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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 3: Apprenticeship.—1818-1825. (search)
y with which the compositors set and distributed the types. My little Speech at Dinner given by Franklin Club, Boston, Oct. 14, 1878. heart sank like lead within me, he afterwards said. It seemed to me that I never should be able to do anythinger much depression of spirits, after months of illness which had greatly shattered her. Five months later she wrote him Oct. 5, 1819. of the terrible ravages which the yellow fever was then making in Baltimore, and of the happy fortune which had said: I always endeavored to do my work thoroughly, if I could, Speech at Dinner given by Franklin Club, Boston. Oct. 14, 1878. without any errors, and therefore my proofs were very clean, as the technical phrase is. I recollect with greatin thought and expression. His remaining contributions to the Gazette were a Salem Gazette, Aug. 6, 10, 20, Sept. 7, Oct. 22, 29, 1824. series of six articles entitled The Crisis, which appeared at intervals between the beginning of August and
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 4: editorial Experiments.—1826-1828. (search)
own in the Commonwealth, but before he could personally set them in motion, he was called to another field of action; and although his fellow-members of the committee were high-minded, spirited and philanthropic men, they do Jour. of the Times, Oct. 10, 1828. not seem to have pushed the matter with much vigor after the stimulus of his personal presence and effort was withdrawn. A single petition from Boston, cautiously and almost apologetically worded, appears to have been the sole result of their labors. Garrison communicated the progress made before he left Boston to Lundy, who wrote in reply: I am now strengthened in the hope, that I shall not only Jour. of the Times, Oct. 10, 1828. find a valuable coadjutor in the person of my friend Garrison, but that the ice is broken in the hitherto frozen—no, no, not frozen—cool regions of the North. (Ask pardon for the metaphor—but, really, you have all been cool, on the subject of slavery, too long.) I should have been pleas<
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 5: Bennington and the Journal of the Times1828-29. (search)
ay present the first number of the Journal of Jour. of the Times, Oct. 3, 1828. the Times, for public approval and patronage. It is prope the Journal will receive advice gratuitously Jour. of the Times, Oct. 31, 1828. upon subjects relating to law, physic, and divinity—upon We have dipped rather deeply into politics, this week, he Ibid., Oct. 3, 1828. wrote, and must continue to do so a few weeks longer. Ther may be the result of the present tremendous Jour. of the Times, Oct. 31, 1828. conflict, we shall thank God on our bended knees that we cation on slavery, he said: It is time that a Jour. of the Times, Oct. 10, 1828. voice of remonstrance went forth from the North, that sho notice, and even such tragedies as the attempted suicide, Ibid., Oct. 31, Dec. 12, 1828. at Rochester, N. Y., of one who preferred death ference to the novel, illogical, subtle, and Jour. of the Times, Oct. 31, 1828. inconclusive arguments of a discourse of Rev. John Pierpo
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 6: the genius of Universal emancipation.1829-30. (search)
h a cowskin, and on whose bleeding G. U. E., Oct. 2, 1829, p. 27. back, from his neck to his hipnd when Garrison commented on the G. U. E., Oct. 30, 1829, p. 62. inconsistency of the Americanubt it, in a moral point of view. It Ibid., Oct. 2, 1829, p. 25. would be paying a thief for gind welcomed it as perhaps the most G. U. E., Oct. 30, 1829, p. 58. comprehensive mode that can bnia Convention for the revision of the State Oct., 1829, to Jan., 1830. constitution, a body rem impetuous in our disposition, and G. U. E., Oct. 2, 1829, p. 30. singular in our notions of refut saying that he did not like her G. U. E., Oct. 30, 1829, p. 60. religious notions. And yet hin the name of God, we ask, what sort Ibid., Oct. 23, 1829, p. 50. of religion is now extant amoment of the frog in Speech to Franklin Club, Oct. 14, 1878. the well, that went two feet up, ando reason with such men? Need they G. U. E., Oct. 30, 1829, p. 59. be told, that if fire be quen[2 more...]
