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Rhode Island (Rhode Island, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
arriving at a clear judgment of the issue raised in New Hampshire; We were much pleased to find, wrote Quincy to R. D. Webb, on Jan. 30, 1845, that you agreed so entirely with us about the Rogers business. Your idea of French and his having behaved like spoiled children is exactly correct (Ms.). Webb, the writer goes on to note, had formed his opinion from the printed controversy before Quincy's private version reached him. Cf. Lib. 17: 1. but not so a portion of the abolitionists (in Rhode Island particularly) whose personal attachment to Lib. 14.207. Rogers was very warm. These not even the refusal of French to print in the Herald the overwhelmingly adverse Lib. 14.199. decision of the Society, nor his abrupt discontinuance of Lib. 14.199. the paper and refusal to surrender the subscription lists, following Leavitt's Emancipator example, could disenchant. A new schism resulted, of limited extent though marked by bitter feeling, and was fostered by the New-Organization and L
United States (United States) (search for this): chapter 4
was found insufficient, the People of the United States' it was who assented to, ratified, and est most important point. The People of the United States, by a Sovereign Right, under God, established this Constitution; the People of the United States, by the same Sovereign Right, having foun. . . In demanding that the People of the United States' be faithful to their professed principlesib. 14.86. Freedom and Emancipation in the United States. This document, signed by Mr. Garrison asnstitution was formed by the people of the United States in order to establish justice, to promote e instantly been proclaimed throughout the United States. The words, secure the blessings of liberhe present Lib. 14: 87. government of the United States, let time determine. It would be a waste very novel, by the future historian of the United States; the sub-title being The White Slave. It They alone of the entire population of the United States had washed their hands of slavery, histori[5 more...]
Oneida (N. Y.) (New York, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
to curtail their labors in the field till after the election. In New Hampshire it was otherwise, but there an obstacle was encountered domestic to the abolition ranks. Abby Kelley to W. L. Garrison. Franklin, N. H., Sept. 26, 1844. Ms. You may not be aware of the fact that we are trying to upturn some of the hard soil of New Hampshire. Douglass, Pillsbury, F. Douglass, P. Pillsbury, S. S. Foster, John M. Spear, C. L. Remond, W. A. White. Foster, Spear, Jane E. Hitchcock of Oneida, N. Y., and myself are in the field, and Remond and, perhaps, White will soon be here. The State has been most wofully neglected for some two years past, and this, with no-organization, has well nigh hedged up our way to immediate great usefulness. Bro. Rogers gives N. P. Rogers. no word of cheer, blows no bugle rallying-cry for the efforts now being put forth. He cannot, with his views of carrying Ante, p. 23. forward reforms. He don't like this coming forth as agents from a Board or Exe
Concord, N. H. (New Hampshire, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
, Nov. 19, 1844. Ms. dear Garrison: The air here so tends to revive me, they will not consent I should return yet to Concord. I hope this will reach you in season to prevent your riding there in expectation of meeting me. I wanted to see you murom your hand. You could not intend it. But I cannot remark upon it. I only write to apprise you of my not returning to Concord. I am still very ill, but able to go out. Your affectionate friend, N. P. Rogers. Edmund Quincy to R. D. Webb. ly, I fear. We shall soon know, for to-day he comes. N. P. Rogers to Elizabeth Pease. Ms. begun Apr. 4, 1844, in Concord, N. H., resumed July 25, and finished in Boston. Fragmentary. W. Phillips. Here a break-off again, and it is now Dec. 23,d. The State of Massachusetts had Lib. 14.202; 15.7, 26, 27. sent one of its most respectable citizens, Samuel Hoar of Concord, a lawyer and ex-Congressman, to Charleston, to test in the Federal courts the validity of the South Lib. 15.7; ante, p
Plymouth, N. H. (New Hampshire, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
be necessary. It may be you cannot control it, but I beg that all your influence be given to [that end]. I have urged our noble friend G. to go up [as] soon as possible, Garrison. and I hope he will,—and so has Quincy, Phillips, Mrs. Chapman, and others,—to see all, hear all, and, if it be possible, settle all. We all intend to go up to the convention this month, when I most sincerely trust you will be well, and the Herald difficulty settled. N. P. Rogers to W. L. Garrison. Plymouth [N. H.], Nov. 19, 1844. Ms. dear Garrison: The air here so tends to revive me, they will not consent I should return yet to Concord. I hope this will reach you in season to prevent your riding there in expectation of meeting me. I wanted to see you much. Your article Ante, p. 122. on the attack of Foster, dear G., will have the effect to terminate the publishing of the Herald of Freedom. Poor John has had his J. R. French. hands full to worry along with it thus far. This will cripple h
Quincy (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
