[THE GERMAN EMIGRANT MUST BE AGAINST SLAVERY.]
Letter to Lewis Tappan, Esq., May 17, 1853.
Boston, May 17, 1853.
Dear Sir,—I know Mr. Schmidt by the good name he has won, and I have also had the pleasure of making his personal acquaintance. I understand him to be a scholar, believing in the demand which Liberty in our country now makes upon every citizen. Thus endowed in mind and character, he will address his compatriots from Germany, in their own language, with persuasive power. I trust he will find the opportunity he covets; and I know of none which promises better than his present plan of a Weekly German Antislavery Newspaper at Washington.
The number of persons to be addressed by such a journal is very large; and they should be easy converts. The German emigrant who is not against Slavery here leads us to doubt the sincerity of his opposition to the Tyranny he has left behind in his native land.
Believe me, dear Sir, faithfully yours,
Charles Sumner.
Lewis Tappan, Esq.
[POWERS OF THE STATE OVER THE MILITIA: EXEMPTIONS FOR CONSCIENTIOUS SCRUPLES.]
Speech in Convention to revise and amend the Constitution of Massachusetts,[2] June 21, 1853.