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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3 10 0 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 4 0 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2 2 0 Browse Search
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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3, Chapter 36: first session in Congress.—welcome to Kossuth.—public lands in the West.—the Fugitive Slave Law.—1851-1852. (search)
glance out of the window, and then at the gate, I almost expect to see you with one foot on the stone step and one hand on the fence holding final discourse with Worcester. Author of the Dictionary of the English Language,—a neighbor of Longfellow, and a good friend of Sumner. In New York Sumner made a few calls, among them ving letters from Caleb Cushing, N. P. Banks, Jr., Samuel E. Sewall, John Pierpont, Rev. Hubbard Winslow, Rev. Leonard Woods, Edward Austin, Samuel h. Walley, J. E. Worcester, George Livermore; and among letters from citizens of other States may be named those from Theodore Sedgwick and John Jay of New York, Timothy Walker of Cincirior to speeches conspicuous for violent language, and entitling it to a permanent place in the future discussion of the slavery question in all its aspects. J. E. Worcester, author of the Dictionary, wrote with admiration of its ability and excellent spirit. William C. Bryant said it was the only thing which preserved the charac
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3, Chapter 37: the national election of 1852.—the Massachusetts constitutional convention.—final defeat of the coalition.— 1852-1853. (search)
o beyond the point in which Democrats and Free Soilers were agreed, he would not forego the opportunity to make new converts to his doctrine that freedom is national, and slavery sectional, which at the outset he affirmed with an appeal to patriotism and the moral sense. His speech lasted two hours and a half, sometimes exceeding that limit, and was everywhere listened to by most attentive audiences crowding the halls to their utmost capacity, and numbering in cities like New Bedford and Worcester two thousand persons, and in Boston considerably more. Robert Carter's letter, published in the New York Evening Post, November 15, said: Mr. Sumner has perhaps reached more men than any other speaker, having spoken seventeen or eighteen times to audiences averaging at least twelve hundred. He has advantages as an orator over any other public speaker in the State, and his speech on the Constitution is the ablest I have ever heard him deliver. The Springfield Republican, October 31, no
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3, Chapter 39: the debate on Toucey's bill.—vindication of the antislavery enterprise.—first visit to the West.—defence of foreign-born citizens.—1854-1855. (search)
until the election, our cause and our candidates will surely triumph. Late in the canvass Sumner spoke at nine important places,— first at Fall River, where his audience was two thousand; the next evening at New Bedford; and November 2 at Faneuil Hall. Other places where he spoke were Springfield, Worcester, Fitchburg, Lynn, Lowell, and Salem. At Springfield The Boston Telegraph, October 29, gives extracts from newspapers showing Sumner's success at New Bedford, Springfield, and Worcester. The local paper at Lowell gave a similar description. he spoke in the largest hall of the city, which was crowded to its full capacity, with several hundred seeking admission without avail. The Springfield Republican, hitherto not partial in his favor, wrote, October 27:— The outbursts of applause by which Mr. Sumner was frequently interrupted told the irrepressible enthusiasm of the audience, and their hearty indorsement of the sentiments of the speaker; and we may say without ex
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2, Index of names of persons. (search)
83, 567 Woods, H. L. R., 158 Woods, S. F., 3d Battalion Mass. Rifiemen, 375 Woods, S. F., 34th Mass. Inf., 375 Woodsum, W. P., 375 Woodward, C. J., 375 Woodward, C. M., 375 Woodward, D. M., 233 Woodward, E. P., 375 Woodward, E. T., 497, 569 Woodward, G. M., 375 Woodward, Lyman, 375 Woodward, P. G., 375 Woodward, S. E., 455, 567 Woodworth, C. L., 395 Woodworth, J. C., 375 Woolsey, C. W., 483, 567 Worcester, David, 483 Worcester, G. F., 375, 568 Worcester, G. S., 233 Worcester, J. E., 585 Worcester, L. R., 375 Worcester, Thomas, 585 Worcester, W. E. C., 234 Work, J. W., 576 Worth, Jethro, 158 Worthley, J. C., 375 Wright, A. C., 375 Wright, A. J., Jr., 158 Wright, A. R., 375 Wright, B. F., 375 Wright, Daniel, 375 Wright, Edward, 455, 483, 568 Wright, Emory, 158 Wright, F. C., 375 Wright, G. M., 455 Wright, H. C., 158 Wright, J. H., 158 Wright, J. W. B., 375 Wright, Jesse, 158 Wright, L. P., 234 Wright, M. B., 483 Wright, T. S., 35th Mass. Inf
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Chapter 10: Craigie House (search)
e, apothecary-general of the northern department of the Revolutionary army, who made additions to the house, which was described as a princely establishment A history of this house from original documents was prepared by Samuel S. Green, of Worcester, and was read by him before the American Antiquarian Society, April 25, 1900, and published in their documents. Mr. Craigie sometimes entertained a hundred guests at the Commencement festival, and had among his other guests the celebrated Talleue, except that it includes Outre-Mer, No. 1, doubtless the same copy which he saw lying on the sideboard. Mr. J. E. Worcester, the lexicographer, shared the house with Longfellow, as did for a time Miss Sally Lowell, an aunt of the poet. Mr. Worcester bought it for himself, and ultimately sold it to Mr. Nathan Appleton, father of the second Mrs. Longfellow, to whom he presented it. Part of the ten magnificent elms of which Longfellow wrote in 1839 have disappeared. The ground has been imp