Record ID | ia:lettertomydearfr00webb48 |
Source | Internet Archive |
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LEADER: 04039ntm 22004217a 4500
001 3584162
005 20101001102500.0
008 090115s1849 xx 000 i eng d
033 00 $a18490325
040 $aBRL
099 $aMs.A.9.2 v.24, p.69
100 1 $aWebb, Richard Davis,$d1805-1872.
245 10 $a[Letter to] My dear Friend$h[manuscript].
260 $aDublin, [Ireland],$c25th of March 1849.
300 $a1 leaf (4 p.) ;$c9 x 7 1/4 in.
500 $aHolograph, signed.
500 $aRichard Davis Webb and his wife approve of the plan to hold the anti-slavery bazaar in Philadelphia. Because of Quaker sympathies, donations might even be increased from Great Britain and Ireland. Richard D. Webb writes: "In Dublin all the trouble is taken by my wife, myself, and the Jennings family in Cork." He expresses sympathy for Lizzy (Elizabeth Bates Chapman Laugel), who is suffering from rheumatic fever. Richard D. Webb is glad that Caroline Weston liked his piece in the Liberty Bell; he remarks on the "lamentably" and "wonderfully small" number of literary people who have any interest in the cause. He admires Harriet Martineau's stand. Richard D. Webb explains that no disrespect was intended to Harriet Martineau in his letter to the National Anti-Slavery Standard. He thinks that Harriet Martineau is "tremendously clever---and that she looks a little scornfully on a large portion of those on whom her fame depends." Richard D. Webb would like to have Mrs. Follen and her son as guests, if they "thought Dublin worth looking at." Dr. Follen "is one of my saints." Richard D. Webb comments on various contributions to the Liberty Bell. Dr. John Bowring has gone to Hong Kong to serve as British consul. Richard D. Webb discourses at length on the misfortunes of Ireland: "The mass of the people are so miserable, degraded, demoralized & superstitious ... that it is almost impossible to help them." Also, "Ireland is not one nation, it is two which have little or nothing in common." Richard D. Webb dwells on the influence of priests, but admits that the "low Irish Protestants are not a whit less fanatical than the Catholics." He deprecates Daniel O'Connell's influence. Richard D. Webb never heard of a Roman Catholic who was an abolitionist. Richard D. Webb comments: "All Irishmen know what no Englishman seems disposed to admit---that nearly all of our misfortunes and faults and miseries including the ascendancy of popery, ignorance, & slavery are the legitimate result of ages of gross tyranny & deliberate misgovernment on the part of England." Webb remarks on Charles Lenox Remond: "I only wonder that he stood by you so long. When here I often blushed for him and the cause. He was a shameless beggar at times." Webb refers to George Bradburn's attack on William Lloyd Garrison as "the most revolting thing." Webb asks if Caroline Weston has heard of this Julia Griffiths, an enthusiastic friend of Frederick Douglass. He discusses on the disagreement between the Howitts and Harriet Martineau.
600 10 $aWeston, Caroline,$d1808-1882$vCorrespondence.
600 10 $aWebb, Richard Davis,$d1805-1872$vCorrespondence.
600 10 $aBowring, John,$cSir,$d1792-1872.
600 10 $aBradburn, George,$d1806-1880.
600 10 $aFollen, Eliza Lee Cabot,$d1787-1860.
600 10 $aGriffiths, Julia,$dd. 1895.
600 10 $aHowitt, Mary Botham,$d1799-1888.
600 10 $aLaugel, Elizabeth Bates Chapman,$db. 1831.
600 10 $aMartineau, Harriet,$d1802-1876.
600 10 $aO'Connell, Daniel,$d1775-1847.
600 10 $aRemond, Charles Lenox,$d1810-1873.
630 00 $aLiberty bell (Boston, Mass.)
650 0 $aAnti-slavery fairs.
650 0 $aAntislavery movements$zUnited States$xHistory$y19th century.
650 0 $aWomen abolitionists$zMassachusetts$zBoston$y19th century$vCorrespondence.
651 0 $aIreland.
655 0 $aLetters.
655 0 $aManuscripts.
700 1 $aWeston, Caroline,$d1808-1882,$erecipient.
830 0 $aCaroline Weston Correspondence (1834-1874)
999 $ashots: 4