Massachusetts (Fanning's, 1853)

Gazetteer/Almanac
Fanning's Illustrated Gazetteer of the United States.... (New York: Phelps, Fanning & Co., 1853), 211-214.
MASSACHUSETTS, one of the United States, so-called from a tribe of Indians, formerly at Barnstable, or from Moswetuset, the aboriginal name of Blue Hill, a few miles s. of Boston.  It lies between 41° 23' and 42° 52' north latitude, and 69° 50' and 73° 30' west longitude from Greenwich; and is bounded north by Vermont and New Hampshire; east by the Atlantic; south by Rhode Island and Connecticut; and west by New York.  Its superficial area is 7,500 square miles.

Frederick Douglass, Abolitionist Activities (American National Biography)

Scholarship
Roy E. Finkenbine, "Douglass, Frederick," American National Biography Online, February 2000, http://www.anb.org/articles/15/15-00186.html.
Unlike [William] Garrison, who viewed moral suasionist appeals to individual conscience as the only appropriate tactic, Douglass was increasingly persuaded of the efficacy of politics and violence for ending bondage. He attended the Free Soil Convention in Buffalo in 1848 and endorsed its platform calling for a prohibition on the extension of slavery. In 1851 he merged the North Star with the Liberty Party Paper to form Frederick Douglass' Paper, which openly endorsed political abolitionism.

History of the Harvard Law School and of Early Legal Conditions in America

Type: Description
Citation:
Charles Warren, "Parrott, Marcus Julius," History of the Harvard Law School and of Early Legal Conditions in America (New York: Lewis Publishing Company, 1908), 3: 55.
Body Summary:
PARROTT, MARCUS JUNIUS, A. B. DICKINSON, 1849; moved to Kansas 1854; practiced for a time; first free-state delegate from Kansas Ту. in congress; health failed and engaged in agriculture in Kansas; died Oct. 4. 1879, at Dayton, O.

Evander McIvor Law (New York Times)

Obituary
“Maj. Gen. E.M. Law Dies,” New York Times, November 1, 1920, p. 14: 6.
Maj. Gen. E. M. Law Dies.
BARTOW, Fla., Oct. 31.—Major Gen. E. M. Law, ranking surviving officer of the Army of the Confederacy, died here today after a week’s illness.
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