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William Lloyd Garrison by Archibald H. Grimke

A >> Archibald H. Grimke >> William Lloyd Garrison

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Foster, William E., 390.

Fremont, John C., 361.

_Free Press_, 27, 34.

Fugitive Slave Law, effect of, 345-347.

Fugitive Slaves, The Crafts, Shadrach, Sims, Burns, 349.

Fuller, John E., 219.

Furness, Rev. W.H., 344.


Garrison, Abijah, 12-15, 18.

Garrison, Charles Follen, 331-332.

Garrison, Francis Jackson, 330.

Garrison, George Thompson, 381.

Garrison, Helen Eliza, 194-196, 219,
297, 331,
385-386.

Garrison, James, 19, 20,
302-303.

Garrison, Joseph, 11, 12.

Garrison, Wendell Phillips, 297.

Garrison, William Lloyd,

Early years, 11-26;

Publishes _Free Press,_ 27-34;

seeks work in Boston, 35;

nominates Harrison Gray Otis for Congress, 35-36;

temperance and the _Philanthropist_, 39-44;

meets Lundy, 44;

early attitude on the slavery question, 46-50;

on war, 51;

first experience with ministers on the subject of slavery, 52;

Anti-slavery Committee of twenty, 53;

goes to Bennington, Vt., to edit the
_Journal of the Times_, 54-55;

monster anti-slavery petition to Congress, 55;

anticipates trouble with the South, 56;

begins to preach freedom, 56-57;

agrees to help Lundy edit the _Genius of Universal
Emancipation_, 58;

Congregational Societies of Boston invite him to
deliver Fourth-of-July oration, 60;

the address, 61-67;

goes to Baltimore, 69;

raises the standard of immediate emancipation, 70;

Lundy and he agree to differ, 71;

defends Free People of Color, 73-74;

makes acquaintance with barbarism of slavery, 74;

ship _Francis_ and Francis Todd, 75-77;

prosecuted and imprisoned, 77-83;

released, 83;

visits the North, 84;

returns to Baltimore but leaves it again for good, 87;

lectures on slavery, 88-91;

character, 92-94;

incarnation of immediate emancipation, 109;

Dr. Lyman Beecher, 110-111;

difficulties in the way of publishing the _Liberator_, 112-115;

his method of attacking slavery, 118;

he is heard, 120;

Walker's appeal, 121-122;

Nat Turner, 125-126;

southern excitement, 127-128;

New England Anti-Slavery Society, 137-138;

appointed agent, 141;

thoughts on African colonization, 143-150;

first visit to England, 152-156;

Mr. Buxton's mistake, 152;

prejudice against color, 157;

Prudence Crandall, 166, 168;

organization of New York City Anti-Slavery Society and
beginning of the mob period, 170-172;

formation of American Anti-Slavery Society, 174-185;

declaration of sentiments, 182-184;

increased agitation, 185-186;

marriage, 193;

the wife, 194-196;

poverty of the _Liberator_, 197-200;

the paper displeases friends, 201-204;

George Thompson, 204-206;

Faneuil Hall meeting to put the Abolitionists down, 211-215;

gallows for two, 215-216;

the Broad-Cloth Mob, 218-232;

Thompson leaves the country, 238;

appears before a committee of Massachusetts legislature, 245-246;

Pennsylvania Hall, 257-260;

Marlboro Chapel, 260-261;

ill health, 263;

Educational Convention of anti-slavery agents, 264-265;

the Sabbath question, 265-272;

The woman's question, 273-280;

clerical appeal, 282-285;

anti-slavery political action, 286-288;

conflict between the New York and the Boston boards, 289-291;

the World's Convention, 292-295;

visit to Scotland, 295-296;

in the lecture field, 300-301;

his brother James, 302-303;

meets charges of infidelity, 303-304;

Irish Address, 304-305;

no union with slaveholders, 306-312;

Texas agitation, 316-318;

dislikes Liberty party, 319-323;

some characteristics, 326-334;

the Rynders Mob, 340-344;

publicly burns the United States Constitution, 354;

answers objections to his disunionism, 362-363;

Harper's Ferry, 365-367;

secession: first attitude to it, 370-373;

second attitude, 373;

adapts himself to circumstances, 373-381;

Lincoln and emancipation, 379;

visits Baltimore, Washington, Charleston, 381-384;

illness and death of his wife, 385-386;

differences with anti-slavery associates, 386-388;

discontinues the _Liberator_, 388;

national testimonial, 389-390;

fourth visit to England, 390-391;

champions cause of Southern negroes, 391;

champions cause of Chinese, 392;

believes in Free Trade, 392-393;

illness and death, 393-395.

Garrison, William Lloyd, Jr., 297.

_Gazette_, Boston, 217.

_Genius of Universal Emancipation_, 58, 69, 71-75.

Gibbons, James S., 309.

Giddings, Joshua R., 338.

Goodell, William, 149, 203, 247,
248.

Green, William, Jr., 184.

Grimke, Angelina E., 235, 258-259.

Grimke, Sisters, 275-280.


Hale, John P., 338, 350.

Hamilton, Alexander, 104.

Hamlin, Hannibal, 338.

Haydon, Benjamin Robert, 294, 295.

Hayne, Robert Y., 209.

_Herald_, Newburyport, 21, 26.

_Herald_, New York, 340, 341.

Higginson, T.W., 358-359, 361.

Hoar, Samuel, 314.

Horton, Jacob, 61.

Hovey, Charles F., 389.


Jackson, Francis, 233, 240-241,
311-312, 317,
341, 344.

Jewett, Daniel E., 175.

Jocelyn, Rev. Simeon Smith, 203.

Johnson, Andrew, 380.

