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At a conference of the British Temperance League, held in the city of Manchester on the 17th day of May, 1865, Joseph Thorp, esq., in the chair, on the motion of the reverend J. C. Street, of Newcastle, seconded by the reverend William Cam, of Manchester, it was
Unanimously resolved, That this conference expresses its feeling of grief and indignation at the assassination of the late President of the United States of America, who was for upwards of fifty years a consistent temperance man, and desires to convey to Mrs. Lincoln and to the people of that country its profound sympathy with them in this great affliction, its horror and detestation of the atrocious crime against humanity which has been committed, and its fervent hope that the event may be overruled by the Almighty for the preservation of the great republic and the complete overthrow of human slavery—these being the objects for which Mr. Lincoln lived and worked, and for fidelity to which he died.
JOSEPH THORP,
President.
WM. J. CLEGG,
Secretary to the Conference.