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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)
ery sign. He was chairman, too, of the pro-slavery meeting in Faneuil Hall, at which Washington was cheered for being a slave-Holder! . . . The conduct of Mayor Lyman on this occasion has now been honestly set forth. It was promptly arraigned in the Liberator by the Rev. Henry C. Wright, Under the signature Hancock. Mr. Wright was not satisfied with one norm de guerre: Law, Wickliffe, Cato, Justice, are others which he employed at this time in the Liberator. He was a native of Sharon, Conn. (1797), who turned from hat-making to the ministry, studying at Andover from 1819 to 1823, and being licensed to preach in the latter year. He was settled till 1833 at West Newbury, Mass. He joined the New England A. S. Society in May, 1835, and first met Mr. Garrison on Nov. 6, 1835. See his Autobiography. and Lib. 5.182. defended by Samuel E. Sewall (An Abolitionist) and Lib. 5.186. Another Abolitionist. It was reconsidered at great Lib. 5.190. length, and again condemned, by Mr
16; on mismanagement of Mass. Abolition Society, 318; at Albany Convention, 342; translates Lafontaine, 168; remarks on G.'s death, 1.298; Life of M. Holley, 2.316.—Letters to G., 1.434, 2.162, 168, 178, A. A. Phelps, 2.69, 0. Johnson, 2.310, 318, H. B. Stanton, 2.316; from T. F. Buxton, 1.425, H. B. Stanton, 2.314. Wright, Frances, career, 2.142; effect on L. Beecher, 109; G. declared a disciple, 249.— Portrait in Stanton's Hist. Woman Suffrage, vol. 1. Wright, Henry Clarke [b. Sharon, Ct., Aug. 29, 1797; d. Pawtucket, R. I., Aug. 16, 1870], career, 2.30, tribute from G., 54; censures Mayor Lyman, 30, 51; desired for Board of Managers by G., 85; on G.'s fondness for children, 115; on family government, 143; censured by Andover Appeal, 141, by religious press, 150, dismissed by N. Y. Exec. Com., 159, 326, and disclaimed, 161; in Philadelphia with G., 211, 212, 217; calls Peace Convention, 222, preparation, 223, 224, radicalism obnoxious, 226, put on committee, 227, 228, spe