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.

... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ...
Nathaniel A. S. Standard (search for this): chapter 10
ald singled out the Liberator, for its Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.198; Lib. 20.77. immediate abolitioe and his Club broke up an anti-Wilmot Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.20. Proviso meeting in New York—a sfelt to have turned the current of the Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.199. meeting. Up rose, as per agreeort of by his own set, whom Mr. Ibid.; Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.199. Garrison had to call to order.ow you can speak, said he to Douglass; Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.202; N. Y. Herald, May 8, 1850. butour throats for us. No, was the quick Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.207. response, but we would cut you, too, and it is the highest praise to Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.199. record that his unpremeditatedrom curbing or preventing the mob, the Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.203. Aldermen even passed resolves roked his beard. Mr.Lib. 20:[78], 106; Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.202. Phillips's irreproachable appe throughout the North, even by enemies Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.201. of the abolitionists, that no [6 more...]
Peleg Sprague (search for this): chapter 10
o had to be hurried off to England. Mr.Lib. 21.14, 15, 141, 153; 22.2. Thompson might have rubbed his eyes and asked himself if he had really been absent for fifteen years. What would be his reception now as an abolitionist, as a foreigner? Peleg Sprague had in 1835 malevolently bade him go Ante, p. 2.498. back and brave the wrath of English respectability by denouncing the wrongs of India. Would his heroic labors meantime in the service of the Rajah of Sattara, Ante, p. 173. and his preseent attitude of the Lancashire cotton-operatives during our civil war—Freedom first for America, employment then for ourselves. See, for reports of the Glasgow meeting, with its appeal to the workingmen of America, Lib. 21: 5. Otis was dead and Sprague dumb; but all H. G. Otis. the moral callousness of their class, and all their legal idolatry of the Constitution, was typified in Benjamin Ante, 1.501. R. Curtis, rising in December, 1850, to address another Union-saving meeting in the Cradle
Jared Sparks (search for this): chapter 10
d pecuniary inducements to commissioners to convict and to hold fast (Lib. 20: 153). or denounce the omission to provide any redress for the abuse of the authority conferred by the bill. For thus having convinced the understanding and touched the conscience of a nation, he was publicly thanked by some seven hundred addressers of Boston and Lib. 20.55, 57, 62. vicinity—great lawyers, like Rufus Choate and Benjamin R. Curtis; men of letters, like George Ticknor, William H. Prescott, and Jared Sparks (the last also the President of Harvard College); theologians like Moses Stuart, Leonard Woods, and Ralph Emerson of Andover Seminary. Half as many gentlemen of Newburyport confessed Lib. 20.73. their gratitude to Webster for his having recalled them to a due sense of their Constitutional obligations; and in this group we read the names of Francis Todd (who, if a novice in slave-catching, had known something of Ante, 1.180. slave-trading) and of the Rev. Daniel Dana, D. D. These Ante,
J. R. W. Sloane (search for this): chapter 10
alculated to stir the wrath of the ungodly. Dr. Furness's criticism proceeded from a standard of pulpit reading which he himself has exemplified without a peer. On the other hand, we have the testimony of an earnest Covenanter (and therefore anti-slavery) clergyman in regard to Mr. Garrison's habit: He opened the meetings of the Anti-Slavery Society by reading the Scriptures; and he read them from the depths of his soul, with a power I have yet to hear equalled ( Life and work of J. R. W. Sloane, D. D., p. 84). We quote above from the account of the Rynders mob written by Dr. Furness for a friend of his in Congress, but allowed to be published anonymously in the Pennsylvania Freeman of May 23, 1850 (Lib. 20: 81). We shall also have occasion to use another account from the same hand, printed on pp. 28-35 of the pamphlet commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of his ordination (Philadelphia, 1875), and reprinted in the Boston Commonwealth of Jan. 24, 1885. The reading of the Trea
William H. Seward (search for this): chapter 10
