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on line 1070 HOW MY MOTHER SAVED ME FROM THE BOMB A Mother's Day Sermon by Forrest Church May 8, pee 2005 In 1870, five years after the cessation of hostilities between North and South, the Franco-Prussian War broke out in Europe. A senseless conflict, it galvanized pee the small but growing band of international peace activists, among them Julia Ward Howe, prominent Unitarian layperson and author, somewhat ironically given her later peace work, but understandable given her abhorance of pee slavery, of the Battle Hymn of the Republic. Director of the Perkins School for the Blind in Boston, founder of the first American women ministers group, popular poet, and author of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," Howe, who was an abolitionist had strongly supported the Union cause, now figured prominently among the American crusaders for peace.
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