"Holograph, signed with initials. William Lloyd Garrison will have to put off his visit to see Wendell Phillips Garrison in New York until the 20th. On the 19th, he will attend a public breakfast in Boston for Neal Dow, the temperance advocate from Maine. The weather has been very cold. Garrison writes: \"I am sorry not to be at the Ladies' Fair for the benefit of the Freedmen. But I am to be present and speak at a similar meeting, by express invitation, to-morrow evening, at Cambridge, Charles Eliot Norton in the chair. He invites me to tea.\" Garrison loaned money to Mr. Peter Sinclair, a Scottish acquaintance, who is engaged in \"an emigration scheme of skilled laborers from Europe.\" Garrison condemns Andrew Johnson's presidential message. Garrison says: \"I always regret to see any fling in 'The Nation' at those who believe in the necessity and duty of impeachment. Leave that to traitors and copperheads.\""
title
"Letter from William Lloyd Garrison, Roxbury, [Mass.], to Wendell Phillips Garrison, Dec. 10, 1867"
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creators
"Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879 (Author); Garrison, Wendell Phillips, 1840-1907 (Addressee)"