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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 1: no union with non-slaveholders!1861. (search)
uite sure of a mobocratic outbreak at our annual meeting on Thursday and Friday Jan. 24, 25. next; and, though some of us may be exposed to personal violence, PhillFestival at Music Hall, on Wednesday evening, remains to be seen. But all will Jan. 23. work well in the end. Phillips is to speak at the Music Hall to-morrow forenoon, Jan. 20. before Mr. Parker's congregation, and another violent demonstration is anticipated. Mayor Wightman refuses to order the police to be present to pp. 85). Andrew G. Curtin, the Mss. E. W. Capron and E. H. Irish to J. M. McKim, Jan. 29, 30, 1861. Republican Governor of Pennsylvania, urged the Republican legisla editorial in criticism of Mr. Seward's compromise speech in the Senate. After Jan. 12. referring to the significance attached to it, on account of Mr. Seward's potar of the West. lawful errand, compelling her to flee in disgrace and to avoid Jan. 9, 1861. certain destruction—treason and traitors everywhere, in every slave St
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 2: the hour and the man.—1862. (search)
ssive friends of Pennsylvania. He discusses the duty of abolitionists and non-resistants in face of the draft for troops. He welcomes, but with misgivings, Lincoln's preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, recognizes the need of continuing the American Anti-slavery Society, and strives to keep the Liberator alive by raising its price. Early in the new year Mr. Garrison yielded to the urgent solicitation of friends in New York, and delivered a lecture, at Cooper Institute in that city, on Jan. 14. The Abolitionists and their Relations to the War, which subsequently received a wide circulation in pamphlet form. The pulpit and Rostrum, Nos. 26 and 27 (double number), containing the above-named lecture, a pro-slavery speech in the U. S. Senate (Jan. 23, 1862) by Garrett Davis of Kentucky, and Alexander H. Stephens's speech (March 21, 1861) declaring African slavery the corner-stone of the Southern Confederacy. New York, 1862 (Lib. 32: 39). In this he vindicated the motives and
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 3: the Proclamation.—1863. (search)
rder States. This duty was set forth in the resolutions relative to the Proclamation which were adopted by the Executive Jan. 13. Committee of the American Anti-Slavery Society, and in those Lib. 33.10. passed by the Massachusetts Society at its January Jan. 29. meeting, all of which were drafted by Garrison. Congress was also urged, in one of the resolutions, to establish a Freedmen's Bureau, for the special purpose of guarding the rights and interests of the liberated bondmen, providie women of England is exciting great interest, and cannot fail to do much good. It was published by Sampson Low & Co. on Jan. 7, 1863. Wednesday, in the form of a small volume; and it has since been reprinted entire in the columns of the Morning Sich these journals take in the good work. It could not have appeared at a more favorable moment, for on Tuesday last the Jan. 6, 1863. Times, with a maniacal folly, which is often linked with malignity, published an article pleading Biblical sanct
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 4: the reelection of Lincoln.—1864. (search)
lovingkindness; and I considered her the most equable and affectionate of them all. . . . How cheerful and bright she was at our meetings in Philadelphia, and how much she enjoyed them (Ms. Jan. 5, 1864, to W. L. G.). The physical strain put on Mr. Garrison in the first moments of his wife's helplessness temporarily disabled him also; but he was able, in the latter part of January, to attend the Anti-Slavery Subscription Festival, and the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Jan. 27, 28, 1864. Society. At this meeting Mr. Phillips made an elaborate speech on the danger of a premature reconstruction of the seceded States, and the importance of demanding the political enfranchisement of the freedmen in any scheme that might be devised, as the only means of preventing the enactment of apprenticeship or other oppressive laws by their late masters. His text was a resolution, introduced by himself, in these terms: That, in our opinion, the Government, in its haste, i
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 5: the Jubilee.—1865. (search)
