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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 5: shall the Liberator lead—1839. (search)
ack at Nashville, and driven from the city, in August, 1835, for having copies of anti-slavery publications among the stock of Bibles he was engaged in selling (Lib. 5.156, and Life of Lundy, p. 277). was conspicuous. From New Hampshire came Stephen S. Foster. The business committee consisted of S. J. May, E. Quincy, H. C. Wright, Lib. 9.164. W. L. Garrison, Lucretia Mott, Maria W. Chapman, Lydia Maria Child, Thankful Southwick, and Adin Ballou. A Universalist clergyman, leader at Mendon, Mass., of that wing of the denomination known as Restorationists (the same to which A. St. Clair had belonged); two years later, one of the founders of the Hopedale Community (Non-Resistant, 1:[53]; Noyes's American Socialisms, p. 120; Lib. 11.33). Effingham Capron was in the chair. Of the proceedings Lib. 9.159, 164, 176; Non-Resistant, 1:[73], [80], [81]. there is little need to say much here, further than that Mr. Garrison read the annual report—his own. The most notable immediate effect