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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1. Search the whole document.
Found 70 total hits in 36 results.
November 29th, 1811 AD (search for this): chapter 2
Biographical sketch of Wendell Phillips.
Universal liberty was the inheritance of Wendell Phillips.
The blood of unmitigated Puritan and of unsullied Revolutionary sires ran in his veins.
Freedom of thought and of religion had been the stamping-ground of his ancestors.
He strove for them, no less than for freedom of being and of action.
Born in Boston,--of which city his father, John Phillips, was the first mayor,--on the 29th of November, 1811, he was early destined to strange distinctions.
In 1831 he was graduated from Harvard College; in 1834 he completed a course of study at the Harvard Law School, and received the degree of bachelor of laws.
In the same year he was admitted to practise at the Suffolk bar.
To him, however, the law was not the all-absorbing study of a lifetime; and, impatient of its details, he sought recreation in the exciting topics of the times.
Already, when he came to sign the roll of the court as a member of the bar of Suffolk, had he ventur
1831 AD (search for this): chapter 2
January, 1832 AD (search for this): chapter 2
1834 AD (search for this): chapter 2
1837 AD (search for this): chapter 2
1844 AD (search for this): chapter 2
1845 AD (search for this): chapter 2
1847 AD (search for this): chapter 2
1850 AD (search for this): chapter 2
1851 AD (search for this): chapter 2