sination. Swiftly following the example of Maryland, Missouri joined the ranks of the free States at the beginning of the new year, and abolished slavery within Jan. 11. her borders without a day of grace or a cent of compensation to the slave-masters. The new Constitution was adopted in State Convention without submission t in N. Y. Tribune, Nov. 4, 1883). An order of General Sherman, assigning the abandoned W. T. Sherman. lands in the Sea Islands for settlement by the freedmen, Jan. 16, 1865. having occasioned some misapprehension and adverse Lib. 35.24. comment, the Secretary of War deemed it advisable to write to Mr. Garrison personally conappointed to do, under the stars and stripes, in broad daylight, by wholesale, what Virginia murdered Brown for trying to do in detail. Speech of Wendell Phillips, Jan. 28, 1864. There was the case of an indignant Union General who directed a brutal slave-owner Lib. 34.22. to be tied up and flogged by the slave women whom he Bri
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 6: end of the Liberator.1865. (search)
he continuance of the Anti-slavery organization and propaganda, culminates in an utter disagreement between Garrison and Phillips and their respective supporters. The American Anti-slavery Society follows Phillips, and Garrison withdraws from it. A lecturing tour to the Mississippi enables him to sustain the Liberator till the close of the thirty-fifth volume, when he pens his valedictory, and terminates his career as an in-dependent journalist. The debates at the January meetings of the Jan. 26, 27, 1865. Massachusetts Society in Boston had turned almost wholly upon the question of reconstruction and negro suffrage; Mr. Phillips vigorously opposing the readmission of Louisiana or any other of the seceded States with the word white in their constitutions, and declaring that no emancipation can be effectual, and no freedom real, unless the negro has the ballot and the States are prohibited from enacting laws making any distinction among their citizens on account of race or color.
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 7: the National Testimonial.—1866. (search)
of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society (which had also been the subscription-office of the Liberator) was continued, he went to it almost daily, as of old. The Society itself voted, at the January meeting, by a majority of three to one, not to Jan. 24, 25. disband, after a debate in which the argument in favor of dissolution was sustained by Mr. Quincy, Mr. May, and S. May, Jr. Mr. Garrison, who all withdrew from the organization. The importance of continuing it was urged with much intensore for the next four years than hold an annual meeting. Its office was closed. In February, Mr. Garrison made his second and final visit to Washington, for the sake of spending a few days with his daughter, who had recently become Mrs. Henry Jan. 3, 1866. Villard and gone there to reside. He lectured in Philadelphia to a large audience, on his way thither, and spent Feb. 3. ten days at the Capital at a peculiarly exciting time, when Feb. 17-26. the apostasy of Andrew Johnson to the par
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 9: Journalist at large.—1868-1876. (search)
urn journey from Kansas to New York, the ladies named shared the speaking with him, and listened without protest to his constant ridicule and vulgar abuse of the negro. The annoyance and mortification felt by many suffragists at this entangling alliance and its consequent degradation of the movement, led to the formation at Cleveland, in November, 1869, of the American Woman Suffrage Association, of which Henry Ward Beecher was made President, and to the subsequent establishment at Boston Jan., 1870. of the Woman's Journal. To both of these movements Mr. Garrison gave his active cooperation, and was especially helpful in launching the Journal, of which, for a time, he was an associate editor with Mrs. Mary A. Livermore, Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, Mrs. Lucy Stone, and T. W. Higginson. He was one of the Vice-Presidents also of the American and of the Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Associations, and President of the former for two years. In the wintry months of February and March, 1870, he
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 11: last years.—1877-79. (search)
upying seats to which they were not honestly elected, and their faces should become crimson every time they enter the Senate Chamber. If they had their deserts, instead of presenting their brazen visages in the Capitol, Hampton would be in the penitentiary, and Hamburg massacre Butler be lying in a grave of infamy, according as crimes are adjudged and punished in a civilized community (Boston Traveller, April 24, 1879). In these he urged that the cry of the bloody shirt, Boston Advertiser, Jan. 13, 1879. that awful symbol (yet but faintly expressive) of the gory tragedies that have been performed at the sacrifice of a hecatomb of loyal white and colored victims, be made the rallying cry of the Republican party in the next Presidential campaign. The time has come to make this device return to plague the inventors, by furnishing the occasion for such a fresh elucidation of the fundamental principles of popular government, and such an exposure of the terrible wrongs perpetrated