nal Committee of the Society. The British friends of the cause had no difficulty in Lib. 15.66, 98. arriving at a clear judgment of the issue raised in New Hampshire; We were much pleased to find, wrote Quincy to R. D. Webb, on Jan. 30, 1845, that you agreed so entirely with us about the Rogers business. Your idea of French and his having behaved like spoiled children is exactly correct (Ms.). Webb, the writer goes on to note, had formed his opinion from the printed controversy before Quincy's private version reached him. Cf. Lib. 17: 1. but not so a portion of the abolitionists (in Rhode Island particularly) whose personal attachment to Lib. 14.207. Rogers was very warm. These not even the refusal of French to print in the Herald the overwhelmingly adverse Lib. 14.199. decision of the Society, nor his abrupt discontinuance of Lib. 14.199. the paper and refusal to surrender the subscription lists, following Leavitt's Emancipator example, could disenchant. A new schism res
Pittsfield (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
lored man entering the State from another State, and asked, why, then, might not every free State imprison every incoming native of a slaveholding State (Lib. 12: 177). He reached Charleston on Nov. 28, 1844; his colleague, Henry Hubbard of Pittsfield, Mass., delegated to Louisiana, arrived in New Orleans Dec. 1, and was likewise expelled, but less fiercely (Smith's History of Pittsfield, p. 405; and Lib. 15: 2, 9, 14, 17, 25). See the law enacted by the South Carolina Legislature to prevent thPittsfield, p. 405; and Lib. 15: 2, 9, 14, 17, 25). See the law enacted by the South Carolina Legislature to prevent the recurrence of like missions: An Act to provide for the punishment of persons disturbing the peace of this State, in relation to slaves and free persons of color (Lib. 15: 14; 18: 65), and a similar one by Louisiana (Lib. 15: 17, 25). But slavery has n't left her pluck enough for that, I fancy—the melancholy truth. Other Massachusetts citizens were equally in need and equally devoid of protection at this moment. There was Lib. 14.147. honest Jonathan Walker of Harwich, sea-captain, caught
Dedham (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
full to worry along with it thus far. This will cripple him. His supplies will cease, and the paper stop. I regret it less than I should once, so far as I am concerned. It will be a relief to him, but cruelly furnished. I am sorry it comes from your hand. You could not intend it. But I cannot remark upon it. I only write to apprise you of my not returning to Concord. I am still very ill, but able to go out. Your affectionate friend, N. P. Rogers. Edmund Quincy to R. D. Webb. Dedham, Dec. 14, 1844. Ms. You will receive by this packet the public accounts of the sad business of the Herald of Freedom, and of the strange conduct of our friend Rogers. . . . We have watched this business from the beginning with deep interest and apprehension, but abstained from noticing it or in any wise interfering until it became absolutely unavoidable. There was an important antislavery instrumentality, of no great money value in the market, to be sure, but of inestimable value as a
Galveston (Texas, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
se the same prison had once held himself. He professed his Ante, 1.174. readiness to espouse his [Torrey's] cause as though he were my bosom friend, Lib. 14.119. helping pecuniarily with his mite, and by arousing public sympathy and indignation. He Lib. 14.126. was as good as his word. On August 19, 1844, Torrey wrote from Baltimore jail to Elias Smith, A former Methodist minister, at this time an anti-slavery lecturer, and very intimate with Mr. Garrison, to whom he wrote from Galveston, Texas, July 13, 1866, apropos of the fund then being raised for the latter's support: My dear old friend, I have nothing to give, but I have the memory of obligations for kindnesses received at your hands which, if I had thousands, I could scarcely repay. When an exile from my home, more than twentythree years ago, and living temporarily in Cambridgeport, you were a friend and brother most precious. You sympathized in my misfortunes and poverty; and, later, in Boston, you sheltered my littl
Annapolis (Maryland, United States) (search for this): chapter 4
Bahama Islands; taken back in irons to Pensacola and there jailed, chained to a ringbolt for fifteen days; afterwards put in the pillory for an hour, and pelted with rotten eggs; finally, by order of a Federal court, branded on the right hand with S. S. Lib. 15.115, 132. for slave-stealer—lucky to escape at length with his life. There was also the Rev. Charles T. Torrey, who, two years before, being a newspaper correspondent in Washington, had exercised his Constitutional right to visit Annapolis to report a slaveholders' convention, was Jan. 12, 1842; Life of Torrey, pp. 91-104; Lib. 12.10, 14. recognized, nearly lynched, and, upon his room at the tavern being searched, arrested for his temporary security, but on trial was released on bail. This treatment led him to engage in several hazardous attempts to run slaves off from the border States, and in June, 1844, he was again Life of Torrey, p. 126; Lib. 14.107, 119. in a Maryland jail—this time in Baltimore—on a charge that shu<
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