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  1. Nov 18, 2020 · Maria W. Stewart (1803–Dec. 17, 1879) was a North American 19th-century Black activist and lecturer. The first United States-born woman of any race to give a political speech in public, she predated—and greatly influenced—later Black activists and thinkers such as Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth .

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  2. Oct 24, 2011 · On February 27, 1833 Maria W. Stewart gave this speech before a racially integrated audience at the African Masonic Hall in Boston. AFRICAN RIGHTS and liberty is a subject that ought to fire the breast of every free man of color in these United States, and excite in his bosom a lively, deep, decided and heart-felt interest.

  3. Maria W. Stewart (née Miller) (1803 – December 17, 1879) was an American teacher, journalist, abolitionist and lecturer known for her role in the anti-slavery and women's rights movements in the United States.

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  5. Nov 20, 2020 · The full text appears in Marilyn Richardson, Maria W. Stewart: America's First Black Woman Political Writer (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987), 45-49. Why sit ye here and die? If we say we will go to a foreign land, the famine and the pestilence are there, and there we shall die.

  6. Jan 24, 2017 · One of those abolitionists, Maria Stewart, was one of her era’s most effective anti-slavery voices, breaking boundaries for women even as she advocated for an end to a brutal institution. Born...

  7. African-American activist who was the first American-born woman to speak on political themes to audiences of both men and women and probably the first African-American woman to speak in defense of women's rights.

  8. Sep 11, 2020 · Maria Stewart is widely known as the first Black female abolitionist whose voice and writings remained available throughout the nineteenth century, but genuine examination of her speeches and written work has been slow to come. 1 Yet, a careful reading of Stewart’s publications yields intriguing intersections with the work of some more celebrate...

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