Description
Holograph, signedWilliam Lloyd Garrison addressed an audience of colored friends in Providence; they voluntarily made a collection for Garrison's mission. Garrison stayed with the Bensons in Brooklyn; he spoke in Samuel Joseph May's pulpit. He wants Oliver Johnson to state in the Liberator that Miss Prudence Crandall has opened her school. Garrison addressed a colored audience in Hartford, Conn. Nathaniel Jocelyn started a portrait of William Lloyd Garrison in New Haven. Robert B. Hall has been attentiveOn page three of this manuscript, William Lloyd Garrison continues writing this letter on April 17, 1835, in Philadelphia. Garrison gave an address to an audience of colored people in Philadelphia. This audience was less interested than the colored people in Boston. Edmund Brewster painted William Lloyd Garrison's portrait. Garrison will sail for Liverpool on May 1 if funds are raised. A sheriff from Canterbury, Conn., tried to serve writs against Garrison at the instigation of Andrew T. JudsonMerrill, 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
- Benson, George William, 1808 1879
- Brewster, Edmund, Fl. 1818 1839
- Crandall, Prudence, 1803 1890
- Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805 1879
- Hall, Robert B. (Robert Bernard), 1812 1868
- Jocelyn, Nathaniel, 1796 1881
- Johnson, Oliver, 1809 1889
- Judson, Andrew T. (Andrew Thompson), 1784 1853
- Knapp, Isaac, 1804 1843
- May, Samuel J. (Samuel Joseph), 1797 1871
- Slaver