Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: December 19, 1860., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Wendell Phillips or search for Wendell Phillips in all documents.

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The Anti-abolition mob in Boston. A dispatch from Boston, dated Sunday, gives a fuller account of the mobbing of Wendell Phillips, the abolition orator there, on that day. His subject was "Mobs and Education, " and Music Hall was filled by severad wings were crowded with men, apparently strangers to the preaching of Theodore Parker and those who succeed him. Phillips spoke of mobs in general, and the mob which broke up the late John Brown meeting in particular. His remarks were distinMayor he held personally responsible for allowing the disgraceful attack upon peaceable citizens in Tremont Temple. Phillips spoke nearly an hour and a half, the meeting being interrupted occasionally, but very briefly, by stamping and hissing. At the close of the meeting a large crowd had gathered outside the building, and on the appearance of Phillips, a great rush was made, but whether with a purpose of violence toward him, seemed uncertain. His friends rallied, and with a large force