2 edition of Kossuth"s first speech in Faneuil Hall, Thursday evening, April 29, 1852. found in the catalog.
Kossuth"s first speech in Faneuil Hall, Thursday evening, April 29, 1852.
Kossuth, Lajos
Published
1902
by Directors of the Old South Work in [Boston
.
Written in English
Edition Notes
Series | Old South leaflets. [General series., v. 5] no. 111 |
Classifications | |
---|---|
LC Classifications | E173 .O44 vol. 5 |
The Physical Object | |
Pagination | 20 p. |
Number of Pages | 20 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL6629584M |
LC Control Number | 20020778 |
OCLC/WorldCa | 5929511 |
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Get this from a library. Kossuth's first speech in Faneuil Hall, Thursday evening, April 29, [Lajos Kossuth]. "A short distance from that sacred edifice, [Faneuil Hall,] and between it and the Court House, where the disgusting rites of sacrificing a human being to slavery were lately performed, was the spot which was first moistened with American blood in resisting slavery, and among the first.
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We are fired with the hope to reform men. The menagerie, or forms and powers Page 9 of the spine, is a book of fate; the bill of the bird, the skull of the snake, Basil Hall likes to show that the.
Business was, in a measure, suspended, and general un- easiness prevailed. On the 18th, another meeting was held in Faneuil Hall, and a committee was again ap- pointed to wait upon the consignees and request them to resign.
Again they refused, and that evening the house of Richard Clarke, on School- street, was surrounded by an unruly crowd. Augustine and from slaves rising up inside the city. Worries about the Spanish would end before the Revolutionary War. Fear of slave violence would last a hundred years beyond that.
Ninety-three passengers were on the Carolina, the three-masted frigate that arrived in Charleston that first April, seven months after leaving England.