hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity (current method)
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in descending order. Sort in ascending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
W. L. G. Lib 3,448 0 Browse Search
W. L. Garrison 924 0 Browse Search
William Lloyd Garrison 331 1 Browse Search
Wendell Phillips 252 0 Browse Search
Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) 208 0 Browse Search
United States (United States) 196 0 Browse Search
Edmund Quincy 195 1 Browse Search
Frederick Douglass 168 0 Browse Search
George Thompson 148 0 Browse Search
John Brown 129 1 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

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.

Found 936 total hits in 247 results.

... 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 ...
Louis Kossuth (search for this): chapter 10
Pastorate, p. 31. Cf. ante, p. 19. The audience responded with a thunderous affirmative, which Captain Rynders sought to break by exclaiming: You are not a black man; you are only half a nigger. Then, replied Mr. Douglass, turning upon him with the blandest of smiles and an almost affectionate obeisance, I am half-brother to Captain Rynders! Nat. A. S. Standard. 10.199, 207. He would not deny that he was the son of a slaveholder, born of Southern amalgamation; a fugitive, too, like Kossuth— another half-brother of mine (to Rynders). He spoke of the difficulties thrown in the way of industrious colored people at the North, as he had himself experienced—this by way of answer to Horace Greeley, who had recently complained of their inefficiency and dependence. Criticism of the editor of the Tribune being grateful to Rynders, a political adversary, he added a word to Douglass's 50th Anniversary of a Pastorate, p. 32. against Greeley. I am happy, said Douglass, to have the asse
Thomas L. Kane (search for this): chapter 10
. But it was of no avail. Rynders drowned their fine voices with noise and shouting. Ibid. Still, a knock-down argument with a live combatant would have suited him better than mere Bedlamitish disturbance. He was almost gratified by young Thomas L. Kane, Afterwards a Federal officer in the civil war. He was a brother of the Arctic explorer. son of Ibid., pp. 29-31. Judge Kane of Philadelphia, who, seeing the rush of the John K. Kane. mob upon the platform, had himself leaped there, to pJudge Kane of Philadelphia, who, seeing the rush of the John K. Kane. mob upon the platform, had himself leaped there, to protect his townsman, Dr. Furness. They shall not touch a hair of your head, he said in a tone of great excitement, and, as the strain became more intense, he rushed up to Rynders and shook his fist in his face. He said to Cf. Jour. of Commerce, May 7, 1850; Lib. 20.75. me [Dr. Furness] with the deepest emphasis: If he touches Mr. Garrison I'll kill him. But Mr. Garrison's composure was more than a coat of mail. The knot was cut by Francis Jackson's formal offer of the floor to Rynders as s
John K. Kane (search for this): chapter 10
y attempted to raise a song, to soothe the savages with music. But it was of no avail. Rynders drowned their fine voices with noise and shouting. Ibid. Still, a knock-down argument with a live combatant would have suited him better than mere Bedlamitish disturbance. He was almost gratified by young Thomas L. Kane, Afterwards a Federal officer in the civil war. He was a brother of the Arctic explorer. son of Ibid., pp. 29-31. Judge Kane of Philadelphia, who, seeing the rush of the John K. Kane. mob upon the platform, had himself leaped there, to protect his townsman, Dr. Furness. They shall not touch a hair of your head, he said in a tone of great excitement, and, as the strain became more intense, he rushed up to Rynders and shook his fist in his face. He said to Cf. Jour. of Commerce, May 7, 1850; Lib. 20.75. me [Dr. Furness] with the deepest emphasis: If he touches Mr. Garrison I'll kill him. But Mr. Garrison's composure was more than a coat of mail. The knot was cut b
by the editor of Lib. 20.77. the Globe on the same day. The right to assemble May 7, 1850. peaceably for the overthrow of the Government is nowhere guaranteed by the Constitution. . . . No public building, no, not even the streets, must be desecrated by such a proposed assemblage of traitors. As for one of the heralded orators for this Anniversary, the black Douglass, who, at the Syracuse Convention in January, Ante. p. 281. had invoked immediate disunion, and alleged that Washington, Jefferson, and Patrick Henry were strangers to any just idea of Liberty—This was uttered, says a contemporary, and no hand was raised to fell the speaker to the earth! But, added the Globe, if this Douglass shall re-proclaim his Syracuse treason here, and any man shall arrest him in his diabolical career, and not injure him, thousands will exclaim, in language of patriotic love for the Constitution and the rights of the South, did he not strike the Villain dead? Lib. 20.77. W. L. Garrison
William Jay (search for this): chapter 10
