Showing posts with label Henry I Bowditch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henry I Bowditch. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Samuel Gridley Howe to the Committee of Vigilance, September 26, 1846

Boston, Sept. 26th, 1846.

Dear Sir: — Permit me to inform you that you were appointed a member of the Committee of Vigilance, chosen at Faneuil Hall on Thursday the 24th inst., to take means to secure the protection of the laws to all persons who may be in danger of abduction from the Commonwealth; and to request you to be present at a meeting thereof to be held at Dr. Bowditch's house, No. 3 Otis Place, on Wednesday, Sept. 30th, at 7½ o'clock, P. M. At this, the first meeting of the Committee, it is of the highest importance that, if possible, every member should be present and assist in its deliberations.

S. G. Howe.

SOURCE: Laura E. Richards, Editor, Letters and Journals of Samuel Gridley Howe, Volume 2, p. 245

Friday, March 9, 2018

Samuel Gridley Howe to Dr. Henry Ingersoll Bowditch, February 3, 1846

South Boston, Feb. 3d, 1846.
Dr. Bowditch,

My Dear Sir:— My duties at home will prevent my joining you at eleven o'clock. I should regret this very much if I thought that my presence could be of any service, because it seems to me that now is the time when the tide of affairs may be “taken at the flood,” and great results produced.

A league of those who in the South and West as well as in the North firmly believe servile labour to be as impolitic as it is wicked, may in a few years change the whole aspect of things in this country. I should not despair even of seeing the day when, high and noble interests being at stake, the truly great and noble spirits of the land would start forward to take the lead; men who will not now enter into the political strife when such paltry watchwords are inscribed upon the party banners. Under such men I should delight humbly to serve; and to forward such measures as they would propose, I should willingly “spend and be spent.”

I will, in my narrow sphere, advocate any measure except such as tend directly to cut us off from the parent stock, for it seems to me that would diminish our usefulness and the slave's hope. If the slaveholder listens to us, his brethren and friends, with so much impatience, how would he hear us if we were aliens and enemies?

I carefully cultivate my few social relations with slaveholders, because I find I can do so, and yet say to them undisguisedly that slavery is the great mistake, as well as the great sin of the age. Now, do what they may, they cannot prevent such words from a friend making some impression upon their hearts, which are as hard as millstones to denunciations from an enemy.

It is not enmity and force, but love and reason, that are to be used in the coming strife.

Very truly yours,
S. G. Howe.

SOURCE: Laura E. Richards, Editor, Letters and Journals of Samuel Gridley Howe, Volume 2, p. 238-9