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Letter to] Dear Caroline [manuscript

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Holograph, signed with initialsDeborah Weston sends verses for the Liberty Bell newspaper. She spent the last week at Chauncy Place. Lucia heard Jenny Lind. She comments that "Daniel Webster stands much disgraced before the community." When the Turkish ambassador visited him, "not a black man in Boston would cook for him," and he was compelled to make use of "white trash." A meeting was held at Faneuil Hall about the Fugitive Slave Law. Deborah writes: "Josiah Quincy the old man headed the call for the meeting ... 350 others no name of the gentility but Ingersoll Bowditch, George B. Emerson, & Robert Apthorpe, which last with Theodore Parker worked hard. Wendell [Phillips] spoke beautifully. [Frederick] Douglas[s] tolerably ..." "The Whig Party are annoyed that Sam Elliot brought needless disgrace upon them." The country is much stirred up. Deborah said: "It only wants an attempt to sieze [sic] a slave in Mass. to make an outbreak." Warren is well. "Rosamond is the brightest little creature ever seen."The second leaf is either a continuation of the letter dated Oct. 21, 1850, or a separate, incomplete letter. It was written by Deborah Weston perhaps to Caroline Weston, ca. 1850 Nov. 1. Deborah Weston quotes William Lloyd Garrison as saying that "all he wanted was to get Thompson safe out of the country." Deborah had a good time at Henrietta [Sargent's]. Deborah describes the visit: "Henrietta was left in a very Pharisaical state of mind, thanking God she was not like these Bostonians ......
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