Johnson, Oliver, 114, 134, 137,
139, 160-161,
374.

_Journal_, Camden (S.C.), 128.

_Journal_, Louisville (Ky.), 120.


Kansas, Struggle over, 357-358.

Kelley, Abby, 259, 291, 310.

Kimball, David T., 175.

Knapp, Isaac, 113, 127, 139,
197, 200, 265,
301-302.

Kneeland, Abner, 90, 268.


Lane Seminary, 189.

Latimer, George, 312.

Leavitt, Joshua, 149, 320, 329.

Leggett, Samuel, 86.

_Liberator, The_, 111-120,
126-129, 131,
141, 163, 165,
169, 176,
197-204, 236,
237, 265, 284,
297, 327-329,
388.

Lincoln, Abraham, 365, 370, 375,
376, 377, 378,
379, 380, 382,
384.

Lloyd, Fanny, 13-20, 24-26,
44-45.

Longfellow, Stephen, 148.

Loring, Edward Greeley, 354.

Loring, Ellis Grey, 134, 135, 136,
138, 245, 264.

Lovejoy, Elijah P., 254-257.

Lowell, James Russell, 136, 329.

Lumpkin, Wilson, 128.

Lundy, Benjamin, 44, 45, 46,
48-54, 57,
58, 69, 71,
72, 75, 108,
133.

Lunt, George, 244, 247, 248.

Lyman, Theodore, 223, 224, 227,
228.


Macaulay, Zachary, 154.

Malcolm, Rev. Howard, 52.

Martineau, Harriet, 94, 240.

Mason, James M., 338.

Mason, Jeremiah, 111.

Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, 265, 280, 297,
310.

Mathew, Father, 304, 305.

May, Samuel, Jr., 325, 389.

May, Samuel J., 90, 93, 94,
134, 166, 167,
179, 180, 186,
199, 245, 272,
289, 393.

McDowell, James, 124, 125.

McKim, James Miller, 149.

McDuffie, Governor, 243, 246.

_Mercury_, Charleston, 126,

Mill, John Stuart, 390.

Missouri Compromise, Repeal of, 352-354.

Moore, Esther, 259.

Morley, Samuel, 390,

Mott, Lucretia, 178, 259, 292,
293.

_National Intelligencer_, 128.

New England Anti-Slavery Society, 137-141, 200,
280, 311.

_New England Spectator_, 282.

Newman, Prof. Francis W., 378.


O'Connell, Daniel, 154, 170, 171,
304.

Otis, Harrison Gray, 35, 129, 130,
131, 213, 214,
215.


Palmer, Daniel, 11.

Palmer, Mary, 11, 12.

Parker, Mary S., 222, 234.

Parker, Theodore, 121, 349, 350,
362.

Pastoral Letter, 277.

Paxton, Rev. J.D., 186.

Pease, Elizabeth, 303, 331, 346.

Pennsylvania Hall, 257-260.

Phelps, Amos A., 149, 186, 203,
278, 280, 288.

Phillips Academy (Andover), 190.

Phillips, Ann Green, 292, 293.

Phillips, Wendell, 190, 257, 310,
317, 323, 326,
344, 346-347,
349, 351, 386,
387, 388, 393,
394.

Pillsbury, Parker, 310,

Prentice, George D., 120.

Purvis, Robert, 144, 162, 178.


Quincy, Edmund, 299, 310, 316,
323, 324, 325,
326, 327-329.

Quincy, Josiah, 347.


Rankin, John, 177.

Remond, Charles Lenox, 293, 295, 304.

Rhett, Barnwell, 338.

Rogers, Nathaniel P., 149, 293, 295,
301.

Rynders, Isaiah, 341-344.


Scoble, Rev. John, 294.

Sewall, Samuel E., 90, 91, 134,
135, 136, 137,
138, 175, 236,
367.

Seward, William H., 338, 372.

Shaw, Chief-Justice, 312.

Slavery, Rise and Progress of, 95-107.

Smith, Gerritt, 147, 236, 297,
320.

Sprague, Peleg, 213, 214.

Stanton, Edwin M., 382.

Stanton, Henry B. 253, 288.

Stearns, Charles, 359.

Stevens, Thaddeus, 338.

Stuart, Charles, 201, 202, 264.

Sumner, Charles, 234, 317, 339,
346, 359.


Tappan, Arthur, 83, 84, 164,
171, 184, 209,
210.

Tappan, Lewis, 149, 177, 201,
209, 283, 285.

Texas Agitation, 314-318.

Thompson, George, 204-206, 210,
212, 213, 216,
217, 218, 238,
294, 295, 351,
383, 385.

Thurston, David, 180.

Tilton, Theodore, 382.

Todd, Francis, 75, 76, 77,
81, 82, 87.

Toombs, Robert, 338.

Travis, Joseph, 124.

Turner, Nat., 124-125.


Uncle Tom's Cabin, 351-352.


Villard, Mrs. Henry, 394.


Walker, David, 121, 122, 123,
126.

Ward, Rev. Samuel R., 344.

Ware, Rev. Henry, Jr., 203.

Webb, Richard D., 310, 316, 318,
326.

Webster, Daniel, 35, 101, 110,
111, 117, 249,
338, 339, 347,
348, 370.

Weld, Theodore D., 149, 190, 264,
279.

Wesley, John, 70, 107.

White, Nathaniel H., 41.

Whitney, Eli, 98.

Whittier, John Greenleaf, 34, 175, 179,
186, 202, 234,
279, 320.

Wilberforce, William, 152, 154.

Winslow, Isaac, 177.

Winslow, Nathan, 177.

Wright, Elizur, 147, 149, 185,
186, 202, 210,
283-285, 287,
320.


Yerrington, James B., 113.






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