Sale 2471 - Printed & Manuscript African Americana, March 29, 2018

34 34 c   (SLAVERY AND ABOLITION.) To the Inhabitants of Rochester. Letterpress broadside, 13 1 / 4 x 8 inches; minor wear. Rochester, [England]: Caddell, 25 July 1832 [500/750] An eloquent English broadside issued in response to a local newspaper article criticizing the abolitionist cause. “Emancipation is not the liberation of the Slave from the restraints of the law, but from the arbitrary authority of the Planter and his dependents. The Negroes will not be let loose upon the white population. . . . The devastation and bloodshed which took place in St. Domingo was occasioned, not by the liberation of the Negroes . . . but by an attempt to reduce them again to Slavery.” No copies traced in OCLC or elsewhere. 35 c   (SLAVERYANDABOLITION.) Garrison,William Lloyd; editor. Large group of early issues of the Liberator. 83 newspapers, each 4 pages on one folding sheet, page size about 24 x 18; uncut, condition generally strong, with scattered toning, foxing and tears, 7 issues with vermin damage to upper corner; some issues with names of original subscribers written in upper margins. Boston, 1833-44 [1,200/1,800] A substantial group of the leading abolitionist newspaper. More than half of the issues are from the paper’s first five years, dated 1833 and 1835 (it was founded in 1831). Many of the early issues in this lot were sent to Ann Hoopes (1801-1865), a Quaker of Lancaster County, PA. In 1838, she moved to Salem, OH and became an active participant in the Underground Railroad after her marriage to Daniel Bonsall. Some later copies are marked for subscriber J. Gibbons. Joseph Gibbons (1818-1883) was another Quaker from Lancaster County who was active in the Underground Railroad (see Snodgrass, Underground Railroad Encyclopedia, page 65 and 218).A complete list of issues is available by request. with —a single issue of a different abolitionist newspaper,The True American (Lexington, KY), 15 July 1846. 35

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy NDkyODA=