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July 23, 2014 | History

I return you a thousand thanks, my Dear Friend, ...

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Publish Date
Language
English

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Book Details


Published in

Dedham, [Mass.]

Edition Notes

Holograph, signed.

Edmund Quincy has written a long letter to John A. Collins with the facts and details of the annual meeting. In reference to Caroline Weston's "transmission of documents to Eng[lan]d," Edmund Quincy remarks that female abolitionists are "more executive than most of the brethren." Edmund Quincy lectured to Quakers in Lynn. While staying with William Bassett, Edmund Quincy saw Abby Kelley and Elizabeth(?) Whittier, the sister of J. G. Whittier, "a little Quakeress with tremendous black eyes." Edmund Quincy tells of a session with a phrenologist named Coombs. He mentions a sermon by Theodore Parker, in which it was stated that the anti-slavery and non-resistance movements were the only manifestations of Christianity without Emersonian or Channingian qualifications.

Series
Caroline Weston Correspondence (1834-1874)

The Physical Object

Format
[manuscript]
Pagination
1 leaf (4 p.) ;

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25454652M
Internet Archive
ireturnyouthousa00quin

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