"Holograph, signed. George Thompson gives news of his children. He discusses his relations with his constituents in London, who, in spite of enemies, approved of his tour to the United States; he was \"treated better than well.\" He denounces the conduct of [John] Scoble. [The Rev. John Scoble was an abolitionist and an opponent of William Lloyd Garrison.] He regrets the change in F. D.'s [Frederick Douglass] North Star and prefers the Commonwealth to \"that body of death\" the Emancipator. [The references to the publications, the North Star and the Emancipator, express Thompson's disapproval of the Liberty Party, as opposed to pure Garrisonianism.] He praises [John Bishop] Estlin. Thompson considers it desirable to stand for reelection to Parliament."
title
"Letter from George Thompson, 128 Sloane Street, London, to Anne Warren Weston, Friday, August 15, 1851 [Part 1 of 3]"
image1
"08_07_003135.jpg"
image2
"08_07_003136.jpg"
image3
"08_07_003137.jpg"
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"08_07_003138.jpg"
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"08_07_003139.jpg"
creators
"Thompson, George, 1804-1878 (Author); Weston, Anne Warren, 1812-1890 (Addressee)"