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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)
m we consulted were best able to form an enlightened judgment by which we could safely be guided. With great regard, I am truly yours, Edwin M. Stanton. The dramatic incidents of the war had been many and striking, and each month brought its fresh example of retributive justice, of strange contrast and coincidence. There was the occupation of General Lee's estate at Arlington as a Freedmen's village (with its Garrison and Lib. 34.1, 128. Lovejoy Streets) and national cemetery; of John Tyler's and Henry A. Wise's residences by schools for colored Lib. 32.155; 34.19; 35.45. children—the daughter of John Brown teaching in the latter, with her father's portrait hanging on the wall; and of Jefferson Davis's plantation on the Mississippi as a Lib. 34.15, 121. contraband camp, and its final purchase and cultivation by his former slaves; the teaching of a freedman's school in Maryland by the son of Frederick Douglass, Lib. 33.136. near the place whence his father had escaped; the