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Correspondence, Women abolitionists, Antislavery movements, History, Abolitionists, Democratic Party (U.S.), Free trade, Centennial celebrations, Contagious Diseases Acts, Christmas, Bunker Hill, Battle of, Boston, Mass., 1775, United States. President (1861-1865 : Lincoln), American Anti-Slavery Society, Prejudices, United States, Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, Capital punishment, Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865-1877), American Colonization Society, American Peace Society, African Americans, Colonization, National anti-slavery standard, Liberator (Boston, Mass. : 1831), Society of Friends, Cornell University, Cornell University. Libraries, Amistad (Schooner), Slavery and the church, Suffrage, Women, Massachusetts. State Reform School (Westborough, Mass.), Massachusetts, SabbathPeople
William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879), Caroline Weston (1808-1882), Oliver Johnson (1809-1889), George Thompson (1804-1878), Samuel May (1810-1899), William Tweedie (1821-1874), F. W. Chesson (1833 or 4-1888), Samuel C. Cobb (1826-1891), Philip Scarborough (d. 1865), Francis Jackson (1789-1861), Theodore Dwight Weld (1803-1895), Charlotte Coffin (1809-1889), Samuel J. May (1797-1871), Ellis Gray Loring (1803-1858), John A. Collins (1810-1879), Daniel O'Connell (1775-1847), Michael J. Sheehy, Quincy Adams Shaw (1826-1908), Theobald Mathew (1790-1856), Léon Chautard, Napoleon III Emperor of the French (1808-1873), Joshua P. Blanchard (1782-1868), Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), Gerrit Smith (1797-1874), John Cochrane (1813-1898), John Charles Frémont (1813-1890), Theodore Parker (1810-1860), Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1823-1911), J. M. W. Yerrinton (d. 1893), William Wells Brown (1814?-1884), Elizabeth Pease Nichol (1807-1897), Elizabeth Pease Garrison (1846-1848), Helen Eliza Garrison (1811-1876), Wendell Phillips (1811-1884), Joshua Coffin (1792-1864), Henry Egbert Benson (1814-1837), Maria Weston Chapman (1806-1885), Nathaniel Peabody Rogers (1794-1846), John Telemachus Hilton (1802-1864), William Bassett (1803-1871), Nathaniel Colver (1794-1870), William Wolcott Ellsworth (1791-1868), William McKenney (1790-1857), Leonard Bacon (1802-1881), John Breckinridge (1797-1841), Robert J. Breckinridge (1800-1871), Prudence Crandall (1803-1890), Amos A. Phelps (1805-1847), Henry Grafton Chapman (1804-1842), Joseph Sturge (1793-1859), John Quincy Adams (1767-1848), Oliver C. Gilbert, Robert Folger Wallcut (1797-1884), Ginery Bachelor Twitchell (1811-1883), Emma Forbes Weston (b. 1825), Anne Warren Weston (1812-1890), Mary Pratt Garrison (1853-1882), Francis Jackson Garrison (1848-1916), Henry Villard (1835-1900), George Lunt (1803-1885), Horace Bushnell (1802-1876), John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892), Lucy Stone (1818-1893), Amos Bronson Alcott (1799-1888), John Stuart Mill (1806-1873), Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1822-1893), Joseph Congdon, Joshua Titus Everett (1806-1897), William Lloyd Garrison (1838-1909)Places
United States, Boston, Massachusetts, Boston (Mass.), AfricaTimes
19th century, Civil War, 1861-1865Showing 11 featured editions. View all 37 editions?
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Holograph, signed.
In this letter to Elizabeth Pease Nichol, William Lloyd Garrison writes: "I find that, during my absence in England, the spirit of 'new organization' spared no pains, and let slip no opportunity, to make me odious with the public, and, especially, to alienate the affections of the colored people from me. They will know that, so long as I retain the confidence of my colored friends, all their machinations against me will prove abortive." Garrison and Nathaniel P. Rogers were given a public welcome from their trip abroad given by black abolitionists and white friends in Marlborough Chapel, Boston. James T. Hall gave Garrison the right hand of fellowship in the presence of this assembly. At the new organizationers' meeting, Nathaniel Colver was abusive. Mrs. Chapman is "even more arduous in her labors." Garrison and Nathaniel P. Rogers will attend both the New Hampshire and the Massachusetts state anti-slavery conventions, where they will report on World's Convention and the London Committee, showing it in its true light. Garrison quotes an editorial from the Quaker paper, The Friend. William Bassett has been excluded from the Society of Friends.
Merrill, Walter M. Letters of William Lloyd Garrison, v.2, no.214.
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