Page:The Civil War in America - an address read at the last meeting of the Manchester Union and Emancipation Society.djvu/88

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UNION AND EMANCIPATION SOCIETY.

to liberty, appeal to the generous instincts of our common humanity. We also especially urge the claims of the still-oppressed freed people in some of our own colonies, for the wellbeing of whom we are more directly responsible; and whose wretched condition calls for a practical manifestation of our Christian sympathy.

In conclusion, we offer our congratulations to our transatlantic friends, on the restoration of peace, the preservation of the Union, and the emancipation of the slave; and whilst not unmindful of the difficulties that surround their President, we recognise his patriotism, moral courage, and practical statesmanship, and record our earnest hope that in the discharge of the functions of his high office, he will secure beyond compromise all the rights and privileges of citizenship to his countrymen, without distinction of colour.



APPENDIX TO THE REPORT.


PROCEEDINGS IN REFERENCE TO THE ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN.

At a meeting held in the Free Trade Hall, Manchester, April 28th, 1865,

Francis Taylor, Esq., in the chair:

It was moved by the Rev. G. W. Conder, seconded by Jacob Bright, Esq., and passed unanimously:—

“That the address of sympathy and condolence with Mrs. Lincoln, now read, be adopted, and that the