Footnote 154: [(return)]
Cutler: Lynch Law, 109, citing Niles's Register, June 4, 1836.

Footnote 155: [(return)]
McDougall: Fugitive Slaves, 36-37.

Footnote 156: [(return)]
McMaster, V, 219-220.

Footnote 157: [(return)]
Adams: The Neglected Period of Anti-Slavery, 1808-1831, 250-251.

Footnote 158: [(return)]
Ibid., 110.

Footnote 159: [(return)]
William Birney: James G. Birney and His Times, 85-86.

Footnote 160: [(return)]
Register of Debates, 4,975, cited by Adams, 112-3.

Footnote 161: [(return)]
Henry A. Beers: Initial Studies in American Letters, 95-98 passim.

Footnote 162: [(return)]
"An Address delivered before the Free People of Color in Philadelphia, New York, and other cities, during the month of June, 1831, by Wm. Lloyd Garrison. Boston, 1831," pp. 14-18.

Footnote 163: [(return)]
See "American Slavery as it is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses. By Theodore Dwight Weld. Published by the American Anti-Slavery Society, New York, 1839"; but the account of the New Jersey woman is from "A Portraiture of Domestic Slavery in the United States, by Jesse Torrey, Ballston Spa, Penn., 1917," p. 67.