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October 23rd, 1835 AD (search for this): chapter 13
tionable paper, without injuring Mr. Garrison's interest? Would you be willing to aid in promoting such a scheme—or can you suggest a better? Pray answer these questions at your first convenience. The real object of the Cambridge Anti-Slavery Society and the natural fate of this robust organization are set forth in a letter from Mr. Ware to a friend who still thought he had not sufficiently demonstrated his want of connection with the Boston abolitionists. It is dated Cambridge, October 23, 1835—a year later than the foregoing: When I saw how outrageously Garrison and some others Memoir, pp. 366, 367. were abusing this great cause, mismanaging it by their unreasonable violence, and by what I thought unchristian language, and a convention was proposed in Massachusetts, I joined a few gentlemen in Cambridge Twenty-three in number, most if not all Unitarians. The first four names on the list were Henry Ware, Sidney Willard, Charles Follen, H. Ware, Jr. Further on came W
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