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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 1: re-formation and Reanimation.—1841. (search)
Alden to London Committee. conducting the Massachusetts Abolitionist, who brought the most cruel anst God, and spoke of the whole phalanx of Massachusetts Ultraists, with Garrison at its head. Thi-world man, was at this epoch preaching in Massachusetts that the day of probation, preceding the mhe cause in a great number of towns in eastern Massachusetts, in Connecticut, in New Hampshire, wit sent back to slavery from the soil of old Massachusetts? --this time uttered with all the power ofat J. H. Noyes called the whole phalanx of Massachusetts Ultraists Ante, p. 11. had a conservative Middlesex, one of the largest counties in Massachusetts, yet within easy radius of Boston, the Lib spare time to lecturing and recruiting in Massachusetts and the neighboring States, delivering mors at Lib. 11.189. antislavery meetings in Massachusetts, Thus, at Hingham, Nov. 4, 1841, Edmundn the Free Amer- Lib. 11.59. ican (as the Massachusetts Abolitionist was styled, with delightful v[1 more...]
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 2: the Irish address.—1842. (search)
subject emanating from the Legislatures of Massachusetts and Vermont; and (amid immense applause) rtheir several homes, leaving the people of Massachusetts to devise such ways and means for a redres-President offered a petition from Haverhill, Mass., praying for a peaceable dissolution of the Unark of the fire of liberty. The people of Massachusetts will scorn to regard it. The soil of MassaMassachusetts shall be consecrated ground, and the victim of oppression who flies to it for shelter . . ollowed by others—from Ohio, New York, and Massachusetts again (this last, Lib. 12.38, 49, 50, 77,Maine, New Hampshire, and various parts of Massachusetts. His adventures in the Mohawk Valley and Nov. 22, 1842, amid cries of God bless old Massachusetts! (Lib. 12: 205.) Meantime, in that State,the arrest of fugitives, and to separating Massachusetts forever from all connection with slavery t1842. Add Whittier's true Northern lyric, Massachusetts to Virginia (Lib. 13: 16). The Liberator h
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 3: the covenant with death.1843. (search)
Community at Northampton, Mass. This was the third of those original experiments by which Massachusetts, as J. H. Noyes says, appears to have anticipated the advent of Fourierism, and to have prepstions with associated action, and do not apprehend that this false policy will be pushed in Massachusetts. Of this episode no detailed report remains. See Lib. 13: 19. Church and state were nfringement of the Constitution, the progress of disunion was considerable in the year 1843. Massachusetts passed, in Lib. 13.55. answer to the Latimer petition, a Personal Liberty Act forbidding juilar measure. Maine rejected it, as being tantamount Lib. 13.65. to disunion; but imitated Massachusetts in appointing an agent to protect the State's colored seamen in Southern Lib. 13.45, 50, 74ress on this subject elicited a report from the Committee on Commerce (Robert C. Winthrop of Massachusetts, chairman), affirming the unconstitutionality of the Southern laws by which colored seamen w
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 4: no union with slaveholders!1844. (search)
n's Report. We instituted a series of a Hundred Conventions in Massachusetts, In imitation of the grand double series of a Hundred Convening only his travelling expenses. He also attended our Hundred Massachusetts Conventions, so that he has had some experience in the field. himself resigned to the Ms., and Lib. 14: 125. Gov ernor of Massachusetts his commission as justice of the peace, regretting he had ever t at an end, as far as Northern rights were concerned. The State of Massachusetts had Lib. 14.202; 15.7, 26, 27. sent one of its most respecLib. 14.198. with the United States by making one directly with Massachusetts—the Fort Moultrie State against the Bunker Hill State. Calhoun, wrote Edmund Quincy to Richard Webb, that Ms. Dec. 14, 1844. Massachusetts will at last be kicked into some degree of spirit. I don't knor pluck enough for that, I fancy—the melancholy truth. Other Massachusetts citizens were equally in need and equally devoid of protection
State's foreign relations. This was the logic of the situation. So far as Massachusetts (or any free State) was concerned, South Carolina had dissolved the Union: annexation of Texas. Governor and Legislature pledged Lib. 15.6, 26, 31. Massachusetts anew to the position that annexation would have no binding force on her. Bulaw that the moment a man held as a slave in Texas stepped upon the soil of Massachusetts, his liberty should be as sacred as his life, Wilson's Rise and Fall of Slapro quo, even supposing the whole North to have taken this stand along with Massachusetts. The truth was, slavery was dragging the country down an inclined plane, a what ought to be, and what we have faith to believe will be, the course of Massachusetts, should the infamous plan be consummated. Deeming the act utterly unconsti Lib. 15.194. zeal outran their discretion as practical men. Meantime in Massachusetts a mass meeting for Lib. 15.146; Sept. 22, 1845. Middlesex County had been
