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Charles A. Wheaton (search for this): chapter 11
our controversy with the Government. After a fortnight's diligent search after materials to make out a case of constructive treason against Gerrit Smith, Charles A. Wheaton, Samuel J. May, and five others, and to find grounds for the indictment of sixteen for aiding and abetting the rescue of poor Jerry, we were informed last eunconstitutionality of the Law; 2dly, upon the egregious wickedness Cf. Lib. 21.198. of the Law. It is now no longer probable that either Gerrit Smith, Charles A. Wheaton, or myself, will be indicted. They were, however (Lib. 21: 187), at Auburn; and, bailors being called for, Hon. William H. Seward stepped forward and putull account of the Jerry rescue in May's Recollections of the A. S. Conflict, pp. 373-384. I suppose that warrants were issued by Judge Conkling for me and for Mr. Wheaton. Alfred Conkling. Why they were not served, the managers of such matters best know. It is not that we have cowered to them. I have spoken and written, if pos
Richard H. Dana (search for this): chapter 11
ance as Lib. 21.59, 70. made the rendition seem to the South a Pyrrhic Lib. 21.73. vic tory. The N. Y. Herald estimated that the capture, trial, and return of Sims cost the Federal Government nearly $6000, and his owner half as much (Lib. 22: 77). The sum of $90,000 inserted in the Deficiency Bill by the Senate of the 31st Congress (session 1851-52) for Judicial Expenses was ascribed to the execution of the Fugitive Slave Law. Josiah Quincy, also a disappointed prophet, said to Richard H. Dana, Jr.: When the [Fugitive Slave] law passed, I did think the moral Lib. 21.83. sense of the community would not enforce it; I said that it Ante, p. 303. never would be. But now I find that my fellow-citizens are not only submissive to, but that they are earnestly active for, its enforcement. The Boston of 1851 is not the Boston of 1775. Boston has now become a mere shop—a place for buying and selling goods; and I suppose, also, of buying and selling men. Sims was carried off on
Benjamin F. Hallett (search for this): chapter 11
nd armed, that George Thompson visited William and Ellen Craft on Sunday, Nov. 3, 1850 (Lib. 21: 153). that he heard Shadrach pray while on his way to the Canadas, and said amen to the prayer. Why, that, said Mr. Commissioner Hallett, Benjamin F. Hallett. Eheu, quantum mutatus ab illo (ante, 1: 482; 2: 32, 43, 187). See his own account of his pro-slavery backsliding in Lib. 22: 69, 87. of course partly in jest, is aiding and abetting the fugitive. Well, Theodore Parker prayed for him publicly, said James. Oh, that nothing, J. N. Buffum. replied Hallett; the Lord would not answer his prayers! When we told Theodore, he said: Well, then, the Rev. T. Parker. Government is in this category: the prayers which the Lord will endorse and answer are illegal; those he will not answer are legal. The case of Shadrach was one of four which, preeminently, in the year 1851, revealed to the North the real meaning of the Fugitive Slave Law as a precursor of disunion and civil war. The
Parker Pillsbury (search for this): chapter 11
accept the hospitality of slaveholders. If he be a patriot, a lover of liberty, whether he fly from the banks of the Danube, the Seine, or the Tiber, let him go to New England, and find a home with the persecuted and maligned abolitionists of the country! Let him throw in his lot with them; let him range himself under the banner of No Union with Tyrants! Francis Jackson and Samuel May, Jr.; James Mott and J. Miller McKim; Abraham Brooke of Ohio; Abby Kelley Foster, H. C. Wright, and Parker Pillsbury, were likewise heard or seen at this meeting. William Goodell was present; and William H. Burleigh, who had strayed into the Liberty Party fold, recanted of Lib. 21.78. his bitter opposition to his old abolition co-workers. Frederick Douglass, on the other hand, avowed his radical Lib. 21.78, 82. change of mind in regard to the nature of the Constitution, which he now looked upon as an anti-slavery instrument. On Daniel Webster, as the ex-officio custodian of the law of treason,
Charles Devens (search for this): chapter 11
d I doubt whether more laughing is done anywhere than in anti-slavery Ante, p. 144. parlors. We meet sometimes in an establishment whose noble owner had a slave in his employ, and kept him amid 100 workmen who resolved to receive the marshal á la Haynau and Baron Haynau, at Barclay & Perkins's brewery, London; Lib. 20.160. the brewers, if he made the arrest; and let it be known that the establishment had constantly on hand hot water and cold, some dirty and some clean. The marshal Charles Devens, afterwards a General in the civil war and U. S. Attorney-General under President Hayes's Administration. offered to make the arrest if the claimant would precede and point out the man. The claimant declined, went to Washington, complained, and it was during the marshal's absence to answer that complaint that Lib. 21.30. Shadrach was rescued from his deputy. Buffum was boasting, rather unadvisedly, while he was James N. Buffum. giving bail for Lewis Hayden, A fugitive slave from
