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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3. Search the whole document.

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Theobald Mathew (search for this): chapter 10
among us a disturber of the public peace? He should be consumed in the wrath of an indignant people for his audacity. To this, and to a threat of assassination pencilled on the margin Lib. 20.194. of the copy sent him,—Keep a sharp lookout for Colt's revolver,—Mr. Thompson felicitously responded at Worcester: Those who plead for the American slave are under the protection of Him who hath said: No weapon formed against you shall prosper. Isa. 54.17. But Mr. Garrison's prediction to Father Mathew that violence and Ante, p. 256. lawlessness would stalk the land in 1850 as in 1835, had been fulfilled; and the end was not yet. A pleasurable reminder of the earlier epoch was contained in the subjoined letter, from the author of The martyr age of the United States, which crossed the ocean almost simultaneously with Thompson: Harriet Martineau to W. L. Garrison. The Knoll, Ambleside, October 23d, 1850. Ms. my dear friend: This is just to say that if you should ere long
J. M. Mason (search for this): chapter 10
246. marshal of a Federal court, or Federal postmaster, or collector of customs, in the State where the seizure was made. The Expounder of the Constitution was prepared to support this iniquity to the fullest extent, Lib. 20.45. along with Senator Mason's amendments of January 23, J. M. Mason. affixing, not only to the rescue of an alleged fugitive, but Lib. 20.54. to the harboring or concealing of any such, a penalty of one thousand dollars fine and twelve months imprisonment (ultimately J. M. Mason. affixing, not only to the rescue of an alleged fugitive, but Lib. 20.54. to the harboring or concealing of any such, a penalty of one thousand dollars fine and twelve months imprisonment (ultimately mitigated, as regards imprisonment, to Lib. 20.153. a term not exceeding six months); and denying the alleged fugitive all right to testify in his own defence. Nor did Webster, who, while yet undecided on which side to commit himself, had drawn up an amendment Lib. 20.100. providing for a trial by jury (which lay hid in his desk on the 7th of March), make this a sine qua non of his adhesion; or revolt at the effect given to the kidnapper's ex-parte Lib. 20.95. affidavits; The pagan law
Harriet Martineau (search for this): chapter 10
, 1856, Library of American literature, 4.308; Wm. H. Herndon, 1856, Lib. 26.70; Theodore Parker, 1856, Lib. 26.81; Harriet Martineau, 1857, Lib. 27: 173); 400,000 (W. L. G., 1857, Lib. 27: 72; Owen Lovejoy, April 5, 1860, Lib. 30: 62). For the sakee author of The martyr age of the United States, which crossed the ocean almost simultaneously with Thompson: Harriet Martineau to W. L. Garrison. The Knoll, Ambleside, October 23d, 1850. Ms. my dear friend: This is just to say that if om this source, I cannot send it. With my best regards to your wife, I am, dear friend, Yours affectionately, Harriet Martineau. It was shortly after the Rynders mob, and during a protracted assault on Mr. Garrison for his blasphemous Lib design, bore the injunction, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. So far had blasphemy corrupted the editor. Miss Martineau, who had illustrated in the most signal manner both the intellectual and the political capacity of her sex, penned th
Charles A. Mann (search for this): chapter 10
s wrong— that we ought to repeal all laws prohibiting the introduction of slaves into the United States, beginning with an amendment of the Constitution. This gentleman is one of the most wealthy and respectable in this city [New York]. Another, of equal wealth and respectability, told me he had no objection to the reestablishment of slavery in this State. A few such examples of perverted principle and feeling are quite enough to satisfy me that our only hope is from the country. To Hon. Chas. A. Mann; in Mag. Am. Hist., June, 1885, p. 585. The readiness of wealth and respectability to suppress the anti-slavery agitation by force was again to be illustrated, in 1850 as in 1835, in the person of Mr. Garrison. He began the year in poor health, though still in the lecture Lib. 20.2, 7, 19, 21. field, and taking some, if not his usual, part in the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society in Jan. 23-25, 1850. Faneuil Hall. He there offered a resolution condemning
adquarters of the Empire Club, an organization of roughs and desperadoes who acknowledged his captaincy. His campaigning in behalf of Polk and Dallas in 1844 secured him the friendly Lib. 15.55. patronage of the successful candidate for Vice-President, Geo. M. Dallas. and he took office as Weigher in the Custom-house of the metropolis. He found time, while thus employed, to engineer the Astor Place riot on behalf of the actor Edwin Forrest; Lib. 19.79. Forrest against his English rival Macready, on May 10, 1849, and the year 1850 opened with his trial for this Lib. 20.24. atrocity and his successful defence by John Van Buren. On February 16 he and his Club broke up an anti-Wilmot Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.20. Proviso meeting in New York—a seeming inconsistency, but it was charged against Rynders that he had offered Lib. 20.86. to give the State of New York to Clay in the election of 1844 for $30,000, and met with a reluctant refusal. In March he was arrested for a brutal assaul
