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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 1: the Boston mob (second stage).—1835. (search)
e Thompson, vents itself on Garrison at a meeting of the Boston Female Anti-slavery Society on October 21. Mayor Lyman rescues him, and shelters him in the City Hall, whence he is formally committed tt of the meeting postponed from Congress Hall named as the appointed time Wednesday afternoon, October 21, at 3 o'clock, and the place the hall adjoining the Anti-Slavery Office at 46 Washington Streeed there, he yet shared the pro-slavery sentiment of the time. . . . A day or two after the 21st of October, I dined at his house. He knew I had been one of the women mobbed, and, of course, we met rehended and dealt with as to law and justice shall appertain. Dated at Boston, this twenty-first of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty-five. Daniel Parkman. Sof said city, then and there to be dealt with according to law. Dated at Boston, the twenty-first of October, A. D. 1835. Edward G. Prescott, Jus. Pacis. Suffolk, Ss. October 21, 1835. I hav
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 2: Germs of contention among brethren.—1836. (search)
At this meeting, as at divers local anti-slavery meetings,—the first of their respective organizations since the mob of October 21,—Mr. Garrison's hands were naturally upheld by resolutions of praise and confidence. To the censorious comments of thee following year must have kept him (or Ante, 1.464. any man) awake to his duty. But it was not till after the mob of October 21 that he was heartily engaged in Channing's Life, p. 537. writing on the subject of slavery. The book went to press nently, Dr. Follen had been showing the relation of cause and effect between the Faneuil Hall meeting and the mob of October 21, as foreshadowing the result of legislative resolutions censuring the abolitionists. Would not the mobocrats again undn is still the exciting topic, he wrote from Newport on Oct. 27, 1835—the editor of the Liberator having gone to jail on Oct. 21. The mobs still interfere with the anti-slavery meetings, and the South alarms many at the North by threatening us with <