Description
Holograph, signedAbby Kelley Foster considers Maria Weston Chapman to be "a most terribly severe disciplinarian" in reference to George Bradburn and James N. Buffum. She suggests that Maria W. Chapman write to Buffum and make clear to him "that [Gerrit] Smith by endorsing New Organization is inflicting as deep an injury as St. Clair or Torrey ..." Abby Kelley Foster asserts that "some people you drive from the cause, S.S. Foster, for instance." Collins remains in central New York. Jacob Ferris, George Bradburn, and Frederick Douglass are now in Ohio. Collins urged Maria W. Chapman to accompany them, but her judgment forbade it. She thinks that the campaign will be more useful without Collins and gives her reasons. Collins is "wrapped in another idea" and that the agents connected with him chafe under the disadvantage of holding "property meetings" directly after theirs. Abby Kelley Foster is confident that she can accomplish more alone than in conventions; also wishes to avoid "the forked tongue of slander." Abby Kelley Foster is holding a revival anti-slavery meeting in Seneca Falls. Syracuse abolitionists are still smarting from the rupture there
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Record Contributed By
Boston Public LibraryRecord Harvested From
Internet ArchiveKeywords
- Antislavery Movements
- Bradburn, George, 1806 1880
- Buffum, James Needham, 1807 1887
- Chapman, Maria Weston, 1806 1885
- Collins, John A. (John Anderson), 1810 1879
- Foster, Abby Kelley, 1811 1887
- Foster, Stephen S. (Stephen Symonds), 1809 1881
- Slaver
- Smith, Gerrit, 1797 1874
- Women
- Women Abolitionists