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Kansas.
Read at the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the state of Kansas. bear camp House, West Ossipee, N. H., Eighth month, 29th, 1879.
To J. S. Emery, R. Morrow, and C. W. Smith, committee:
I have received your invitation to the twenty-fifth anniversary celebration of the first settlement of Kansas.
It would give me great pleasure to visit your state on an occasion of such peculiar interest, and to make the acquaintance of its brave and self-denying pioneers, but I have not health and strength for the journey.
It is very fitting that this anniversary should be duly recognized.
No one of your sister states has such a record as yours,—so full of peril and adventure, fortitude, self-sacrifice, and heroic devotion to freedom.
Its baptism of martyr blood not only saved the state to liberty, but made the abolition of slavery everywhere possible.
Barber and Stillwell and Colpetzer and their associates did not die in vain.
All through your long, hard struggle I watched the course of events in Kansas with absorbing interest.
I rejoiced, while I marvelled at the steady courage which no danger could shake, at the firm endurance which outwearied the brutalities of your slaveholding invaders, and at that fidelity to right and To J. S. Emery, R. Morrow, and C. W. Smith, committee: