Letter from James Miller M'Kim, Phil[adelphi]a, [Penn.], to Maria Weston Chapman, Oct. 17 / [18]43
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Holograph, signed.James Miller M'Kim is surprised that the executive committee in New York has not yet issued the call to meet in Philadelphia, where a house has been procured for this purpose. He thinks that the call should not come from Philadelphia, but from the committee of the National Society. Elizabeth Neall is mistaken in saying that there would "certainly be a mob." M'Kim says: "Our minds however were made up from the first to hold the meeting---mob or no mob." M'Kim does not agree with Maria Weston Chapman that "'mob violence' would do good." In Philadelphia, they have been mob ridden ever since the burning of Pennsylvania Hall, where "the mobocrats had a fair triumph on that occasion." M'Kim asks how long the American Anti-Slavery Society is to continue under the present regime. He objects to the society being under control by the Hopper family. He mentions the price of copies of a mezzotint engraving of Lucretia Mott.
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Correspondence Manuscripts
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Digital CommonwealthKeywords
- Abolitionists
- American Anti Slavery Society
- Antislavery Movements
- Boston
- Chapman, Maria Weston 1806 1885
- Correspondence
- History
- M'kim, J. Miller (James Miller) 1810 1874
- Massachusetts
- Mott, Lucretia 1793 1880
- Pennsylvania
- Philadelphia
- Slaver
- United States
- Women
- Women Abolitionists