Description
Holograph, signedThe wound in William Lloyd Garrison's leg has grown worse, giving him continual pain night and day. He hopes that Isaac Knapp will find room in the Liberator to print a letter by General Andrew Jackson regarding the movements of General Gaines. There was another slave case in Boston. Garrison hopes that Samuel E. Sewall or Ellis Gray Loring will take Judge Hornblower's stand that the fugitive slave law in Congress is unconstitutionalMerrill, 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
- Breckinridge, Robert J. (Robert Jefferson), 1800 1871
- Fugitive Slaves
- Gaines, Edmund Pendleton, 1777 1849
- Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805 1879
- Hornblower, Joseph C. (Joseph Coerten), 1777 1864
- Jackson, Andrew, 1767 1845
- Knapp, Isaac, 1804 1843
- Loring, Ellis Gray, 1803 1858
- Sewall, Samuel E. (Samuel Edmund), 1799 1888
- Slaver
- Thompson, George, 1804 1878