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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 9: Journalist at large.—1868-1876. (search)
uld not see that any Constitutional obstacle existed to maintaining with Federal troops the governments in South Carolina and Louisiana—the last that remained to be artificially held up in this manner—so long as the legally constituted State Governments invoked their aid. He therefore viewed with foreboding President Grant's admission, towards the close of his second term, that the military administration could no longer be maintained at the South; and entered an earnest protest against President Hayes's retirement of the troops directly after the latter assumed office in 1877. free Trade.—In January, 1869, Mr. Garrison was elected a Vice-President of the American Free Trade League, of New York, and actively assisted in the formation of a Revenue Reform League in Boston, the following April, making one of the principal speeches at the Boston April 20, 1869. meeting. In justification of his part in it he said: This is a meeting with special reference to business Boston Jour<
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 10: death of Mrs. Garrison.—final visit to England.—1876, 1877. (search)
sual active participation. He subsequently devoted several days to the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, but the resultant fatigue crippled him for weeks, and the summer, as a whole, was a quiet and sober one for him. What a solitude is the house! he wrote to his absent daughter, and his letters repeatedly reflected his sense of loneliness. Nevertheless, he wrote and read much, received and visited many friends, and contributed two or three letters to the Presidential campaign. In Hayes-Tilden. June he received a note from Harriet Martineau, acknowledging the Memorial of Mrs. Garrison, and this was swiftly followed by the announcement of her own death, which it June 27, 1876. foreshadowed. He was deeply interested in the advance proofs of her Autobiography, which Mrs. Chapman sent Maria W. Chapman. him, and as to which she frequently conferred with him during that autumn. Harriet Martineau to W. L. Garrison. Ambleside, May 30, 1876. Ms. my dear friend: When y
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 11: last years.—1877-79. (search)
and. In a letter to the New York Times he condemned the Southern policy of Oct. 30, 1877. President Hayes as totally at variance with all his fair-spoken words and pledges, a deplorable betrayal ofuse, made any such issue, or protested against bulldozing the loyal colored voters, or arraigned Hayes's conciliatory policy. Besides, he is sustained by the worst elements in the Commonwealth, and ture to similar action, but without success. I wish I could believe (though I do hope) that President Hayes will interpose his veto; but what he will do remains to be seen. To his son Wendell he ontained in your last letter. I wish the President's veto had been more emphatic and less President Hayes. technical, but, nevertheless, am thankful it has saved us from disgrace. Our common interith the view of passing a new bill aimed at the same result. It is pleasant, I think, to find Mr. Hayes sound on this question, though he did put his veto on the narrowest possible ground, omitting