Cover -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1. Puritans and Slavery -- 2. Black Abolitionist Writers in theAge of Revolution -- 3. Black Petitioning and Organized Abolitionism in Revolutionary Massachusetts -- 4. Abolition of Slavery and the Slave Trade -- 5. Massachusetts Blacks and the Growth of the Northern Antislavery Movement -- 6. Black Emigration and Abolition in the Early Republic -- 7. Abolitionism and the Politics of Slavery in Early Antebellum Massachusetts -- Afterword -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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Cover -- Half-Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Foreword -- Preface -- Contents -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS -- PART ONE Introduction: "Our Rights as Moral Beings -- Prelude: Breaking Away from Slave Society -- Seeking a Voice: Garrisonian Abolitionist Women, 1831-1833 -- Women Claim the Right to Act: Angelina and Sarah Grimké Speak in New York, July 1836-May 1837 -- Redefining the Rights of Women: Angelina and Sarah Grimké Speak in Massachusetts, Summer 1837 -- The Antislavery Movement Splits Over the Question of Women's Rights, 1837-1840 -- An Independent Women's Rights Movement Is Born, 1840-1858 -- Epilogue: The New Movement Splits Over the Question of Race, 1850-1869 -- PART TWO The Documents -- Seeking a Voice: Garrisonian Abolitionist Women, 1831-1833 -- 1. Lucretia Mott, Life and Letters, 1884 -- 2. Constitution of the Afric-American Female Intelligence Society, 1831 -- 3. Maria Stewart, Religion and the Pure Principles of Morality, 1831 -- 4. Maria Stewart, Lecture Delivered at the Franklin Hall, Boston, 1832 -- 5. Maria Stewart, Farewell Address to Her Friends in the City of Boston, 1833 -- Women Claim the Right to Act: Angelina and Sarah Grimké Speak in New York, July 1836-May 1837 -- 6. American Anti-Slavery Society, Petition Form for Women, 1834 -- 7. Angelina Grimké, Appeal to the Christian Women of the South, 1836 -- 8. Angelina Grimké, Letter to Jane Smith, New York, December 17, 1836 -- 9. Angelina Grimké, Letter to jane Smith, New York, January 20, 1837 -- 10. Angelina Grimké, Letter to jane Smith, New York, February 4, 1837 -- 11. Sarah and Angelina Grimké, Letter to Sarah Douglass, Newark, N.J., February 22, 1837 -- 12. Angelina and Sarah Grimké, Letter to Sarah Douglass, New York City, April3, 1837 -- 13. Sarah Forten, Letter to Angelina Grimké, Philadelphia, April15, 1837.
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"Reprinted from Deutsch-Amerikanische Geschichtsblätter, Jahrbuch der Deutsch-Amerikanischen Historischen Gesellschaft von Illinois--Jahrgang 1918-19 (Vol. XVIII-XIX)." ; Cover title. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; will reformat
"Amy Post. A paper read by Lucy N. Colman before the Woman's Political Club of Rochester, N. Y.": p. 83-86. ; Digital reproduction. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Description based on print version record.
Published also as Johns Hopkins university studies in historical and political science. ser. XXXVII, no. 3. ; Vita. ; Thesis (Ph. D.)--Johns Hopkins university, 1917. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 / Activist Taproots: Place, Reform, and the Quest for Unity -- 2 / Scrubbing at the "Bloody Stain of Oppression":A Human Rights Movement against Unjust Laws, 1830-1849 -- 3 / "Stand Firm on the Platform of Truth": Freedom of Assembly and Local Antislavery Organizations in the Old Northwest -- 4 / "The Palladium of Our Liberties": Freedom of the Press in the Old Northwest, 1837-1848 -- 5 / "An Odd Place for Navigation": Itinerant Lecturers and Freedom of Speech,1830-1849 -- 6 / Itinerant Lecturers in a Fracturing Nation, 1850-1861 -- 7 / The Potential for Radical Change: The Turbulent 1850s, the Civil War, and Resilient Racism -- Conclusion -- Appendix: Old Northwest Population Statistics, 1800-1870 -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
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Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- 1 William Lloyd Garrison at Two Hundred: His Radicalism and His Legacy for Our Time -- 2 ''And There Shall Be No More Sea'': William Lloyd Garrison and the Transatlantic Abolitionist Movement -- 3 William Lloyd Garrison and Emancipatory Feminism in Nineteenth-Century America -- 4 Putting Politics Back In: Rethinking the Problem of Political Abolitionism -- 5 God, Garrison, and the Coming of the Civil War -- 6 Garrison at Two Hundred: The Family, the Legacy, and the Question of Garrison's Relevance in Contemporary America -- Contributors -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W.
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Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Prologue -- Part 1: The Context: Converging Paths -- 1. Elizabeth Cady Stanton: Growing Up, 1815-35 -- 2. Entering the World of Reform: Antislavery and Woman's Rights, 1835-40 -- 3. Communities in Transition: Seneca Falls and Waterloo, 1795-1840 -- Part 2: The Movements: Parallel Paths -- 4. Minding the Light: Quaker Traditions in a Changing World -- 5. Seneca Falls: Abolitionist Ferment -- 6. Women and Legal Reform in New York State -- Part 3: The Event: Converging Paths -- 7. Adversity and Transcendence, June 1847--June 1848 -- 8. Declaring Woman's Rights, July 1848 -- 9. The Road from Seneca Falls, 1848-1982 -- Notes -- Index.
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