Skip to main content

Letter to] Dear Wife [manuscript

View
@ Boston Public Library

Description

Holograph, signedSallie Holley recently lectured here "to very general acceptance." Abby Kelley Foster and Stephen S. Foster held several meetings in City Hall. On their last night, they had to enter City Hall by breaking the lock. The notices of their meetings by the Detroit newspapers have been "abusive, untruthful and scurrilous, to the last degree." No preparation was made for William Lloyd Garrison; it was impossible to procure a hall. Garrison recounts a journey opposite Detroit, on the Canadian side of the boundary, to the village of Windsor, to the home of Henry Bibb, the printer of the "Voice of the Fugitive." Bibb's printing office was destroyed by a fire. Garrison then walked to Sandwich, a settlement composed mostly of fugitive slaves. Garrison addressed a mostly black audience in a Methodist church in DetroitMerrill, Walter M. Letters of William Lloyd Garrison
Rights:
Access to the Internet Archive’s Collections is granted for scholarship and research purposes only. Some of the content available through the Archive may be governed by local, national, and/or international laws and regulations, and your use of such content is solely at your own risk
View Original At:

Record Contributed By

Boston Public Library

Record Harvested From

Internet Archive