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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3 10 0 Browse Search
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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 4: no union with slaveholders!1844. (search)
son. Franklin, N. H., Sept. 26, 1844. Ms. You may not be aware of the fact that we are trying to upturn some of the hard soil of New Hampshire. Douglass, Pillsbury, F. Douglass, P. Pillsbury, S. S. Foster, John M. Spear, C. L. Remond, W. A. White. Foster, Spear, Jane E. Hitchcock of Oneida, N. Y., and myself are in the fie stop if it be not in their hands. . . . Foster had an excellent plan which might have been carried into effect, had it not been for the explosion. It was, that Pillsbury should be Editor, and Rogers Corresponding Editor, to furnish just as much editorial as he pleased, while Pillsbury provided the rest of the matter. All that R.Pillsbury provided the rest of the matter. All that R. and F. say about this Rogers; French. movement being made by the N. H. Board, or encouraged by us, for the purpose of turning them out, is most preposterously unfounded. No such idea was in anybody's mind any more than of ousting Garrison. So was the idea that we wanted to be rid of him on account of his No-Organization notio
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 7: first Western tour.—1847. (search)
c. Milo is one of the truest reformers in the land, and wields a potent reformatory pen, but his organ of hope is not quite large enough. There seems to be no branch of reform to which he has not given some attention. New Brighton is a small village of eight hundred inhabitants, but there are several other villages in its immediate neighborhood. There have been a good many lectures on slavery given in it by our leading anti-slavery lecturers such as Stephen and A. K. Foster, Burleigh, Pillsbury, Douglass, etc.; but the people C. C. Burleigh, P. Pillsbury. generally remain incorrigible. The secret is, they are much priest-ridden—thus confirming afresh the assertion of the prophet, like people, like priest. The Hicksite Quakers Hosea 4.9. have a meeting-house here, but they are generally pro-slavery in spirit. No place could be obtained for our meeting excepting the upper room of a large store, which was crowded to excess, afternoon and evening, several hundred persons being p
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 19: John Brown.—1859. (search)
whose labors in the field had acquainted them with the lack of anti-slavery vitality in Republican communities, and subjected them to the abuse of Republican journals, Cf. ante, pp. 393, 394. denounced the party as the greatest obstacle in the path of the slave. In their endeavors to commit the Lib. 29.17. antislavery organization to this doctrine, they encountered the optimism and fair-mindedness of Mr. Garrison, in MSS. Mar. 24, 1859, P. Pillsbury to S. May, Jr.; June 3, W. L. G. to Pillsbury; July 22, 25, to A. K. Foster. discussions that led to no little personal feeling and alienation, which time would make more visible. As to the Republican Party, said he, at the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, every political party will be proportionate to the character of the people. This one, he continued, not mincing his words, is a time-serving, a temporizing, a cowardly party, . . . a piebald, a heterogeneous party, very diverse in the constituents which co