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True witness (New Orleans, La.)
1861/09/28, 1861/12/07
Vol. 8 nos. 31 and 41. Presbyterian religious newspaper. The 12/7/1861 issue discusses slavery and religious readings for soldiers.
GLC05959.18
to Jesse Stubbs re: helping fugitive slaves escape (the Langford family)
1858/02/21
Coffin, Levi, 1798-1877
GLC06733.04
Printed biography mentioning the Langford story
1860 ca.
Stubbs, Jesse, fl. 1860
Some details vary.
GLC06733.05
to Edmund Pendleton re: waiting foreign dispatches on peace talks; selling slave
1782/08/06
Madison, James, 1751-1836
Awaiting news of peace talks and personal advice regarding impossibility of selling a slave. Madison notes that while European newspapers "teem with paragraphs relative to pacific negotiations" but past British policy "should always restrain our...
GLC06757
Liberator. [Vol. 32, no. 39 (September 26, 1862)]
1862/09/26
W.L. Garrison & I. Knapp (publishers), 1831-1865
Prints Lincoln's first Emancipation Proclamation. Said to be the first printing of the proclamation in an abolitionist newspaper. Headline reads "Proclamation of Emancipation - Freedom of the Slaves in Rebellious States on the First Day of January...
GLC06107.48
to J. W. Turner re: opposition to free soil movement
1853/10/06
Davis, Jefferson, 1808-1889
GLC07463
to Thomas B. Musgrave re: imprisonment
1859/11/17
Brown, John, 1800-1859
"I do not feel myself the least degraded by my imprisonment, my chain, or the near prospect of the gallows. Men cannot imprison, or chain, or hang the soul." With engraving, photograph, and collateral paperwork. Per Lee Shepard, Asst. Director for...
GLC07638.01
to "My Darling Wife" re: doubting reported plan to rescue Brown
1859/11/24
Taliaferro, William Booth, 1822-1898
Written while guarding John Brown in prison.
GLC07638.02
to John Adams Green and Edward Butler Osborne
1837/03/18
Adams, John Quincy, 1767-1848
Abolition of slavery and the right to petition
GLC07693.01
To the Inhabitants of the 12th Congressional District of Massachusetts
1837/03/20
GLC07693.02
to John Brown
1859/11/20
Doyle, Mahala, fl. 1859
By the widow and mother of three men killed by Brown in the Pottawatomie massacre: "My son John whose life I begged of [you] is grown up and is very desirous to be at Charlestown on the day of your execution, would certainly be there if his means...
GLC07590
The Epistle from the Yearly Meeting Held In London [emancipation]
1782/05/20-25
Contains a letter to friends at the quarterly and monthly meetings in Great Britain and Ireland, and another letter to friends at their yearly meeting in Philadelphia. Both letters guide the conduct of Quakers, and encourage "the continuance of your...
GLC07633
The Epistle from the Yearly Meeting Held in London [British abolition efforts]
1789/06/01-09
Quaker meeting regarding the conduct of church members. Mentions the global spread of British abolition efforts: "It is with particular satisfaction we observe the spreading of those principles of justice, which have long bound us to the cause of...
GLC07634
to Nancy E. Jones
7 August 1863
Jones, Joseph, fl. 1862-1865
Mentions that he has atteneded prayer meetings led by Black church members. Refers to the educational disaparity between Black and White children. Writes, "if they had the schooling and chance that we have they could take care of their selves and be...
GLC02739.064
Speech of the honorable Daniel Webster, on the Compromise Bill
1850
Webster, Daniel, 1782-1852
Speech defending his previous speech on 7 March 1850, during which he had supported the proposed Compromise of 1850. Following his March speech Webster was attacked by many abolitionists as having deserted the North. Here he defends his actions...
GLC02586
to James T. Austin
20 December 1837
Legare, Hugh Swinton, 1797-1843
Possibly to James Trecothick Austin, a Massachusetts resident active in local politics. Thanks Austin for a copy [of a speech or an article]. Notes that the topic of the speech (possibly related to anti-slavery) will soon bring trouble on the...
GLC02504.27
to D. W. Burroughs
18 March 1838
Pierce, Franklin, 1804-1869
Pierce, writing as a United States Senator from Vermont, responds to a letter from Reverend Burroughs. In reference to their conflicting views on slavery, promises to send Burroughs a copy of the United States Constitution, as he requested. Writes...
GLC02634
Transmittal of a proposed amendment to protect slavery (c/s Seward)
1861/03/16
Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865
Sending a proposed amendment to Governor to John Downey of California. "I transmit an authenticated copy of a Joint Resolution to amend the Constitution of the United States, adopted by Congress and approved on the 2d of March, 1861, by James...
GLC05631
[Twenty Star American "Abolitionist Flag"]
1859 circa
Large American cotton flag with only 20 stars. Fragile. The flag consists of 9 alternating red or white cloth strips sewn together with 20 somewhat irregular stars. The blue field is mottled and the flag has staining. The flag is identified as an...
GLC05762
Carte de visite bust portrait
1861 ca.
Stevens, Thaddeus, 1792-1868
GLC05596.18
Carte de visite vignette bust portrait
Sumner, Charles, 1811-1874
(Somewhat better version in GLC 2095.) Signed on front: "Charles Sumner"
GLC05597.23
[Frederick Douglass]
1885 ca.
Bell, Charles Milton, 1848-1893
Inscribed on front "Frederick Douglass. Born 1817." Inscribed verso: "Frederick Douglass. Born February 1817." With newspaper obituary pasted on the back. The albumen surface has been slightly scratched.
GLC05146
[Henry Ward Beecher]
1875 ca.
Sarony, Napoleon, 1821-1896
Verso has pencil notes of previous owner: "t[aken] @ 62-65 = 1878."
GLC05144
Standing view of the Kansas free-soiler
Brady, Mathew B., 1823-1896
MOMA # 94.608. Lead "Lane's Army of the North" on raids against Kansas slaveholders. Elected to the Senate in 1861 where he served until his suicide in 1866. Ink inscription on recto "Lane." Graphite inscription on verso "*MOMA 94.608" "Gen. Lane"...
GLC05111.02.0153
Oration delivered in Corinthian Hall, Rochester
1852/07/05
Douglass, Frederick, 1818-1895
First Edition by Lee, Mann & Co. Douglass' famous fourth of July oration, given on the fifth. Douglass was asked by the Rochester Ladies Anti-Slavery Society to give the oration on the fourth, choosing the topic "the meaning of the Fourth to the...
GLC06829
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