worth while, or he may not have had an opportunity. Let me take occasion to repeat to you what I said to him. I do it with more confidence because our friend McKim, whose sound J. M. McKim. moral judgment you know, is, I believe, entirely of my mind in regard to this extraordinary man. I felt with you at the first that he was trimming, and I thought of him with sadness, for I had rather have a great and true man than the political liberation of twenty Hungarys. But some things he has said since he came here have given me, as Lib. 22.3, 6. I think, an insight into his position. He was seen to read very attentively the Anti-Slavery Banner extended
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 2: the hour and the man.—1862. (search)
the office need not feel bound to his place by a sense of obligation. This latter fact, applied to my own case, I accept as an indication of duty (Lib. 32.75). Mr. McKim gave practical effect to his belief by speedily identifying himself with the movement to relieve and educate the freedmen; and early in the summer of 1862 he mads I was, to find so many Music Hall faces there. On several occasions I came Boston. unexpectedly on two or three at a time. This urgency being enforced by Mr. McKim and Oliver J. M. McKim. Johnson, Mr. Garrison wrote to the latter: I have not yet been invited to visit Washington, and, Ms. Mar. 30. therefore, have hadhim. My college oration is almost completed, Ms. he wrote to Oliver Johnson, on July 31, and will be entirely so to-day. I have written it out in full, as you and McKim advised, and so I feel great relief in knowing certainly what I am going to say. But, oh! the bondage and drawback of reading it, as though I had never seen it be
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 4: the reelection of Lincoln.—1864. (search)
isit Washington before the final adjournment of Congress. Ms. Mar. 14, 1864. Oliver Johnson to W. L. Garrison. Philadelphia, April 11th, 1864. Ms. You see we are thus far on our way home. We halt here to-night to allow Mr. Thompson to be presented to the Union League, at their Club House, and to make them a brief colloquial address. It is intended to clinch the nail which he drove a week ago in the Academy of Music—or, changing the figure, to cap the climax of the former meeting. McKim assures us J. M. McKim. that the speech here a week ago made a grand impression, not merely upon the intelligent mass, but upon leading men, heretofore conservative. Horace Binney, Jr., the Chairman, is a man of the very highest social standing, the representative of the wealth and culture of the city. Many eminent clergymen were on the platform—among them Bishop Potter! Verily Alonzo Potter. the day of miracles is not past. I wrote you, I think, of every important incident connected
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 6: end of the Liberator.1865. (search)
en working independently of each other, but were now brought into harmonious operation through the Lib. 35.170. efforts of J. M. McKim. Of this new organization Bishop Matthew Simpson was made President, and Mr. Garrison First Vice-President, Mr. McKim being the Corresponding Secretary of the Eastern Department. Its object was to promote the education and elevation of the Freedmen, and to cooperate to this end with the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, which had been established early in the year by Congress, with General O. O. Howard as Chief Commissioner. Later in the month Mr. Garrison and Mr. McKim visited Maine in behalf of the Commission, holding large meetings and forming auxiliary associations in Portland and Bangor. At Portland, Mr. Garrison's early antagonist, John Neal (ante, 1: 99, 383), entered heartily into the movement. Mr. Garrison and I used to have some hot contests, said Mr. Neal. Who was wrong and who was right? asked Governor Israel Wa