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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3 38 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3. You can also browse the collection for Nathaniel A. S. Standard or search for Nathaniel A. S. Standard in all documents.

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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 10: the Rynders Mob.—1850. (search)
ald singled out the Liberator, for its Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.198; Lib. 20.77. immediate abolitioe and his Club broke up an anti-Wilmot Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.20. Proviso meeting in New York—a sfelt to have turned the current of the Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.199. meeting. Up rose, as per agreeort of by his own set, whom Mr. Ibid.; Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.199. Garrison had to call to order.ow you can speak, said he to Douglass; Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.202; N. Y. Herald, May 8, 1850. butour throats for us. No, was the quick Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.207. response, but we would cut you, too, and it is the highest praise to Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.199. record that his unpremeditatedrom curbing or preventing the mob, the Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.203. Aldermen even passed resolves roked his beard. Mr.Lib. 20:[78], 106; Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.202. Phillips's irreproachable appe throughout the North, even by enemies Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.201. of the abolitionists, that no [6 more...]
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 14: the Nebraska Bill.—1854. (search)
ough their reporter, I gave my manuscript entire to be published in that widely circulated daily; and the next morning it was published entire in that paper, occupying Feb. 15, 1854. more than four columns of the smallest type. Was not that marvellous, as a work of dispatch, and as a sign of the times? The Executive Committee of the A. S. Society purchased five hundred copies of the Times for distribution. The address is to be published in the Standard, and they have ordered five Nat. A. S. Standard. hundred copies of that paper. Finally, they will print it in a small tract, and so I shall have delivered it to a large number of people, in spite of the bad weather. It seemed to give great satisfaction universally. . . . Yesterday, . . . early in the afternoon, I had to go over to Jersey City and take the cars for Paterson, to fulfil my N. J. appointment for that evening. The weather was even more unpropitious than the previous evening, and I thought the meeting must inevit
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 15: the Personal Liberty Law.—1855. (search)
(Speech of Abraham Lincoln at Springfield, Ill., June 17, 1858, upon being made Republican candidate for the Senate of the United States. Arnold's Lincoln and slavery, p. 114). Now, it fell on deaf ears. Worthy of mention is the speech which accompanied the Lib. 25.82. above resolutions—logical and orderly, and fortified at every step with documentary evidence. On August 1, near Jamaica, Long Island, Mr. Garrison spoke again, at the celebration of the day by the New York City Nat. A. S. Standard, Aug. 11, 1855, p. 2. AntiSlavery Society. A most competent judge shall testify to the weight of his remarks on this occasion, in the following letter (a translation by the hand of the recipient): Nicholas Tourgueneff A kinsman of the celebrated novelist; an exile on the false charge of connection with the December conspiracy on the accession of Nicholas to the throne in 1825, but equally obnoxious to that despot because of his antislavery views and action; author of La Ru
nciple of the disunion position, with this admission: As against Buchanan and Fillmore, it seems to us, the sympathies and best wishes of every enlightened friend of freedom must be on the side of Fremont; so that if there were no moral barrier to our voting, and we had a million votes to bestow, we should cast them all for the Republican candidate. Returning to the subject in a later issue, he said: What, then, is our duty as abolitionists in the present crisis? Lib. 26.166; Nat. A. S. Standard, Oct. 25, 1856, p. 2. First—what it is not. It is not to abandon our principles, for they are immutable and eternal. It is not to lessen our demands, for they are just and right. It is not to lose sight of, or postpone to a more favorable period, the glorious object we have ever had in view, —to wit, the total and immediate extinction of slavery,—for this would be fatuity. It is not to substitute the non-extension for the abolition of slavery, for this would be to wrestle wi<