Description
Holograph, signedIn this letter, William Lloyd Garrison refers to the kind attentions of Mr. and Mrs. Wallcut and Mrs. Garnaut. As soon as Stephen Symonds Foster arrives, Garrison will leave Cleveland. Henry C. Wright will accompany Garrison to Albany; Stephen S. Foster will go with Garrison as far as Worcester; and Samuel Brooke will go all the way to Boston with Garrison. Garrison is greived by Frederick Douglass's failure to inquire after Garrison's health and Douglass's secrecy in starting the paper the North Star. Garrison regrets that Edmund Quincy did not oppose the project more strongly in the Liberator. Garrison believes that Samuel Brooke is at the bottom of the planMerrill, Walter M. Letters of William Lloyd Garrison
Access to the Internet Archive’s Collections is granted for scholarship and research purposes only. Some of the content available through the Archive may be governed by local, national, and/or international laws and regulations, and your use of such content is solely at your own risk
Record Contributed By
Boston Public LibraryRecord Harvested From
Internet ArchiveKeywords
- Abolitionists
- Antislavery Movements
- Brooke, Samuel, D. 1889
- Douglass, Frederick, 1818 1895
- Foster, Stephen S. (Stephen Symonds), 1809 1881
- Garnaut, Eliza Jones, 1810 1849
- Garrison, Helen Eliza, 1811 1876
- Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805 1879
- North Star
- Quincy, Edmund, 1808 1877
- Slaver
- Wallcut, Robert Folger, 1797 1884