Samuel E. Sewall (search for this): chapter 11
r and the origin of the Liberator, of which he held up the tiny first number; paid by the way his never forgotten tribute to Benjamin Lundy; and gratefully acknowledged once more the indispensable pecuniary Ante, 1.223. support given him by Samuel E. Sewall and Ellis Gray Loring. To complete the retrospect, he read some of the menacing letters he had been accustomed to receive from the South, and confessed his early expectation of martyrdom in the cause, especially after the State of Georgia hor the rights of man over all the globe; pass, too, over Theodore Parker's eulogium, and the kindred strains Lib. 21.19. of many others, both clergymen and laymen. Charles List, A son-in-law of Nathan Winslow. His widow was re-married to S. E. Sewall. a Boston lawyer, Secretary of the Vigilance Committee, said: The history of liberty, as it will be read a thousand years Lib. 21.23. hence, has not been begun. Now I wish to ask for a contribution to this history which will be the mo
Henry Wilson (search for this): chapter 11
ving for. Life! what a weariness it is, with its drudgery of education; its little cares of to-day, all to be lived over again to-morrow; its rising, eating, and lying down—only to continue the monotonous routine! Let us thank God that he has inspired any one to awaken us from being these dull and rotting weeds—revealed to us the joy of self-devotion—taught us how we intensify this life by laying it a willing offering on the altar of some great cause! We must pass over the speech of Henry Wilson, the Lib. 21.19. then President of the Massachusetts Senate, the future Vice-President of the United States—a twelve-years' 1873-1875. reader of the Liberator, acknowledging his debt of gratitude to Mr. Garrison for his own love of liberty and regard for the rights of man over all the globe; pass, too, over Theodore Parker's eulogium, and the kindred strains Lib. 21.19. of many others, both clergymen and laymen. Charles List, A son-in-law of Nathan Winslow. His widow was re-marr
Larkin B. Coles (search for this): chapter 11
foreign myrmidons were invading our shores! A poor, hunted, entrapped fugitive slave is dexterously removed from the court-room, and the whole land is shaken! A hundred free, white citizens of the North may be thrown into prison, or tarred and feathered, or compelled to flee for their lives at the South, on suspicion of being morally averse to the slave system; See, this very year, the cases of Elijah W. Harris, school-teacher at Clinton, S. C. (tarred and feathered—Lib. 21: 26); Dr. Larkin B. Coles, physician and physiological lecturer, at Columbia, S. C. (imprisoned—Lib. 21: 31); Rev. Edward Mathews, Baptist preacher, at Richmond, Ky. (ducked in a pond—Lib. 21: 41, 46); Rev. Jesse McBride, Wesleyan preacher, near Greensboroa, N. C. (expelled the State–Lib. 21: 98). but who cares? A thousand colored seamen of the North may be incarcerated in loathsome cells, and Ante, p. 92. compelled to pay for their imprisonment, though guiltless of crime, and even sold into slavery on the
James Mott (search for this): chapter 11
; 22.10. and love of liberty of every man who comes from revolutionary Europe to these shores to accept the hospitality of slaveholders. If he be a patriot, a lover of liberty, whether he fly from the banks of the Danube, the Seine, or the Tiber, let him go to New England, and find a home with the persecuted and maligned abolitionists of the country! Let him throw in his lot with them; let him range himself under the banner of No Union with Tyrants! Francis Jackson and Samuel May, Jr.; James Mott and J. Miller McKim; Abraham Brooke of Ohio; Abby Kelley Foster, H. C. Wright, and Parker Pillsbury, were likewise heard or seen at this meeting. William Goodell was present; and William H. Burleigh, who had strayed into the Liberty Party fold, recanted of Lib. 21.78. his bitter opposition to his old abolition co-workers. Frederick Douglass, on the other hand, avowed his radical Lib. 21.78, 82. change of mind in regard to the nature of the Constitution, which he now looked upon as an a
Henry C. Wright (search for this): chapter 11
to these shores to accept the hospitality of slaveholders. If he be a patriot, a lover of liberty, whether he fly from the banks of the Danube, the Seine, or the Tiber, let him go to New England, and find a home with the persecuted and maligned abolitionists of the country! Let him throw in his lot with them; let him range himself under the banner of No Union with Tyrants! Francis Jackson and Samuel May, Jr.; James Mott and J. Miller McKim; Abraham Brooke of Ohio; Abby Kelley Foster, H. C. Wright, and Parker Pillsbury, were likewise heard or seen at this meeting. William Goodell was present; and William H. Burleigh, who had strayed into the Liberty Party fold, recanted of Lib. 21.78. his bitter opposition to his old abolition co-workers. Frederick Douglass, on the other hand, avowed his radical Lib. 21.78, 82. change of mind in regard to the nature of the Constitution, which he now looked upon as an anti-slavery instrument. On Daniel Webster, as the ex-officio custodian of
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