English: Oliver Johnson, about the age of 35. From a daguerreotype taken in 1845.
Identifier: williamlloydgarr01garr (find matches)
Title: William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879 : the story of his life told by his children
Year: 1885 (1880s)
Authors: Garrison, Wendell Phillips, 1840-1907 Garrison, Francis Jackson, 1848-1916
Subjects: Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879 Abolitionists Antislavery movements
Publisher: New York : Century Co.
Contributing Library: Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection
Digitizing Sponsor: The Institute of Museum and Library Services through an Indiana State Library LSTA Grant
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t, the Juvenile Garrison Independent Society presented him with a large and handsomely executed heart-shaped silver medal, suitably inscribed, on the eve of his departure; and colored gentlemen of Boston and Salem, among whose inscribed names we find that of C. L. Reniond, gave him a beautiful silver cup in commemoration of our farewell interview at the hospitable home of Mr. George Putnam. 2 See the hopeful lyric, Ye who in bondage pine, bearing date March 20, 1833, first printed in the April number of the monthly Abolitionist (p. 64,afterwards in Lib. 3: 56), and sung at the anti-slavery meeting held on the 4th of July, 1833, in Boylston Hall, Boston (Lib. 3: 107). 3 These were Miss Harriet Minot, afterwards Mrs. Isaac Pitman, of Somerville, Mass., and a lifelong friend of Mr. Garrison; Miss Harriott Plummer, afterwards Mrs. Charles Bartlett, and mother of the distinguished Gen. William F. Bartlett, of the civil war; and Miss Elizabeth E. Parrott, afterwards Mrs. George Hughes, of Boston.
Text Appearing After Image:
^Et. 28.) PRUDENCE CRANDALL. 331 incidental avowal in the Liberator of March 16 — We Lib. 3: 43. declare that our heart is neither affected by, nor pledged to, any lady, black or white, bond or free l— was perhaps intended to be read as an advertisement, between the lines. A trip to Haverhill and an address there were the result of the correspondence which ensued : W. L. Garrison, to Inquirers after Truth. Boston, March 4, 1833. MS. You excite my curiosity and interest still more by informing me that my dearly beloved Whittier is a friend and townsman of yours. Can we not induce him to devote his brilliant genius more to the advancement of our cause, and kindred enterprises, and less to the creations of romance and fancy, and the disturbing incidents of political strife 1 Boston, March 18, 1833. MS. You think my influence will prevail with my dear Whittiermore than yours. I think otherwise. If he has not already blotted my name from the tablet of his memory, it is because his magnanimity is
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