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Seneca Falls (New York, United States) (search for this): chapter 12
ngelina (with her children) and Mrs. Weld. Sarah are now spending a few weeks at the pleasant residence of Samuel Philbrick in Brookline. The latter I have seen, but Angelina was too unwell, the day I called, to leave her room. She is suffering from the fever and ague. They both wear the Bloomer costume. A short skirt, with trousers (Lib. 21: 76). Mrs. [Amelia] Bloomer was among the first to wear the dress, and stoutly advocated its adoption in her paper, the Lily, published at Seneca Falls, N. Y. But it was introduced by Elizabeth Smith Miller, the daughter of the great philanthropist, Gerrit Smith, in 1850 ( Hist. Of Woman Suffrage, 1: 127; and see also pp. 469, 844). Theodore is at home on his farm. T. D. Weld. W. L. Garrison to S. J. May. Boston, Sept. 27, 1852. Ms. Thanks for your letter. You say, come, and the travelling Ms. Syracuse, Sept. 21, 1852. expenses shall be paid. . . . I will be with you. My plan is, to leave Boston on Wednesday morning, and lectur
West Chester (Pennsylvania, United States) (search for this): chapter 12
y work of the abolitionists in that direction. The law remained intact till the Rebellion made it obsolete. Neither did Uncle Tom recruit the abolition ranks to any appreciable extent, for reasons assigned by Mr. Garrison in a speech at West Chester, Pa., on October 26, 1852: A great deal is said at the present time, and perhaps not too much, in regard to the Fugitive Slave Law. Many persons glory in their hostility to it, and upon this capital they set up an antislavery reputation. Buty (ante, 2: 353). Mr. McKim's letter was for use in partibus. Philadelphia, Nov. 1, 1852. Ms. The observed of all observers at our [State] meeting was Oct. 25-27, 1852; Lib. 22.166. William Lloyd Garrison. He had never before been at West Chester, and as a consequence the people were very anxious to see and hear him. I need not tell you that the impression he made was highly favorable to himself and to the cause. This, you know, is the case wherever he goes. The prejudice which used
Worcester (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 12
the feeling against it cannot but subside. Lib. 21.125; ante, p. 274. And John Van Buren, taking the stump with Henry B. Stanton and Lib. 22.101, 161. Isaiah Rynders for Frank Pierce in 1852, echoed the sentiment that the need of the Free Soil Party, from Lib. 22.157. which he had ratted, ceased with the passage of the Compromise. The superficiality charged against the party was illustrated in its attitude towards the Fugitive Slave Law. As Wendell Phillips pointed out in a speech at Worcester Lib. 21.130. on August 1, 1851, the Free Soil objections to that statute all related to its defects as law, not to its main purpose to give effect to the Constitutional provision concerning runaways. If Ellen Craft, for example, had been seized, allowed the writ of habeas corpus and a jury trial, and still been sentenced to return into slavery, the Free Soilers had nothing to say. Their chief, John P. Hale, expressly avowed in the Senate of the United States on January 10, 1849: I am
Covington (Kentucky, United States) (search for this): chapter 12
ures and Governors Lib. 22.11, 15. while a bill was pending in each State to prevent the Lib. 22.14, 33. entrance of free negroes. Traversing Ohio, which disfranchised its black citizens, he essayed his pro-slavery tact first in Kentucky at Covington. The spirit of the South is warm, Feb. 24; Lib. 22.45. he exclaimed; and wherever warmth is, there is life! . . . It is now for the first time that I breathe the air of a Southern State. But even as he spoke, the Rev. Calvin Fairbank was beinwed the Congressional action which Pulszky's White, Red, and Black, 2.87, 90-92. ended in his release from Turkey and transportation to the United States. At Montgomery, Ala., the cradle of Lib. 22.65. the future Confederacy, he repeated his Covington Lib. 22.45. argument in favor of national interference on behalf of Hungary because the South held to the doctrine of State rights, identically his own! The Southern grand tour was curtailed in order to reach Pulszky's White, Red, and Blac
Jackson (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): chapter 12
South is warm, Feb. 24; Lib. 22.45. he exclaimed; and wherever warmth is, there is life! . . . It is now for the first time that I breathe the air of a Southern State. But even as he spoke, the Rev. Calvin Fairbank was being doomed to the Feb. 21. Kentucky penitentiary under a sentence of fifteen years Lib. 22.47, 63, 66. hard labor, for having assisted in the escape of slaves— Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, p. 719. his second expiation in the same State for the same Christian act. At Jackson, Miss., Kossuth paid his respects to Hangman Foote, then Governor of the State, Mar. 25; Lib. 22.59. to whom, indeed, he owed the Congressional action which Pulszky's White, Red, and Black, 2.87, 90-92. ended in his release from Turkey and transportation to the United States. At Montgomery, Ala., the cradle of Lib. 22.65. the future Confederacy, he repeated his Covington Lib. 22.45. argument in favor of national interference on behalf of Hungary because the South held to the doctrine of St
George Thompson (search for this): chapter 12