us of Kentucky that, out of some 5,000,000 whites in the South, only 100,000, including women and minors, held slaves. Judge Jay, reckoning Wm. Jay. from the same basis, but applying it to the census of 1840, arrived at the sum of 117,000, which, Wm. Jay. from the same basis, but applying it to the census of 1840, arrived at the sum of 117,000, which, if we were Lib. 20.34. to enlarge it by 70,000, would still exceed by less than one-half the population of Boston in this year of Lib. 20.183. compromise, reaction, and violence. We have sought in vain to discover the common data upon which Palfrey and Jay relied. There has never been a Kentucky State census, nor is any document known to the Auditor's Department which gives any clue to the number of slaveholders. Slaveholders were never enumerated in a United States census; but the Southirers of slaves, 186,551. This would make an average holding of 17, whereas the Kentucky average reported to Palfrey and Jay was 22, and seemed too low to apply to the South at large, as the size of gangs increased going Gulfward (Lib. 20: 38). In
850 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 Henry C. Wright, of Abby Kelley Foster, of Frederick Douglass, of Mr. Garrison—against whom his menaces were specially directed. Never was a human being more out of his element. Isaiah Rynders, a native American, of mixed German N. Y. Times, Jan. 14, 1884. and Irish lineage, was now some forty-six years of age. He began life as a boatman on the Hudson River, and, passing easily into the sporting class, went to seek his fortunes as a professional gambler in the paradise of the Southwest.
Francis Jackson (search for this): chapter 10
, and reprinted in the Boston Commonwealth of Jan. 24, 1885. The reading of the Treasurer's report followed, and then Mr. Garrison, resigning the chair to Francis Jackson, proceeded to make the first speech of the day. He held in his hand the text or notes of his discourse, which was not one prepared for the occasion, but had beaders upon the platform remained imperturbable. I was not aware, writes Dr. Furness, of being under any apprehension of personal violence. We were all like General Jackson's cotton-bales at New Orleans. Our demeanor made it impossible for the rioters to use any physical force against us. 50th Anniversary of a Pastorate, p. 30.rness] with the deepest emphasis: If he touches Mr. Garrison I'll kill him. But Mr. Garrison's composure was more than a coat of mail. The knot was cut by Francis Jackson's formal offer of the floor to Rynders as soon as Mr. Garrison had finished his remarks; with an invitation meanwhile to take a seat on the platform. This, s
Edmund Jackson (search for this): chapter 10
trike the Villain dead? Lib. 20.77. W. L. Garrison to his Wife. New York, May 7, 1850. Ms. I arrived here safely yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock, in Tuesday morning. S. May, jr. C. F. Hovey. company with Phillips, Francis and Edmund Jackson, Mr. May and his mother, Mr. Hovey, and other dear anti-slavery friends. The rain, which was pouring down so copiously when we left Boston, accompanied us nearly all the distance, an immense quantity having fallen over a wide tract of countastorate, p. 30. The scene recalled the descent of the Gauls upon the Roman Senate. The barbarism of Rynders was confronted with the loftiest morality, the greatest personal dignity, of the time. He found himself in the midst of Francis and Edmund Jackson, of Wendell Phillips, of Edmund Quincy, of Charles F. Hovey, of William H. Furness, of Samuel May, Jr., of Sydney Howard Gay, of Isaac T. Hopper, of Henry C. Wright, of Abby Kelley Foster, of Frederick Douglass, of Mr. Garrison—against whom h
Charles F. Hovey (search for this): chapter 10
itution and the rights of the South, did he not strike the Villain dead? Lib. 20.77. W. L. Garrison to his Wife. New York, May 7, 1850. Ms. I arrived here safely yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock, in Tuesday morning. S. May, jr. C. F. Hovey. company with Phillips, Francis and Edmund Jackson, Mr. May and his mother, Mr. Hovey, and other dear anti-slavery friends. The rain, which was pouring down so copiously when we left Boston, accompanied us nearly all the distance, an immenses upon the Roman Senate. The barbarism of Rynders was confronted with the loftiest morality, the greatest personal dignity, of the time. He found himself in the midst of Francis and Edmund Jackson, of Wendell Phillips, of Edmund Quincy, of Charles F. Hovey, of William H. Furness, of Samuel May, Jr., of Sydney Howard Gay, of Isaac T. Hopper, of Henry C. Wright, of Abby Kelley Foster, of Frederick Douglass, of Mr. Garrison—against whom his menaces were specially directed. Never was a human bein
C. F. Hovey (search for this): chapter 10
racuse treason here, and any man shall arrest him in his diabolical career, and not injure him, thousands will exclaim, in language of patriotic love for the Constitution and the rights of the South, did he not strike the Villain dead? Lib. 20.77. W. L. Garrison to his Wife. New York, May 7, 1850. Ms. I arrived here safely yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock, in Tuesday morning. S. May, jr. C. F. Hovey. company with Phillips, Francis and Edmund Jackson, Mr. May and his mother, Mr. Hovey, and other dear anti-slavery friends. The rain, which was pouring down so copiously when we left Boston, accompanied us nearly all the distance, an immense quantity having fallen over a wide tract of country. . . . In the course of another hour, I shall be on my way to our meeting at the Tabernacle, bound in the spirit, as Paul said of old, not knowing the things that shall befall me there, saving that bonds and afflictions abide with me, in every city, though none of these things mov
... 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 ...