Owen Lovejoy (search for this): chapter 10
s estimate for the same State, in 1850, hirers included, was 38,385. Clay, again, in a letter to the National Republican Convention at Pittsburg of Feb. 22, 1856 (Lib. 26.41), put the Southern slaveholders at 300,000, but De Bow's larger estimate was generally current—350,000 (Josiah Quincy, June 5, 1856, Library of American literature, 4.308; Wm. H. Herndon, 1856, Lib. 26.70; Theodore Parker, 1856, Lib. 26.81; Harriet Martineau, 1857, Lib. 27: 173); 400,000 (W. L. G., 1857, Lib. 27: 72; Owen Lovejoy, April 5, 1860, Lib. 30: 62). For the sake of the moneyed interests and social and political supremacy of this oligarchy, the whole country was plunging headlong into a frightful abyss of idolatry of the Union, and utter repudiation of the claims of humanity in the person of the enslaved—and especially of the fleeing, hunted, and imploring—negro. Correspondingly small, in its own relation, was the group of three popular leaders who brought about this national degradation. All of them <
Ellis Gray Loring (search for this): chapter 10
ness would stalk the land in 1850 as in 1835, had been fulfilled; and the end was not yet. A pleasurable reminder of the earlier epoch was contained in the subjoined letter, from the author of The martyr age of the United States, which crossed the ocean almost simultaneously with Thompson: Harriet Martineau to W. L. Garrison. The Knoll, Ambleside, October 23d, 1850. Ms. my dear friend: This is just to say that if you should ere long receive £10 by the hands of my friend Ellis Gray Loring, I hope you will accept it for the Liberator, as my very humble offering in your great cause. I don't know for certain that you will get it. That depends on whether I get properly paid by an American publishing firm. I have no reason whatever to doubt their doing their duty by me. It is only that, somehow or other, such payments seldom come in. I can only say that I have done my best to earn the money, and that I wish that it was more. I have never till now felt that I could offer
Longfellow (search for this): chapter 10
ann; in Mag. Am. Hist., June, 1885, p. 585. The readiness of wealth and respectability to suppress the anti-slavery agitation by force was again to be illustrated, in 1850 as in 1835, in the person of Mr. Garrison. He began the year in poor health, though still in the lecture Lib. 20.2, 7, 19, 21. field, and taking some, if not his usual, part in the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society in Jan. 23-25, 1850. Faneuil Hall. He there offered a resolution condemning Longfellow's newly published ode to the Union, which he had already characterized in the Liberator as a eulogy dripping with the blood of imbruted humanity. Lib. 20.11. He now (in terms which, truthful and prophetic as they were, elicited hisses from the hostile part of his audience and Lib. 20.19, 29, 33. vehement censure from the press) set over against the poet's conception of the Ship of State rather a perfidious bark Lib. 20.19. Built ia tha eclipse, and rigged with curses dark, rotting
W. L. G. Lib (search for this): chapter 10
es the South had sixteen chairmanships, to say Lib. 20.6; cf. 21.14. nothing of those which she haming up, he showed that the South would secure Lib. 20.125. the practical abandonment of the Wilmol Webster's incredible 7th of March speech, in Lib. 20.42, 43, 45. wholesale support of the Comprof his indescribably base and wicked speech, as Lib. 20.43. Mr. Garrison termed it, was simply confn the Boston Congregationalist of July 6, 1849 (Lib. 19.166), Lewis Tappan told of having acted as ve at the mercy of any commissioner, clerk, or Lib. 20.54; cf. ante, p. 246. marshal of a Federal s, with Professor Stuart's obsequious pamphlet Lib. 20.83. on Conscience and the Constitution, elihe medium of its trade, and the Union meetings Lib. 20.29, 34, 37, 177, 195, 197, 201, 202; 21.1, n for being found drunk in a house of illfame. Lib. 20:[78]. This exponent of the Christianity anded on with indifference, Marshal Francis Tukey Lib. 20.192. playing the part of Chief-of-Police Ma[166 more...]
Peter Lesley (search for this): chapter 10
tt deprecated discussion and all action, as being Rev. E. S. Gannett. liable to be misunderstood. Nevertheless, the resolutions were called up and passed, and other religious conventions Lib. 20.166, 178. took a similar stand, and the new phase of the old moral issue began again the work of dividing the denominations and plunging the pulpit into politics. If an Orville Dewey stood up in the lyceum to urge the duty of Lib. 20.205; 21.2, 29, 36; 22.37. obeying the Fugitive Slave Law, a Peter Lesley in his sermons set Deuteronomy 23 over against Romans 13; a Theodore Lib. 20.174. Parker discoursed on The Function and Place of Conscience in relation to the Laws of Men. Lib. 20.175. On the eve of the November elections, into which the Fugitive Slave Law imported a new criterion and unwonted intensity of feeling; on the eve, too, of a fresh Lib. 20.177, 195, 197, 201. outbreak of Union-saving meetings, George Thompson revisited the country which had expelled him in 1835. Oct. 29
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