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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 13: Marriage.—shall the Liberator die?George Thompson.—1834. (search)
pted resolutions, framed by three of the foremost citizens of Lowell, Including John P. Robinson and Thomas (afterwards Judge) Hopkinson, leading lawyers. From the latter's office Wendell Phillips had lately gone to be admitted to the bar at Concord. Mass. (Crowley's Lowell, p. 119). embodying the sense of the placard, though condescending to deplore the existence of slavery as a blot on the reputation of our otherwise free country. In Boston, after this, no other hall could be found fouture (Ms. fragment, 185–, Geo. Thompson to W. L. G.) for several weeks, he took permanent lodgings in Roxbury not far away, where the premature confinement of his wife gave him time to reflect on the superior patriotism of Lowell, Augusta, and Concord, as contrasted with the un-American cordiality manifested towards him at Portland, Brunswick, Providence, and elsewhere. Kindred thoughts were also suggested by the press abuse of himself as reproduced in the Liberator's new department, The Ref
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 14: the Boston mob (first stage).—1835. (search)
ow the force of this ignorance and prejudice even in the most enlightened and unbigoted and humanitarian circles. At Concord, Mass., on his Middlesex County lecturing tour, Charles C. Burleigh A native of Plainfield, Conn., born in 1810, and one le courage. Our brother Thompson had a narrow escape from the mob Lib. 5.157; Kennedy's J. G. Whittier, p. 112. at Concord, and Whittier was pelted with mud and stones, but he escaped bodily damage. His soul, being intangible, laughed at the L. G. On the same day he wrote to Henry Benson, with Ms. Sept. 12, 1835. reference to the mobbing of Thompson at Concord: These things cannot last long, but while they do last, we had better not attempt to lecture. I think our first public religion, which I believe he humbly but deeply enjoys. You would have been delighted to have shared our adventures in Concord (??) on the memorable night of the 4th inst. The mirthful and the melancholy were so strangely and equally blended throu