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7 Caspian, the schooner, D. 16 Cass, Lewis, D. 29; D. 43; Gen. Wool's letter to, on the necessity of reinforcing the Southern forts, Doc. 11; speech at Detroit, April 24, Doc. 145 Castle Pinckney, S. C., taken possession of by rebels, D. 7; Commander Pettigru at, D. 8 Castleton, Vt., Union Meeting at, D. 45 Catawba Indians. See Indians. Catholics of the South refuse fellowship with those of the North, D. 97 C. Colden Murray, the bark, D. 17 Chapin, E. H., D. D., P, 62 Charleston Courier; its opinion of the rebellion, P. 149 Charleston Mercury threatens to take the forts, D. 4; discusses sea-coast defences, D. 4; suggests the seizure of forts, D. 10; urges an attack on Fort Sumter D. 16; strictures on the policy of the Federal Government, D. 21; request to the captains of Confederate ships, D. 39 Charleston, S. C., people of, refuse to allow Federal soldiers to be sent to the forts, D. 3; act of secession signed at, D. 4;
ston270 312 ShipMagnoliaSprague & James'sFoster & TaylorWilliam HammondMarblehead660 313 BrigHenricoSprague & James'sFoster & TaylorH. PaneProvincetown142 314 BarkWagramSprague & James'sFoster & TaylorWilliam HammondMarblehead242 315 BarkAzoffJ. Stetson'sJ. StetsonWilliam A. ReaBoston310 316 ShipJ. Q. AdamsP. Curtis'sP. CurtisD. P. ParkerBoston684 317 ShipAlbatrossP. Curtis'sP. CurtisB. BangsBoston750 318 BarkOhioJ. O. Curtis'sJ. O. CurtisFairfield, Lincoln, & Co.Boston358 319 BarkE. H. ChapinJ. O. Curtis'sJ. O. CurtisJ. GandalfoNew Orleans400 320 ShipNiphonJ. O. Curtis'sJ. O. CurtisJ. H. ShawNantucket337 321 ShipOxnardT. Magoun'sF. Waterman & H. EwellWilliam Appleton & Co.Boston608 322 ShipHamletT. Magoun'sF. Waterman & H. EwellWilliam Appleton & Co.Boston521 323 ShipThomas B. WalesT. Magoun'sF. Waterman & H. EwellThomas B. Wales & Co.Boston629 324 ShipHeberT. Magoun'sF. Waterman & H. EwellD. C. BaconBoston447 325 BarkOsmanliT. Magoun'sF. Waterman & H. EwellIasigi
C. Edwards Lester, Life and public services of Charles Sumner: Born Jan. 6, 1811. Died March 11, 1874., Section Eleventh: his death, and public honors to his memory. (search)
mbled Burke in the character of his labors, and in his readiness to be the champion of the wronged and the oppressed, so will he resemble him in the circumstance that his fame will be the greater as it is removed from the mists of contemporary calumny and detraction; and the true proportions of his character will stand out clearly before men when the dead grow visible from the shades of time. Xiii. Among the most eloquent of tributes from the pulpit was the one which fell from Rev. Dr. E. H. Chapin, whose lips when speaking in behalf of humanity always seem to be touched with a live coal from the celestial altar. We caught but a single flaming passage:— That man, the announcement of whose death has come upon us so suddenly, and which has startled us like the vanishing of some conspicuous landmark, with the associations of the most exciting period of our national history clinging around it, was one in whom large gifts and rich acquirements were fused into the condensed ene
Xiii. Among the most eloquent of tributes from the pulpit was the one which fell from Rev. Dr. E. H. Chapin, whose lips when speaking in behalf of humanity always seem to be touched with a live coal from the celestial altar. We caught but a single flaming passage:— That man, the announcement of whose death has come upon us so suddenly, and which has startled us like the vanishing of some conspicuous landmark, with the associations of the most exciting period of our national history clinging around it, was one in whom large gifts and rich acquirements were fused into the condensed energy and solid splendor of moral purpose. He has died in his harness, with the dents of many conflicts upon his shield, and the serene light of victory on his crest. But while among the great men who have fallen so thickly around us, there may have been those who matched him in ability, and excelled him in genius, we must look far and wide through our land, and through our age, to find any who
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 1, Chapter 5: Bennington and the Journal of the Times1828-29. (search)
ary for Young Gentlemen and Ladies, an institution which was the pride of the town, and which attracted pupils from a considerable distance. He was a man born to impress and inspire, and a most successful teacher, combining Ellis's Life of E. H. Chapin, pp. 26-30. firmness with gentleness, physical with moral courage, enthusiasm and energy with a tender, affectionate, and deeply religious nature. The two men were irresistibly attracted to one another, and spent much time together, discussinl, and John Pierpont, whose spirited hymn (With thy pure dews and rains) was ready for the occasion. It was sung now under the direction of Lowell Mason; and was heard afterwards at many an anti-slavery meeting during the No. 798 in Adams and Chapin's Hymns for Christian Devotion. thirty years conflict, besides being included in some church hymnals, in which the following stinging verses must have made it especially serviceable and effective: Hearest thou, O God, those chains, Clanking on Fr
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 7: first Western tour.—1847. (search)
of invitation, a Council of Reformers, and the object was to discuss the general principles of Reform, and the best means of promoting it. Let me give you the names of some of those present—Ralph Waldo Emerson, Amos B. Alcott, William Henry Channing, James F. Clarke, William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips, Edmund Quincy, Mrs. M. W. Chapman, Mrs. Follen, James and Lucretia Mott and daughter of Philadelphia, Caleb Stetson, John L. Russell, Francis Jackson, Charles Sumner, Samuel G. Howe, E. H. Chapin, Joshua P. Blanchard, Samuel E. Coues of Portsmouth, Elizur Wright, Jr., Walter Channing. I have not yet given all the names. It was a matter of deep interest even to see this collection of the men alive of our neighborhood and day. From 4 to 10 P. M., with a short interval for tea, a most spirited conversation was held on all the great Reform subjects of the day. I am more than ever convinced that the Anti-Slavery Reform carries all others with it, and that its triumph will be theirs.
