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The Liberator

John L. Thomas
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Plot Summary

The Liberator

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 1963

Plot Summary

The Liberator is a 1963 biography of the American abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison by John L. Thomas, a professor of history at Brown University. The book won the 1964 Bancroft Prize, an award given for books about democracy or the history of the Americas. Thomas was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1966 and a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship in 1982.

William Lloyd Garrison is born in 1805 in Newburyport, Massachusetts. His father, Abijah, deserts the family when Lloyd is three years old, and he is subsequently raised by his mother, Frances. She starts referring to William by his middle name, which will stick until adulthood. When he is a child, Lloyd sells candy and fruit to help support his family. At the age of thirteen, he begins work as an apprentice at a newspaper, writing articles under a pseudonym.

In 1926, after his apprenticeship ends, Lloyd and printer Isaac Knapp start their own newspaper, the Free Press, where Lloyd meets the nationally known abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier. At twenty-five, Lloyd joins the anti-slavery movement. He also joins the American Colonization Society, a group that advocates for the resettlement of African-Americans, both slave and free, on the west coast of Africa. Soon after, however, Lloyd rejects this society and publicly apologizes for having been a part of it.



Lloyd begins writing for the newspaper Genius of Universal Emancipation, a Quaker publication edited by Benjamin Lundy. Lloyd soon becomes a co-editor of the newspaper. Since he has experience with printing, he takes over the day-to-day operations of the paper so that Benjamin can spend more time touring as an anti-slavery speaker. Lloyd quickly becomes convinced of the need for immediate emancipation, while Benjamin believes it should be a more gradual process. Despite their differences of opinion, they continue to work together on the paper and present their differing views in editorials.

Lloyd files a report on a slave trader in Massachusetts who transports slaves to New Orleans in defiance of trans-Atlantic slave trade laws. The trader, Francis Todd, files a libel suit against Lloyd. When he loses the suit, Lloyd is ordered to pay a fine. He refuses to pay and is sentenced to a six-month jail term instead. After seven weeks, Arthur Tappan, a supporter of Lloyd’s pays the fine and Lloyd is released. Lloyd decides to leave Baltimore after that.

Lloyd returns to Massachusetts where he starts a new newspaper called The Liberator in 1831. At times, his position that slavery should be eradicated immediately gets him in trouble, such as when Nat Turner’s slave rebellion breaks out in Virginia six months after The Liberator begins publication. In North Carolina, a grand jury indicts Lloyd on charges of distributing incendiary material. Lloyd is convicted in absentia and a $5,000 reward is offered for anyone who can capture and convey him to North Carolina for a trial.



Also an advocate for women’s political voices, Lloyd encourages women to band together and petition against slavery. The New-England Anti-Slavery Society, organized by Lloyd in the early 1930s, encourages women to join. When the organization becomes large enough to split off into local groups for each city and state, some of these groups are founded by women. This causes some men in the New England Society to leave to start their own organization, including Arthur Tappan, who once interceded to have Lloyd released from prison in Baltimore.

In 1835, a pro-slavery mob surrounds Lloyd’s offices in Boston. They first ask for British abolitionist George Thompson to be turned over to them, but when it is revealed that he is not there, they ask for Lloyd. Lloyd escapes out a back window but is spotted by the mob and taken to be tar and feathered. The mayor of Boston intervenes and has Lloyd arrested for his own safety.

By the early 1860s, The Liberator has a wide circulation in the northern states, as well as in Canada and Scotland. When the Thirteenth Amendment is passed in 1865, Lloyd publishes the final issue of his paper.



After the abolition of slavery, Lloyd also moves to disband the Anti-Slavery Society. Some members, including Wendell Phillips, do not want the organization to be dissolved until black people have received the same political and social rights as whites. However, Lloyd maintains that the special task of the Anti-Slavery Society is complete and dissolves the group. He continues to support social movements for the rest of his life, including women’s rights and civil rights for black people.

In 1876, Lloyd’s wife, Helen, dies from pneumonia. Many of Lloyd’s abolitionist friends attend her funeral. Lloyd begins to attend Spiritualist circles in the hopes of communicating with Helen. Lloyd begins to suffer from declining health and dies in 1879 from kidney disease.
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