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Subjects
Correspondence, Boston Female Anti-slavery Society, American Anti-Slavery Society, Women abolitionists, Antislavery movements, HistoryPeople
Anne Warren Weston (1812-1890), Wendell Phillips (1811-1884), Elizur Wright (1804-1885), Henry B. Stanton (1805-1887), William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879)Places
United States, Boston, MassachusettsTimes
19th centuryShowing 1 featured edition. View all 1 editions?
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Edition Notes
Holograph, signed.
Anne Warren Weston responds to Henry Brewster Stanton's circular, and says that the Boston Female Anti-slavery Society cannot support both Garrison and the American Anti-Slavery Society. Garrison and the LIberator must come first. She complains that the American Society is not supporting Garrison in the columns of the Emancipator, and that E. Wright called the controversy with the clergy a sectarian one. "There is nothing sectarian about it." Attacks the clerical abolitionists. She says that defending slavery in the pulpit is as bad as slaveholding. Wendell Phillips and Ann Green are to be married.
Half of the third page is cut out and gone.
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