An edition of [Letter to] My Dear Friend (1842)

[Letter to] My Dear Friend

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July 24, 2014 | History
An edition of [Letter to] My Dear Friend (1842)

[Letter to] My Dear Friend

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Publish Date
Language
English

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Edition Notes

Holograph, signed.

Frederick Douglass has just returned from his tour and seemed "highly delighted" with his meeting in Weymouth. John Anderson Collins feels "much enraged" because nothing was said about George Bradburn's lecturing there this week and wishes to have his meeting extensively advertised. "It makes Bradburn as snappish as a Lapland Growler to have a thin audience." John A. Collins comments on the political fate of Joshua Reed Giddings. Collins says: "Every member of congress from the north ought to have retired with him ...I am disappointed in relation to the course of our Massachusetts delegation. [William] Parmenter forgot his domocratic chains and voted against the censure. Mirabulu [sic] dictu---He should be crowned with laurels." [For the House's censure of Joshua R. Giddings, see William Lloyd Garrison, v.III, p.51-52; see also Buell, Walter. "Joshua R. Giddings," Cleveland, 1882, p.117-124.]

Published in
Boston, [Mass.]
Series
Anne Warren Weston Correspondence (1834-1886)

The Physical Object

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

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL25468266M
Internet Archive
lettertomydearfr00coll4

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL16842808W

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