The Liberator Files

Boston-based Abolitionist newspaper, published by William Lloyd Garrison, 1831-1865

Garrison, on the Death of Henry Clay

Garrison & Open Enrollment at Harvard

Garrison response to Daniel O’Connell’s “Irish Address”

Abolition Accomplishments listed by Garrison, 1839

Garrison the Perjury of July 4th

Garrison Organizing Abolitionists beyond Boston

Garrison on candidates and Moral Character

Garrison praises old friend, John Greenleaf Whittier

On the death of former President Polk

Garrison praises Theodore Wentworth Higginson

Complaint by Garrison, about Daniel Webster

Garrison writing on death of Andrew Jackson

Garrison pokes fun at Theodore Parker

Someone did not “swallow” William Lloyd Garrison !

Garrison compares men and women Abolitionists

Ambition in the young William Lloyd Garrison

A Garrison view of Henry Clay

A Phrenological Study of William Lloyd Garrison!

Angelina Grimke, and Garrison on the law

Frederick Douglass, at Garrison Memorial

William Lloyd Garrison, the “Negro Champion”

Garrison thanks Lydia Maria Child

Introducing Maria Stewart, first woman political speaker

George Thompson Garrison is Born

On Daniel Webster’s “mathematics of compromise”

Garrison on New England Complicity

William Lloyd Garrison’s affection for his wife.

William Lloyd Garrison, a bit of humor

William Lloyd Garrison on Fillmore

William Lloyd Garrison and Passage of 13th Amendment

William Lloyd Garrison writing to John Brown before Brown’s execution.

  • Contents

    • Site Directory
    • Beginning – Horace Seldon
    • Liberator Photo Gallery
  • Friendships Forged In Fire

    • Introduction to Friendships Forged in Fire
    • William and Ellen Craft
    • William Wells Brown
    • Lewis Hayden
    • Frederick Douglass
    • William Cooper Nell
  • Discussions About The Life And Role Of Garrison

    • A Portrait Of Purpose
    • Garrison and the Trans-Atlantic Abolition Movement
    • Garrison’s Political Activity, Moral Vision, Public Opinion and Lincoln
    • A Moment in Abolition History
    • A Nation’s Struggle in a Tiny Town
    • Flight From Arrest, 1833
    • Garrison on Violence, Nonviolence, and the Use of Force
    • Garrison, The Agitator, and War Without Slavery
    • Garrison’s View on Voting
    • Slavery and the White Population, North and South
    • The “Oughtness” of Life was Primary for Garrison
    • The “Woman Question” and Garrison
    • The Constitution and a Call for Disunion
    • The Preeminent Agitator of the Century
    • The Role of Garrison in Society
  • Of Further Interest

      Reading Garrison's Letters
      Essays by Horace Seldon

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