rn doughfaces, while in sixteen committees she had carefully secured a majority of actual slaveholders, and from all had insolently excluded the three truly Northern Lib. 20.32. Senators, Hale, Seward, and Chase. A House, packed J. P. Hale, W. H. Seward. S. P. Chase. in like manner, completed the Congress whose destiny it was to pour oil upon the flames of the agitation it sought to extinguish. For eight months after Mr. Clay introduced his so-called Compromise Resolutions, they, Jan. 21, 1tion; while a fifth only reluctantly admitted California as a free State when she had refused to contaminate herself with slavery. Which one of these measures has superfluous merit to be received in extenuation of the Fugitive Slave Law? (William H. Seward, letter of April 5, 1851, to the Massachusetts Convention in Boston, Lib. 21: 77.) and Webster's main purpose was to overcome Northern repugnance to that measure, the rest of his indescribably base and wicked speech, as Lib. 20.43. Mr. Ga
W. H. Seward (search for this): chapter 10
o establish a new reign of terror for anti-slavery fanatics and ensure the lasting domination of the Slave Power. They wielded a packed Senate in whose twenty-seven standing committees the South had sixteen chairmanships, to say Lib. 20.6; cf. 21.14. nothing of those which she had assigned to Northern doughfaces, while in sixteen committees she had carefully secured a majority of actual slaveholders, and from all had insolently excluded the three truly Northern Lib. 20.32. Senators, Hale, Seward, and Chase. A House, packed J. P. Hale, W. H. Seward. S. P. Chase. in like manner, completed the Congress whose destiny it was to pour oil upon the flames of the agitation it sought to extinguish. For eight months after Mr. Clay introduced his so-called Compromise Resolutions, they, Jan. 21, 1850; Lib. 20.21. and the measures to which they gave birth in an Omnibus Bill, engrossed the attention of both Houses and of the country. No appropriation bill could be passed. Lib. 20.118. Everyb
on the stage, and turn the tables by talking down and voting down the actors, it would be a case of real free discussion— popular opinion rising superior to local prejudice, and producing a good result out of the most mischievous elements. On May 6, the Herald singled out the Liberator, for its Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.198; Lib. 20.77. immediate abolitionism and disunionism, and enumerated the speakers announced for the following day: Wm. H. Furness of Philadelphia, white man—from Anglo-Saxon blood; Frederick Douglass of Rochester, black man— from African blood; Wm. Lloyd Garrison of Boston, mulatto man—mixed race; Wendell Phillips of Boston, white man—merely from blood. Comparing the approaching meeting with the Nashville Disunion Ante, p. 279. Convention, Bennett pronounced the former to be much the more mischievous, and renewed his appeal for its suppression in the most inflammatory language. On May 7, he singled out the editor of the Liberator, Nat. A. S. Standard, 1
Isaiah Rynders (search for this): chapter 10
bocrats broke out, and, with the notorious Capt. Rynders at their head, they came rushing on to the confusion.) Mr. Garrison—Yes, sir. Captain Rynders—The question I would ask is, whether thering inconsistency, but it was charged against Rynders that he had offered Lib. 20.86. to give the ou ought not to interrupt us, he continued to Rynders—in the quietest manner conceivable, as Dr. Fu Dr. Furness, Lib. 20.81. brought down Rynders again, who vociferated and harangued, at one ectionate obeisance, I am half-brother to Captain Rynders! Nat. A. S. Standard. 10.199, 207. He wf the editor of the Tribune being grateful to Rynders, a political adversary, he added a word to Dodown on the floor to see some friends there. Rynders came by. I could not help saying to him: Howsay to me, in a whisper, that he would remove Rynders Standard, 10.202. whenever I demanded it, inhe 9th of July, 1850. Lib. 20.111. As Capt. Rynders thought it so intolerable and blasphemous [31 more...
Ernestine L. Rose (search for this): chapter 10
ce received his instructions to pay no Lib. 20:[79]. attention to anything short of actual assault and battery. Hence his captains and their hundreds looked on Nat. A. S. Standard, 10.202. passively at the scenes in the hall of the Society Library in the evening of May 7, when some two dozen rioters drowned with jocose and abusive interlocutions, with Lib. 20:[78]. hisses, oaths, catcalls, and a general charivari, the attempted speeches of Parker Pillsbury, Stephen S. Foster, and Mrs. Ernestine L. Rose. Wednesday's sessions opened in the morning at the May 8, 1850. same place. According to the Tribune's report of the 348 Broadway. proceedings— Mr. Garrison wished to say, once for all, that though this was a meeting of the Anti-Slavery Society, yet the doors were wide open to those who dissented; they were invited here in good faith, and should have, if they desired it, a full and fair hearing. They who are unwilling to accept an offer so generous, must certainly be consc
. 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, 1850; Lib. 20.174. He landed in Boston, the port of his
... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ...