hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2 2 0 Browse Search
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1 1 1 Browse Search
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3 1 1 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 4 results in 3 document sections:

n, Rev. [1785-1866], church attended by G., 1.78; address against militia system, 81; criticised and praised by G., 114; visits him, 125; writes ode for his Park St. Church address, 125, 126; address on imprisonment for debt, 269; church quarrel, 454; at Chardon St. Convention, 2.425.—Portrait in Harper's Monthly, Jan., 1880. Pillsbury, Parker [b. Hamilton, Mass., Sept. 22, 1809], Acts of A. S. Apostles, 2.289. Pinckney, Henry Laurens [1794-1863], gag resolutions, 2.74, 81, 127. Pitman, Isaac, 1.330. Pitt, William [1759-1806], 1.379, 465. Plumly, —, Mr., 1.137. Plummer, Harriott, 1.330. Polk, James Knox [1795-1849], denounces British Colon. memorial, 1.303, and World's Convention memorial, 2.381. Pollard, Benjamin, 2.15. Poole, William F., 1.90. Porter, William S., Rev. 2.175. Post (Boston), accuses G. of self-mobbing, 1.386, calls Faneuil Hall meeting, 487, warns Judge Lynch away from Boston, 519. Potter, Ray, Rev., [b. Cranston, R. I., 1795; d. Pawtucket, R.
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)
tic muse, See the hopeful lyric, Ye who in bondage pine, bearing date March 20, 1833, first printed in the April number of the monthly Abolitionist (p. 64, afterwards in Lib. 3.56), and sung at the anti-slavery meeting held on the 4th of July, 1833, in Boylston Hall, Boston (Lib. 3.107). and reviving an old friendship in the pursuit of a new. Some Haverhill young ladies—schoolmates at Derry, N. H.—styling themselves Inquirers after Truth, These were Miss Harriet Minot, afterwards Mrs. Isaac Pitman, of Somerville, Mass., and a lifelong friend of Mr. Garrison; Miss Harriott Plummer, afterwards Mrs. Charles Bartlett, and mother of the distinguished Gen. William F. Bartlett, of the civil war; and Miss Elizabeth E. Parrott, afterwards Mrs. George Hughes, of Boston. had by their sympathetic letters caused a lively emotion in an always susceptible bosom; so much so that, dates considered, an incidental avowal in the Liberator of March 16—We Lib. 3.43. declare that our heart is neit<
er to devise a common language, or to provide ways and means for the universal propagation of such a language. The fancied every-day uses of the art he thus pictured in a letter to S. J. May: My attention has recently been drawn to the subject of Ms. July 17, 1845. Phonography and Phonotypy, and I want you, as a friend of universal reform, to look into it; for I am persuaded you will be delighted with it, as I have been. It is a new system of writing and printing, invented by Mr. Isaac Pitman, a teacher in Bath, England, by which the ignorant masses may be taught to read and write in an almost incredibly short space of time— compressing the labor of months into weeks, and of years into months. As a teacher and a scholar, you know how monstrous and endless are the absurdities and perplexities of English orthography, and how laborious is the ordinary mode of writing. But here is a system devised which brings order out of chaos, makes everything plain, simple, consistent, and