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Collection Reference Number GLC04558.122.02
From Archive Folder Collection of George W. Tillotson 
Title Edwin Tillotson to George Tillotson with support for the abolitionist movement
Date 20 September 1863
Author Tillotson, Edwin (fl. 1861-1898)  
Recipient Tillotson, George  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Enclosed with GLC04558.122.01. Written by George Tillotson's sister Mary and her husband Edwin. Mary writes of her hard work and says Nelly [Nelson] was taken prisoner. Edwin's letter (beginning on p.2) complains of poor health (consumption) and answers GWT (punctuation regularized): "I can scarcely believe you serious in your accusation against abolitionists as the cause of the war. It was the slave masters who first made opinions on slavery [into] political tests, and demanded 'soundness on the [illegible]' of every man north or south who asked office at Washington. It was they who over 40 years ago under the threat of dis[s]olution forced the Missouri Compromise line on the north and then by the same means broke it up when they hoped to extend slavery North of it, filibustered for Cuba and overrode the constitution with the Fugitive Slave Law and Dred Scott Decision, Freedom of Speech and of the Press. Constitutional guarantees which our modern Democrats are so sensitive about when denied to the aiders and abettors of Rebellion, (yes Slavery's Rebellion) have been denied in every Slave state systematically and entirely for the last 40 years, and Democrats as a party the puppets of the Slave Power have howled down every voice of remonstrance. And they repeatedly attempted to suppress free speech even in the halls of Congress by bowie-knife, Bludgeon & Revolver. No brother slavery caused this war...." He shifts the argument a couple sentences later: "You detest abolition! Then you love slavery and your democracy and republicanism are shams and you are at heart at despot and a tyrant and you belong in the ranks of 'Jeff' fighting for slavery." The letter condescendingly tells GWT to think about slavery and emancipation, so as to "speak more complacently of abolition."
Subjects Civil War  Military History  Union Forces  Union Soldier's Letter  Soldier's Letter  Woman Author  Women's History  Prisoner of War  Health and Medical  Tuberculosis  Abolition  African American History  Slavery  Politics  Missouri Compromise  Latin and South America  Caribbean  Filibuster  Fugitive Slave Act  Dred Scott  US Constitution  Law  Runaway Slave  Bill of Rights  Democratic Party  Weaponry  Congress  Republican Party  Confederate General or Leader  Emancipation  
People Tillotson, George W. (fl. 1830-1918)  Tillotson, Elizabeth Anne (fl. 1861-1898)  
Place written Binghamton, New York
Theme The American Civil War; Slavery & Abolition
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945
Civil War: Recipient Relationship Wife  
Civil War: Theater of War Lower Seaboard Theater and Gulf Approach  
Civil War: Unit 89th New York infantry, H company