"During the spring of 1834 these men continued their speechmaking, and
Ludlow and Cox went so far as to appeal to all Northern Negroes for
support, and to defend intermarriage between whites and blacks. Few New
Yorkers then regarded Southern slavery as a national shame, and almost
none had any patience with abolition."
SOURCE:
Nevins, Allan The Evening Post: A Century of Journalism New
York: Boni and Liveright 1922, p. 145
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