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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)
bers, leaking from stem to stern, laboring heavily on a storm-tossed sea, surrounded by clouds of disastrous portent, navigated by those whose object is a piratical one (namely, the extension and perpetuity of slavery), and destined to go down, full many a fathom deep, to the joy and exultation of all who are yearning for the deliverance of a groaning world.Zzz He had also drawn hostile attention to himself by a letter Lib. 20.6, 21, 25. to the mass convention of abolitionists held at Syracuse, N. Y., on January 15, of which the closing sentence read: I am for the abolition of slavery, therefore for the dissolution of the Union. Later, he drafted for himself and others a protest against the summary disposal of disunion Lib. 20.26, 30. petitions by the Massachusetts Legislature, alleging: (3.) That while your petitioners are subjected, by the Lib. 20.30. Constitution and laws of the United States, and therefore of this Commonwealth, to heavy fines for obeying the law of God,
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 11: George Thompson, M. P.—1851. (search)
in Massachusetts and New York State, and enjoyed such genial social intercourse as all the circumstances of an inspiriting time, the hospitality of abolitionists like Bourne Spooner of Plymouth, John T. Sargent of Boston, or Samuel J. May of Syracuse, N. Y., the companionship of wits like Quincy and Phillips and the Westons, and the fusion of noble and charming elements effected by the annual Anti-Slavery Bazaar, fostered in an ever memorable degree. Two occasions of this sort in particular stivil war. The other three were the rendition of Thomas Sims, the Christiana (Pa.) armed encounter, in which a slaveholder and his son were slain (Lib. 21: 151, 155, 158, 161, 163, 169, 175, [182], 193, 202; 22: 5), and the Jerry rescue at Syracuse, N. Y. The war—or, more properly, then as in 1861, the pro-slavery invasion—in fact began with the execution of the law, as was first made clear when, on February Lib. 21.30. 15, 1851, pending a postponement of Shadrach's case before Commissioner