ciety like Rynders, with the approval of Ante, p. 288. what was most respectable in church and state. He had seen George Thompson, a co-worker with O'Connell Ante, p. 331. in behalf of Irish and Catholic emancipation, singled out for dedication ith Austria by way of pressure on Hungary's behalf—an interference with the domestic concerns of a foreign country which Thompson did not fail to Lib. 20.190. improve, in repelling censure of his apostleship of human rights in the United States. d's Slavery as it is and Mrs. Stowe's Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin. and his subserviency to slavery with the attitude of Thompson, O'Connell, O'Connell (I was told the anecdote by Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton), in 1829, after his election to the House oefore the end of the year no fewer than eighteen English editions could be Lib. 22.191. reckoned. On September 24, George Thompson wrote from London to Mr. Garrison: Uncle Tom is doing a great work here. Between 400,000 Ms. and 500,000 co
George Ticknor (search for this): chapter 12
injustice yet, because to discuss the question of foreign policy I have a right. My nation is an object of that policy; we are interested in it; but to mix with interior party movements I have no right, not being a citizen of the United States. To Kossuth the last word, the measure of the man. In July, after two months seclusion in New York, he stole Lib. 22.118. away from the country, carrying nothing substantial as the result of his mission except ninety thousand dollars Life of Geo. Ticknor, 2.277. —the net proceeds of voluntary gifts and of the sale of Hungarian bonds. Already when he was at Memphis, on his voyage down the Mississippi, he had ceased to be the newest excitement of the American people. On March 20, 1852, Mrs. Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin appeared, to mock the legislatures, statesmen, and parties engaged in Lib. 22.62, 65, 94, 102; Pulszky's White, Red, and Black, 1.132, 133. affirming the Compromise measures to be final. It had previously been published pie
Robert F. Wallcut (search for this): chapter 12
a journey down the Mississippi. Proceeding by way of Annapolis, Baltimore, Harrisburg, and Pittsburg, he was engaged in canvassing Ohio during the month of February, 1852, when Mr. Garrison launched against him (in part) in the Liberator, and directly (in full) in pamphlet Lib. 22.29. form, a Letter which fixed the attention of the American press, and which no biographer or admirer of Kossuth can neglect. Letter to Louis Kossuth concerning Freedom and Slavery in the U. S. Boston: R. F. Wallcut, 1852. 8vo, pp. 112. This document, put forth in the name and with the sanction of the American Anti-Slavery Society, was drafted and compiled by its President; and it and the Thoughts on Ante, 1.290. Colonization constitute what may properly be called the Works of Garrison, as distinguished from his journalistic writings or the two collections of his prose and verse. To analyze it here is unnecessary. It traced soberly and severely Kossuth's fall; offset his sickening encomium of
Ralph Wardlaw (search for this): chapter 12
ms he aided in giving us more goods from England. We made up a purse and bought a beautiful French Lib. 23.15. bronze statuette of a negro for Mrs. Stowe. . . . By the by, Mrs. Stowe is coming to your country, by invitation of Lib. 23.33, 35. Wardlaw, etc. I fear she will fall into bad hands and do us harm. Rev. Ralph Wardlaw. But we must endure. Her service to the cause has been a great one. But Uncle Tom would never have been written Lib. 23.73. had not Garrison developed the facts; aRev. Ralph Wardlaw. But we must endure. Her service to the cause has been a great one. But Uncle Tom would never have been written Lib. 23.73. had not Garrison developed the facts; and never would have Cf. Lib. 23.26. succeeded had he not created readers and purchasers. She has called on Garrison, In the course of this interview Mrs. Stowe inquired earnestly, but in no offensive spirit, Mr. Garrison, are you a Christian? The question was a proper one, as Mr. Garrison had already put it to her in connection with her views of non-resistance (ante, p. 361). It was met smilingly on his part, and substantially as was of old the inquiry, And who is my neighbor? and visited
Richard Webb (search for this): chapter 12
ca, though Kossuth has proved so fearfully recreant to principle (Ms. and Lib. 22: [123]). See the pointing of this contrast after Kossuth's return to England in Lib. 24: 113, 125, 126. a packet describing with faithfulness and correctness the true state of the slave question in the States. On November 4, James Haughton sent through Charles Gilpin a letter to Lib. 22.3. Kossuth admonishing him not to go to America, and to give to the world his reasons for staying away. On November 17, Richard Webb, forwarding his mite for Lib. 21:[203]. the Hungarian fund to the Mayor of Southampton, desired him to lay before Kossuth considerations why, in visiting America, he should not forfeit the esteem of European admirers by ignoring the existence of slavery. The Edinburgh Ladies' Emancipation Society, on Lib. 21.206. November 18, and the Glasgow anti-slavery societies forwarded Lib. 22.3. addresses of a like tenor. A committee of the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society in person ens
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