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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 5: shall the Liberator lead—1839. (search)
e? The anti-third-party sentiment in Ohio, the scene of the coming convention, was in accord with that of Lewis Tappan and the Massachusetts Board. Our object, protested the Western Reserve Anti-Slavery Convention, in an address on the subject of political action, is not Lib. 9.173. the formation of a distinct political party. Such a design we now disclaim, as we have always disclaimed it. We repudiate the name of party. At the southern extremity of the State, Gamaliel Bailey, in his Philan- Lib. 9.193. thropist, took the same ground, furnishing fresh reasons in addition to those already advanced by Mr. Garrison. The new party, while a minority, could offer no political rewards, and therefore would have to rely upon moral means. But why, he asked, not continue to do so in the old way? And again, touching the marrow of the question, a political party, he said, would necessarily be Lib. 9.205. on a narrower basis than Anti-slavery, which is against slavery everywhere, wherea