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 6: third mission to England.—1846. (search)
t, Lib. 12.174. The heart refuses to convict. Beyond, a crater in each eye, Sways brown, broad-shouldered Pillsbury, Parker Pillsbury, though a native of Massachusetts, became identified by his home life and anti-slavery labors principally with New Hampshire. He succeeded to the editorship of the Herald of Freedom when N. P. which war immediately produces as a mere status, was lamentably shown by the compliance of the Whig governors Briggs Geo. N. Briggs, Wm. Slade. and Slade (of Massachusetts and Vermont respectively) with the President's request for a State call for volunteers. Lib. 16.87, 90, 91, 113. This action did not prevent the party from resent position is inaction—a perfect standstill. Lib. 16.57. Almost at a dead stand was William Goodells report of progress, speaking both for New York and for Massachusetts. In Maine the State Convention admitted that the party there merely held its own, and looked forward to certain death for the party at large if the stationary
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 7: first Western tour.—1847. (search)
Union, were the regular anti-slavery work of the year, to which was added support of the Wilmot Proviso, or the attempt in Congress Lib. 17.193. to ensure freedom to the territory certain to be acquired, by force or purchase, of Mexico. In Massachusetts, little was needed to maintain the Legislature in its attitude of Lib. 17.14, 74. aversion to the war, or to procure its endorsement of the Proviso; but to disunion it of course turned a cold Lib. 17.58. shoulder. As usual, too, Mr. Garrriend Peck, Dr., I am inclined to think, from the looks of the landlord, that our company is not desirable here. In a few minutes a person came into our room, saying that his name was Briggs—that he was the brother of the present Governor of Massachusetts—that he had taken Geo. N. Briggs. the liberty of introducing himself to us in consequence of a conversation he had just had with the landlord, who declared to him that no nigger could be allowed to sit at his table, and that if any such atte
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 8: the Anti-Sabbath Convention.—1848. (search)
t is called Sabbath desecration, they are liable either to fine or imprisonment! Cases of this kind have occurred in Massachusetts, Vermont, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, within a comparatively short period, where conscientious and upright persons have bis animated by the spirit of religious bigotry and ecclesiastical tyranny—the spirit which banished the Baptists from Massachusetts, and subjected the Quakers to imprisonment and death, in the early settlement of this country —admits of little doubterable, and is every day increasing. Lewis Cass. It seems probable, now, that there will be no choice of electors in Massachusetts, by the people, at the November election. So the event proved (Lib. 18: 182). I long to see the day when the great. Garrison's letters have just shown, the agitation was carried on during the month of July. The Conscience Whigs of Massachusetts were in revolt Lib. 18.94, 98, 102. against the action of their party at Philadelphia on June 7, when the popular he
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 9: Father Mathew.—1849. (search)
ebster and Winthrop D. Webster. R. C. Winthrop. swore should find no shelter on the soil of Massachusetts —we say that they may make their little motions, and pass their little laws, in Washington, but that Faneuil Hall Repeals them, in the name of the humanity of Massachusetts. All this, with much more, as we have said, belongs to the general historian of the cause. Our main concern must b with reference to abolition lecturers by the Congregational Associations of Connecticut and Massachusetts a decade earlier (ante, 2.130, 131, 135). True, you would not, I replied, for, in that capacHim see by de Times correspondent at New York, dat Lib. 19.158. some gentmen, members ob de Massachusetts Anti-Slabery See also. 19.177. Society, wait on Fader Mathew in Boston, and ask him to tendo for the Rights of Woman to their utmost extent, Ante, 2.204. by signing and circulating in Massachusetts the Lib. 19.46; Hist. Woman Suffrage, 3.284. earliest petitions for woman suffrage—a moveme
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)
ition? How did he resent the expulsion of Massachusetts from the Federal Ante, p. 130. courts in tion in unreal, ghostly abstractions. His Massachusetts Lib. 20.70. fellow-citizens, reluctant torm a disagreeable duty. Lib. 20.70. Would Massachusetts, he asked sardonically, conquer her own Preceived a crushing Lib. 20.182. defeat in Massachusetts. But more immediately response was made ie other Southern States just as well as in Massachusetts. Captain Rynders—Are you aware that theust denounce it. So did the Quaker poet of Massachusetts: John G. Whittier to W. L. Garrison.ew up for them an address to the clergy of Massachusetts. Lib. 20.162, 177. The short-sighted of higher-law sermons, mostly preached in Massachusetts, in Lib. 21: 46. For instance, the chancesncing fugitive slaves foreigners to us [in Massachusetts], with no right to be here, and to be repeonly to say, I bid you God-speed, women of Massachusetts and New England, in this good work! Whene[3 more...]