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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 1: the Boston mob (second stage).—1835. (search)
y expressive of purity, animation, and gentleness. I did not now wonder at the citizen who, seeing a print of Garrison at a shop window without a name to it, went in and Cf. ante, 1.403. bought it, and framed it as the most saintlike of countenances. The end of the story is, that when the citizen found whose portrait he had been hanging up in his parlor, he took the print out of the frame and huddled it away. Garrison has a good deal of a Quaker air; and his speech is deliberate like a Quaker's, but gentle as a woman's. The only thing that I did not like was his excessive agitation when he came in, and his thanks to me for desiring to meet one so odious' as himself. I was, however, as I told him, nearly as odious as himself at that time; so it was fit that we should be acquainted. On mentioning afterward to his introducer my impression of something like a want of manliness in Garrison's agitation, he replied that I could not know what it was to be an object of insult and hatred
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 3: the Clerical appeal.—1837. (search)
a call for the formation of a State Anti-Slavery Society. His life was, even to observers at Lib. 7.128, 135. a distance, clearly in great peril. Still, his situation could not be fully realized by those who did not know the elements of the community in which he was endeavoring to maintain himself; and, his case excepted, there seemed a lull in violence over the whole field when Mr. Garrison wrote thus, on November 6, to Miss Elizabeth Pease, The daughter of a wealthy and philanthropic Quaker, Joseph Pease; a lady whom he had never met, and who had just introduced herself by a gift of five guineas sent through Angelina Grimke. An intimate and lifelong friendship ensued. of Darlington, England: With regard to the present state of the anti-slavery Ms. question in this country, you will be pleased to learn that the friends of the slave are daily multiplying in all parts of the non-slaveholding States; that there are now not less than twelve hundred anti-slavery societies in
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 6: the schism.—1840. (search)
or, Of Worcester, Mass. Grosvenor, together with the Rev. Nathaniel Colver, of Boston, and the Rev. Elon Galusha, of Perry, N. Y., had been deputed to attend the World's Convention by the body called the National Baptist A. S. Convention organized in New York on Apr. 28-30, 1840 (Mass. Abolitionist, 2.53). Colver was also a delegate of the Mass. Abolition Society, and Galusha of the American and Foreign A. S. Society (ibid., 2.111, and Lib. 10.118). William Adams, A most worthy Scotch Quaker, from Pawtucket, a Rhode Island delegate (see Lib. 10.165). C. L. Remond, and Rogers, will go with me. . . . You shall hear from me again in a day or two. New York, May 19, 1840. Ms. To-day, at 12 o'clock, was the time advertised for the sailing of the Columbus. The wind, however, is dead ahead, so that the packet will not sail until to-morrow, and perhaps not till the day after, should the wind not haul round. This delay renders it more than probable that we shall not arrive in seas
er Hall meeting, 377, goes to Ireland, 378; accuses G. of vilifying America, 380; failure, 510; return to U. S., 416; his Quaker views and G.'s, 2.158; opposes rebuilding Penn. Hall, 218; brother-inlaw of Rev. Dickey, 249. Crewdson, W. D., 2.368.1, 404, 411, 414, 416, 431. Pease, Joseph, of Feethams, [b. Darlington, Eng., Jan. 28, 1772; d. there, Mar. 16, 1846], Quaker abolitionist, 2.183, member Brit. India Com., 372.—Letters from G., 2.391, 393. Peel, Robert [1788-1850], 1.354; oppo. Rush, Benjamin [1745-1813], 1.89. Russell, Philemon R., Rev., 2.427. Sabbath, G.'s strict views on, 1.84, 114; his Quaker views, 2.110-114, 176, 178, 431; his observance of, 175; Chardon St. Convention to discuss, 421-431. Sabin, —, Mr. (ofrs. Philbrick, 2.160. Southwick, Joseph [b. South Danvers, Mass., Sept. 11, 1791; d. Grantville, Mass., May 10, 1866], Quaker, 1.397; descent, 2.46; delegate to Nat. A. S. Convention, 1.397; hospitality to Thompson, 2.46, and G., 47, 48, 69; at Mr