Our promised welcome dearest Miss Weston shall not be withheld... [manuscript]
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@ Boston Public Library
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Holograph, signedCaroline Weston rejoices that Caroline Weston is within a penny postage limit. Mary A. Estlin spent the last month in bed and is "still a pretty close prisoner" there, but is glad that she did not break down while her father depended on her nursing. Mary A. Estlin and Richard Davis Webb will defend Eliza Wigham against the Caroline Weston's accusations. She explains at length why the epithets that Caroline Weston applies to the New Organization in America does not fit in Great Britain. Most of the English abolitionists would be antagonized if the partisans of the American Anti-Slavery Society "were to adopt Mr. [Andrew] Paton's course & noisily proclaim in season and out of season the claims of that Society..." Mary A. Estlin, Richard Davis Webb, and Eliza Wigham wish to enlist the cooperation of anti-slavery sympathizers of all types. Eliza Wigham "chose the least of two evils in her conduct relative to the Edinburgh soiree." When J.W.C. Pennington and J. Henson have been discredited, "Garnet will be our chief remaining antagonist among the colored ministers." Mary A. Estlin speaks affectionately of Ellen CraftAlso with the same Call No. is an unrelated envelope, with the delivery address: Rev. Samuel May, 21 Cornhill, Boston. It is postmarked May 21, Weymouth, Mass
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Boston Public LibraryRecord Harvested From
Internet ArchiveKeywords
- Abolitionists
- Antislavery Movements
- Craft, Ellen
- Craft, William
- Estlin, Mary Anne, 1820 1902
- Garnet, Henry Highland, 1815 1882
- Henson, Josiah, 1789 1883
- Paton, Andrew, 1805 1884
- Pennington, James W. C
- Slaver
- Webb, Richard Davis, 1805 1872
- Weston, Caroline, 1808 1882
- Wigham, Eliza
- Women
- Women Abolitionists