Up from Slavery: an autobiography eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 269 pages of information about Up from Slavery.

Up from Slavery: an autobiography eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 269 pages of information about Up from Slavery.
invitations I declined, for the reason that I wanted to rest.  Neither were we able to accept more than a small proportion of the other invitations.  The Rev. Dr. Brooke Herford and Mrs. Herford, whom I had known in Boston, consulted with the American Ambassador, the Hon. Joseph Choate, and arranged for me to speak at a public meeting to be held in Essex Hall.  Mr. Choate kindly consented to preside.  The meeting was largely attended.  There were many distinguished persons present, among them several members of Parliament, including Mr. James Bryce, who spoke at the meeting.  What the American Ambassador said in introducing me, as well as a synopsis of what I said, was widely published in England and in the American papers at the time.  Dr. and Mrs. Herford gave Mrs. Washington and myself a reception, at which we had the privilege of meeting some of the best people in England.  Throughout our stay in London Ambassador Choate was most kind and attentive to us.  At the Ambassador’s reception I met, for the first time, Mark Twain.

We were the guests several times of Mrs. T. Fisher Unwin, the daughter of the English statesman, Richard Cobden.  It seemed as if both Mr. and Mrs. Unwin could not do enough for our comfort and happiness.  Later, for nearly a week, we were the guests of the daughter of John Bright, now Mrs. Clark, of Street, England.  Both Mr. and Mrs. Clark, with their daughter, visited us at Tuskegee the next year.  In Birmingham, England, we were the guests for several days of Mr. Joseph Sturge, whose father was a great abolitionist and friend of Whittier and Garrison.  It was a great privilege to meet throughout England those who had known and honoured the late William Lloyd Garrison, the Hon. Frederick Douglass, and other abolitionists.  The English abolitionists with whom we came in contact never seemed to tire of talking about these two Americans.  Before going to England I had had no proper conception of the deep interest displayed by the abolitionists of England in the cause of freedom, nor did I realize the amount of substantial help given by them.

In Bristol, England, both Mrs. Washington and I spoke at the Women’s Liberal Club.  I was also the principal speaker at the Commencement exercises of the Royal College for the Blind.  These exercises were held in the Crystal Palace, and the presiding officer was the late Duke of Westminster, who was said to be, I believe, the richest man in England, if not in the world.  The Duke, as well as his wife and their daughter, seemed to be pleased with what I said, and thanked me heartily.  Through the kindness of Lady Aberdeen, my wife and I were enabled to go with a party of those who were attending the International Congress of Women, then in session in London, to see Queen Victoria, at Windsor Castle, where, afterward, we were all the guests of her Majesty at tea.  In our party was Miss Susan B. Anthony, and I was deeply impressed with the fact that one did not often get an opportunity to see, during the same hour, two women so remarkable in different ways as Susan B. Anthony and Queen Victoria.

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Up from Slavery: an autobiography from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.