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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 1: no union with non-slaveholders!1861. (search)
e South towards Lib. 30.186, 189, 190. secession,—earnestly advocated the repeal of the law. They were reenforced by an address to the people of the Lib. 30.205. State signed by the weightiest members of the legal profession, as Judge Lemuel Shaw, ex-Judge Benjamin R. Curtis, Joel Parker, Sidney Bartlett, Theophilus Parsons, and by equally shining lights in the world of scholarship and letters, as George Ticknor, Jared Sparks, and the Rev. James Walker, President of Harvard College, by George Peabody, the Rev. George Putnam, ex-Governors Henry J. Gardner and Emory Washburn, and some thirty others, representing all parties. These citizens were moved (in the immoral jargon of that day) by a sense of responsibility to God for the preservation and transmission of the priceless blessings of civil liberty and public order which his providence has bestowed upon us. They would repeal the Personal Liberty Law from their love of right, their sense of the sacredness of compacts. To their aid
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 9: Journalist at large.—1868-1876. (search)
P. Gulliver, who had accused the Boston Abolitionists of dividing their denunciations equally between Southern slavery and evangelical Christianity; Mr. [George] Peabody and the South (Ind. Aug. 19, 1869), elicited by Mr. Peabody's expressing his cordial esteem for the high honor, integrity, and heroism of the Southern people, andMr. Peabody's expressing his cordial esteem for the high honor, integrity, and heroism of the Southern people, and Honored beyond his Deserts [George Peabody] (Ind. Feb. 10, 1870); Mistaking the Product for the Germinating Power (Ind. Oct. 9, 1873), in reply to an assertion that the anti-slavery agitators made little impression upon the public mind; False and Invidious Comparisons, by Revs. F. H. Hedge and E. E. Hale, at the Memorial Service tGeorge Peabody] (Ind. Feb. 10, 1870); Mistaking the Product for the Germinating Power (Ind. Oct. 9, 1873), in reply to an assertion that the anti-slavery agitators made little impression upon the public mind; False and Invidious Comparisons, by Revs. F. H. Hedge and E. E. Hale, at the Memorial Service to Dr. S. G. Howe (Boston Journal, Feb. 10, 1876, signed Fiat Justitia); Reply to W. H. Ward's aspersions of W. L. G. and the abolitionists in a eulogistic sketch of Joshua Leavitt (Ind. Nov. 17, 1870). His best contribution of this nature was a letter addressed to the Boston Journal on the Mar. 20, 1874. gross conduct of the Mass