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 14: the Nebraska Bill.—1854. (search)
was no attempt to add fuel to the prevailing excitement over the Nebraska Bill, still before the Senate; only a calm appeal to reason and conscience, leading up to the inquiry: If it would be a damning sin for us to admit another slave State into the Union, why is it not a damning sin to permit a slave State to remain in the Union?— and to an explicit reaffirmation of the irrepressible conflict between freedom and slavery. At the anniversary of the American Anti-Slavery Society held in Dr. E. H. Chapin's church in New York on May 10, 11, Mr. Garrison offered two resolutions appropriate to the crisis, which were unanimously adopted, and made the Society's sole deliverance on the Nebraska Bill then pending in the House: Resolved, That the one grand vital issue to be made with Lib. 24.81. the Slave Power is, the dissolution of the existing Ameri-can Union. Resolved, That an Anti-Slavery conscience which is bounded by 36 degrees 30 minutes north latitude, instead of presenting
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3, Chapter 30: addresses before colleges and lyceums.—active interest in reforms.—friendships.—personal life.—1845-1850. (search)
who received for the service, besides expenses for the journey, a fee of ten dollars,—sometimes, though rarely, one of fifteen or twenty or twenty-five. Among speakers who were then in most request for such occasions were Henry Ward Beecher, E. H. Chapin, R. W. Emerson, E. P. Whipple, and Dr. O. W. Holes. Not only clergymen, and those who ranked distinctively as literary men, but also lawyers and statesmen, were easily persuaded to appear with some favorite topic before sympathetic and intellas clear enough to the audience. The lyceums of the period were generally under the management of active and intelligent young men, who were themselves inclined to, or tolerant of, antislavery opinions. Other popular lecturers, like Beecher and Chapin, were accustomed, in the general tone of remark or an occasional allusion, to stimulate antislavery opinion; but no one had ventured so far in this direction as Sumner now went in this lecture. It drew attention to the geographical analogies bet
ss gave the one in the infant class room, Mrs. G. D. Haven's class that which represents Jesus among the doctors, Mrs. S. W. Fuller's class the two on the opposite wall, and Mr. A. Hodgman's class the one of St. Cecilia. The good example set by these classes should be emulated by others, until our vestry walls are embellished by ten or more fine pictures. Our Sunday School may well take pride in the knowledge that at least five of its members have entered the Universalist ministry: Rev. E. H. Chapin, Rev. R. A. White, Rev. Leslie Moore, Rev. George F. Fortier, Rev. Gertrude A. Earle, the latter being one of the first women to graduate from Tufts Theological School, and be ordained to the Universalist ministry. The school to-day is modern in every sense. No effort is spared to make it the leading Universalist Sunday School in the Metropolitan district in training methods, as it already is in numbers. Stereopticon lectures reviewing the lesson are given several times during the
t Bucknam, Miss Ella H1 Essex Street Bullard, Mrs. E. C243—A Highland Avenue Bunker, Mrs. M. B 86 Boston Street Burbank, Mr. and Mrs. A. M.9 Autumn Street Burnham, Mrs. Ethel 77 Berkeley Street Burrows, Mr. and Mrs. F. U.63 Hudson Street Burrows, Mrs. Lucy E.29 Mystic Avenue Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. H. E.22 Wesley Street Carvill, Dr. and Mrs. A. H.28 Highland Avenue Carvill, Miss Maud28 Highland Avenue Castle, Mrs. Dr. C. W.267 Medford Street Chandler, Mrs. E. T.96 Cross Street Chapin, Mr. and Mrs. H. I.5 Boston Avenue Christie, Mrs. E. W.15 Greenville Terrace Coburn, Mr. and Mrs. F. L.47 Mt. Vernon Street Cole, H. A..34 Pearl Street Cole, Mrs. Dr. H. A.34 Pearl Street Collins, Miss E. M.55 Putnam Street Condit, Sears255 Medford Street Conley, Mrs. Joseph 123 College Avenue Coulter, Mrs. Carrie D.16 Grant Street Courtney, Mr. and Mrs. E. A.199 Washington Street Covell, Mrs. C. F.398 Broadway Cunningham, Miss Lucy168 Broadway Daniels, Mrs. Agnes F.21 Munroe Str