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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Lydia Maria Child, Letters of Lydia Maria Child (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier, Wendell Phillips, Harriet Winslow Sewall). Search the whole document.
Found 24 total hits in 11 results.
Wayland (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 68
To David Lee Child. Wayland, October 27, 1856.
I have thought enough about my dear absent mate, but I have found it nearly impossible to get an hour's time to tell him so. In the first place, there was the press waiting for that Kansas story. . . . Then I felt bound to stir up the women here to do something for Kansas; and, in order to set the example, I wrote to Mr. Hovey begging for a piece of cheap calico and of unbleached factory cotton.
He sent them, but said he did it out of courtesy to me; he himself deeming that money and energy had better be expended on the immediate abolition of slavery, and dissolution of the Union if that could not be soon brought about.
I did not think it best to wait for either of these events before I made up the cloth.
Cold weather was coming on, the emigrants would be down with fever and ague, and the roads would soon be in a bad state for baggage wagons.
So I hurried night and day, sitting up here all alone till eleven at night, stitching a
Illinois (Illinois, United States) (search for this): chapter 68
Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania, United States) (search for this): chapter 68
Kansas (Kansas, United States) (search for this): chapter 68
To David Lee Child. Wayland, October 27, 1856.
I have thought enough about my dear absent mate, but I have found it nearly impossible to get an hour's time to tell him so. In the first place, there was the press waiting for that Kansas story. . . . Then I felt bound to stir up the women here to do something for Kansas; and, in order to set the example, I wrote to Mr. Hovey begging for a piece of cheap calico and of unbleached factory cotton.
He sent them, but said he did it out of courtesKansas; and, in order to set the example, I wrote to Mr. Hovey begging for a piece of cheap calico and of unbleached factory cotton.
He sent them, but said he did it out of courtesy to me; he himself deeming that money and energy had better be expended on the immediate abolition of slavery, and dissolution of the Union if that could not be soon brought about.
I did not think it best to wait for either of these events before I made up the cloth.
Cold weather was coming on, the emigrants would be down with fever and ague, and the roads would soon be in a bad state for baggage wagons.
So I hurried night and day, sitting up here all alone till eleven at night, stitching as
New England (United States) (search for this): chapter 68
E. C. Pierce (search for this): chapter 68
David Lee Child (search for this): chapter 68
To David Lee Child. Wayland, October 27, 1856.
I have thought enough about my dear absent mate, but I have found it nearly impossible to get an hour's time to tell him so. In the first place, there was the press waiting for that Kansas story. . . . Then I felt bound to stir up the women here to do something for Kansas; and, in order to set the example, I wrote to Mr. Hovey begging for a piece of cheap calico and of unbleached factory cotton.
He sent them, but said he did it out of courtesy to me; he himself deeming that money and energy had better be expended on the immediate abolition of slavery, and dissolution of the Union if that could not be soon brought about.
I did not think it best to wait for either of these events before I made up the cloth.
Cold weather was coming on, the emigrants would be down with fever and ague, and the roads would soon be in a bad state for baggage wagons.
So I hurried night and day, sitting up here all alone till eleven at night, stitching a
Unitarian (search for this): chapter 68
Charles F. Hovey (search for this): chapter 68
To David Lee Child. Wayland, October 27, 1856.
I have thought enough about my dear absent mate, but I have found it nearly impossible to get an hour's time to tell him so. In the first place, there was the press waiting for that Kansas story. . . . Then I felt bound to stir up the women here to do something for Kansas; and, in order to set the example, I wrote to Mr. Hovey begging for a piece of cheap calico and of unbleached factory cotton.
He sent them, but said he did it out of courtesy to me; he himself deeming that money and energy had better be expended on the immediate abolition of slavery, and dissolution of the Union if that could not be soon brought about.
I did not think it best to wait for either of these events before I made up the cloth.
Cold weather was coming on, the emigrants would be down with fever and ague, and the roads would soon be in a bad state for baggage wagons.
So I hurried night and day, sitting up here all alone till eleven at night, stitching a
October 27th, 1856 AD (search for this): chapter 68
To David Lee Child. Wayland, October 27, 1856.
I have thought enough about my dear absent mate, but I have found it nearly impossible to get an hour's time to tell him so. In the first place, there was the press waiting for that Kansas story. . . . Then I felt bound to stir up the women here to do something for Kansas; and, in order to set the example, I wrote to Mr. Hovey begging for a piece of cheap calico and of unbleached factory cotton.
He sent them, but said he did it out of courtesy to me; he himself deeming that money and energy had better be expended on the immediate abolition of slavery, and dissolution of the Union if that could not be soon brought about.
I did not think it best to wait for either of these events before I made up the cloth.
Cold weather was coming on, the emigrants would be down with fever and ague, and the roads would soon be in a bad state for baggage wagons.
So I hurried night and day, sitting up here all alone till eleven at night, stitching as