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Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 7., Meeting-house brook and the second Meeting-house. (search)
ccess was due. Two letters to the Boston Herald, March 1 and 26, 1903, afterwards printed by him under the titles, Why the Negro was Enfranchised, and Negro Suffrage Justified, testify to his life-long interest in the colored people. He was a zealous advocate of woman suffrage, frequently appearing before legislative committees in its defence. He believed in it as a right, and opposed property qualifications as a surrender of principle. Mr. Hallowell was the author of two books, The Quaker Invasion of Massachusetts, and The Pioneer Quakers, which were a valuable contribution to the early history of Massachusetts. He died January 5, 1904, leaving a wife and four children. His is the record of an honorable, cultivated man, a lover of books, and the friend of his kind at the cost of sacrifice which he ungrudgingly paid. Henry C. Delong. The Medford Historical Society solicits contributions for its scrap book and for the Colonial kitchen which it is fitting up at headquarters.