An edition of [Letter to] My Dear Friend (1869)

[Letter to] My Dear Friend

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Last edited by ImportBot
July 24, 2014 | History
An edition of [Letter to] My Dear Friend (1869)

[Letter to] My Dear Friend

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Publish Date
Language
English

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Cover of: [Letter to] My Dear Friend
[Letter to] My Dear Friend
1869
manuscript in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Holograph, signed.

William Lloyd Garrison says that his failure to write sooner "is owing to my aversion to the mechanical use of the pen." He has attended several women's suffrage conventions. He discusses The Revolution, a periodical, as an organ of the suffrage movement. George Francis Train is no longer connected to it. He criticizes that association that Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony had with George Francis Train in the suffrage movement. He heard that Parker Pillsbury is no longer active in the movement. He praises The Agitator, "a weekly paper, published at Chicago, Illinois, and edited by Mrs. Mary A. Livermore." He mentions a meeting to be held in Cleveland to organize the American Women's Suffrage Association.

Merrill, Walter M. Letters of William Lloyd Garrison, v.6, no.36.

Published in
Roxbury, [Mass.]
Series
William Lloyd Garrison Correspondence (1823-1879)

The Physical Object

Format
[manuscript]
Pagination
2 leaves (8 p.) ;

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25468444M
Internet Archive
lettertomydearfr1869garr2

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