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 7: Baltimore jail, and After.—1830. (search)
Sir: Twice have the inhabitants of this town been deceived N. P. Herald, Oct. 1, 1830. in relation to the delivery of my Addresses on Slavery. Permit me to ditorial appeared in the columns of the Boston Evening Transcript, announcing Oct. 2, 1830. Mr. Garrison's arrival in Boston, and describing the shabby treatment nscript during the ensuing month. In one of these he called attention to the Oct. 13, 1830. recent rendition of two fugitive slaves (man and wife) who had escapepple of excitement in the community. In another article he commented on the Oct. 12, 1830. inconsistency and hypocrisy of the whites of Charleston. Richmond an deliver his lectures; and he finally sent this advertisement to the Courier: Oct. 12, 1830. Wanted—For three evenings, a Hall or Meeting-house (the latteMr. Garrison, in a sonnet which appeared in the same number of the Courier in Oct. 12, 1830. which he advertised for a hall had already avowed his indifference to
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 8: the Liberator1831. (search)
truth. The proposition was, in fact, so monstrous that in our day an ill-informed chief magistrate of Georgia, Governor Colquitt, has publicly hazarded the belief that the tradition of it was an utterly unfounded slander on the N. Y. Sun, Oct. 24, 1879. State. Happily for him he was able to express this incendiary sentiment at a time when the abolition of slavery had made it perfectly safe to do so on the soil of Georgia—thanks to the editor who wrote further, on the news of the pass 455. attacked some dozen white families in the neighborhood of Southampton, shot or otherwise murdered them outright—but without plunder or outrage—and threw not only Virginia but every slaveholding State into the Ibid., Sept. 24, 1831, p. 67; Oct. 15, pp. 130, 131, Lib. 1.155, 162, 170, 174 190; 2.6. wildest excitement. Of the whites fifty-five thus perished; the blacks, quickly dispersed and hunted, yielded at least a hundred victims, of whom many were doubtless innocent. The deluded pr<
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 10: Prudence Crandall.—1833. (search)
United States for immediate emancipation was still more cheering: I did indeed feel it as a cordial to my heart, wrote James Lib. 3.7. Cropper to Arnold Buffum in August, 1832. Meantime Elliott Cresson's activity among the wealthy and philanthropic denomination of which Cropper was so admirable a representative, was practically unchecked, though his unscrupulousness had been discovered. He lost no time Clarkson's Strictures on Life of Wilberforce, and Wilberforce's letter to Clarkson, Oct. 10, 1831. after his arrival out In the summer of 1831. (See African Repository for November; also, Harriet Martineau's Autobiography, 1.149.) in visiting Wilberforce, whom he failed to convince of the practicability of transporting the blacks to Liberia; and the blind Clarkson, whom he deceived by the most outrageous fictions in regard to the emancipatory intentions and influence of the Society, and committed to a guarded approval of it in terms Lib. 3.189. which nevertheless betrayed
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 12: American Anti-slavery Society.—1833. (search)
hich his potential control of the mob naturally does not appear) reads as follows: In the course of his remarks, he gave a correct portrait of N. Y. Gazette, Oct. 3, 1833; Lib. 3.162. Garrison, whom he designated as a man who had gone through this country as far as he had dared, to promulgate his doctrines, and had also crosir-holes, marked this side up, and so shipped to Georgia. This device was afterwards found useful by fugitives coming the other way. The Commercial Advertiser Oct. 3, 1833; Lib. 3.161. confirmed this report: In regard to Wm. Lloyd Garrison, the misguided young gentleman who has just returned from England, whither he has recent be easily allayed. He will act wisely never to attempt addressing a public meeting in this country again. The Evening Post could not credit the stories of Oct. 3, 1833; Lib. 3.162. threatened violence to Mr. Garrison: The mere feeling of magnanimity towards an antagonist so feebly supported, with so few adherents, with so
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 13: Marriage.—shall the Liberator die?George Thompson.—1834. (search)
ot excepted. His appeals are absolutely electrifying. The similarity in age between Mr. Garrison and the English orator favored a friendly attachment, but there May's Recollections, p. 108, seq. were other circumstances—such as their having sprung from the middle class and been denied the higher education; above all, however, their deeply religious training and temperament—which drew them irresistibly together. Mr. Thompson's connection, too, with the W. L. G. in Boston Transcript, Oct. 14, 1878. anti-slavery cause began in the very year in which the Liberator was founded, and as agent of the London Anti-Slavery Society he preached the doctrine of immediate and unconditional emancipation throughout the kingdom, with an effectiveness which, in the judgment of such men as Brougham and John Bright, determined May's Recollections, p. 113. the success of the agitation two years afterwards, and entitled him to the name of Liberator. I have always considered Mr. Thompson as th
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 14: the Boston mob (first stage).—1835. (search)
umph of the cause of freedom. We need not try to imagine the effect of these letters (we pass over the second to Mr. Otis) on the eminent men to whom they were addressed, and who assuredly had never been publicly impeached before in such a manner. It is possible that the same ignorance of the Liberator's contents which had permitted Messrs. Sprague and Otis to libel the abolitionists, saved their dignity from being deeply wounded. To the editors of the city press, and to Boston Atlas, Oct. 22, 1835; Right and Wrong in Boston, 1836, (1) p. 57. the public at large so far as the letters could reach them at first or second hand, there was something almost sacrilegious in Mr. Garrison's censure, particularly of Otis. At the impeachment trial of Judge Prescott, April 26, 1821, Josiah Quincy, Jr., of the then graduating class at Harvard College, had on either side of him personages of no less importance than President Kirkland and Harrison Gray Otis. This was much, he remarks, si