[Letter to] Dear friend Webb [manuscript]
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[Letter to] Dear friend Webb [manuscript]
- Publication date
- 1858
- Topics
- Douglass, Frederick, 1818-1895, Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879, Griffiths, Julia, d. 1895, May, Samuel, 1810-1899, Webb, Richard Davis, 1805-1872, Webster, Delia Ann, National Anti-slavery Bazaar, Abolitionists, Antislavery movements
- Publisher
- Boston
- Collection
- bplscas; bostonpubliclibrary; americana
- Contributor
- Boston Public Library
- Language
- English
Holograph
Title supplied by cataloger
May mentions Mary Anne Estlin's gift of £20 to "The Anti-Slavery Advocate" and transcribes words spoken to him by William Lloyd Garrison that were directed to Webb. He sends George M. Stroud's, "Sketch of the Laws Relating to Slavery" and Horace Greeley's, "History of the Struggle for Slavery Extension or Restriction in the United States" in the annual box of reports. May reports that Oliver Johnson's editorship of the "National Anti-Slavery Standard" has been terminated and that the American Anti-Slavery Society will furnish documentary evidence of the mortgage held by Julia Griffiths on Frederick Douglass' property. May describes Delia Ann Webster as a false abolitionist. He says that he hears the Wigham family lost money in a bank failure and, on a page marked "Confidential" reports that Maria Weston Chapman wants to discontinue the Anti-Slavery Bazaar
Title supplied by cataloger
May mentions Mary Anne Estlin's gift of £20 to "The Anti-Slavery Advocate" and transcribes words spoken to him by William Lloyd Garrison that were directed to Webb. He sends George M. Stroud's, "Sketch of the Laws Relating to Slavery" and Horace Greeley's, "History of the Struggle for Slavery Extension or Restriction in the United States" in the annual box of reports. May reports that Oliver Johnson's editorship of the "National Anti-Slavery Standard" has been terminated and that the American Anti-Slavery Society will furnish documentary evidence of the mortgage held by Julia Griffiths on Frederick Douglass' property. May describes Delia Ann Webster as a false abolitionist. He says that he hears the Wigham family lost money in a bank failure and, on a page marked "Confidential" reports that Maria Weston Chapman wants to discontinue the Anti-Slavery Bazaar
- Addeddate
- 2013-07-29 20:57:44
- Associated-names
- Webb, Richard Davis, 1805-1872, recipient
- External-identifier
- urn:oclc:record:1048328672
- Identifier
- lettertodearfrie00mays_11
- Identifier-ark
- ark:/13960/t0ms5jh4g
- Ocr
- tesseract 5.3.0-6-g76ae
- Ocr_detected_lang
- en
- Ocr_detected_lang_conf
- 1.0000
- Ocr_detected_script
- Japanese
- Ocr_detected_script_conf
- 1.0000
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.21
- Ocr_parameters
- -l eng
- Page-progression
- lr
- Page_number_confidence
- 0
- Page_number_module_version
- 1.0.3
- Pdf_module_version
- 0.0.23
- Scanningcenter
- boston
- Full catalog record
- MARCXML
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