Letter from Anne Warren Weston, Poplar Street, [Boston], to Deborah Weston, Jan. 25, 1842
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Holograph, signed with initials.Anne W. Weston describes cloaks made for her sisters and herself. She dwells on the "iniquity" of Mr. Perkins, who refused his pulpit to Cyrus Burleigh and (John M.) Spear. He did, however, take up a collection for Lunsford Lane on Sunday afternoon. In the evening, while eight people attended Jonas Perkins' prayer meeting, the Universalist House was "thronged to suffocation." There, Lunsford Lane told his story and answered questions "in a manner admirably calculated to produce a good effect for the cause." The total collection amounted to $64. Anne reports on the health of the Chapmans at Chauncy Place, and on business matters. She encloses a letter from E. Pease. "Boz arrived with his wife & was last night at the theatre ... Nickelby was acted & then a sort of masque where all Dicken's principal characters appeared. They gave Dickens three times three ..." The Earl of Mulgrave is here, too. "He is sort of anti slavery having behaved well as Gov. of Jamaica." Anna Cabot is engaged to a son of Giles Lodge.Lunsford Lane, who Anne refers to in her letter, was a slave from North Carolina who had purchased his own freedom and was trying to buy his family out of slavery. For more information, see the book: Lunsford Lane; or, Another Helper from North Carolina. By the Rev. William G. Hawkins, Boston, 1863.
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Digital CommonwealthKeywords
- Antislavery Movements
- Boston
- Cabot, Anna
- Correspondence
- Dickens, Charles 1812 1870
- Freedmen
- History
- Lane, Lunsford 1803 Approximately 1863
- Massachusetts
- Nichol, Elizabeth Pease 1807 1897
- Normanby, Constantine Henry Phipps, Marquess Of 1797 1863
- Perkins, Jonas 1790 1874
- Slaver
- United States
- Weston, Anne Warren 1812 1890
- Weston, Deborah B. 1814
- Women
- Women Abolitionists