Description
Holograph, signedExcept for the issue of slavery, William Lloyd Garrison much prefers America to Great Britain. He regards his recent mission abroad as very important. The refusal of William L. Garrison, Nathaniel P. Rogers, Charles L. Remond, and William Adams to become members of the convention helped to promote the consideration of women's rights. Garrison lectured and distributed tracts on temperance and nonresistance. Garrison praises Nathaniel P. Rogers and hopes he will edit the National Anti-Slavery Standard. George Thompson was ashamed of the speech he made at the convention for its incoherence. Garrison was not troubled by the hostility shown to him by Joshua Leavitt, Amos Augustus Phelps, and William GoodellMerrill, Walter M. Letters of William Lloyd Garrison
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Record Contributed By
Boston Public LibraryRecord Harvested From
Internet ArchiveKeywords
- Abolitionists
- Adams, William, 1790 1868
- Antislavery Movements
- Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805 1879
- Goodell, William, 1792 1878
- Leavitt, Joshua, 1794 1873
- New England Non Resistance Society
- Phelps, Amos A. (Amos Augustus), 1805 1847
- Remond, Charles Lenox, 1810 1873
- Rogers, Nathaniel Peabody, 1794 1846
- Slaver
- Temperance
- Thompson, George, 1804 1878
- Wright, Henry Clarke, 1797 1870