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  1. Abby Kelley is most remembered for her advocacy of "come-outerism" the belief that abolitionists must leave churches that did not fully condemn slavery, but she was also an outstanding organizer and fundraiser.

  2. Aug 6, 2021 · Abby Kelley was an abolitionist (someone opposed to slavery) and an early women’s rights advocate. Devoting her life to creating a more equitable society, she used her skills as a lecturer and educator to advocate for the rights of African Americans and women.

  3. Nov 19, 2015 · Abby Kelley Foster was a fairly average, middle class Massachusetts woman whose special contribution was her skill to reach out to and change ordinary people in small villages and towns. She felt her true calling was converting people who were not yet convinced that slavery was evil.

  4. Abby Kelley Foster (1811-1887), born into an ordinary Massachusetts Quaker family, became a leading nineteenth-century abolitionist and women's rights activist. Abby dedicated her life to social justice working relentlessly to end both race and gender prejudice.

  5. Photograph of Abby Kelley Foster with signature Foster embarked on a crusade of reform that spanned two decades. She spoke along the East Coast and in the Midwest becoming an integral figure in abolitionist movement.

  6. Jul 30, 2021 · Abby Kelley Foster was an abolitionist (someone opposed to slavery) and an early womens rights advocate. Devoting her life to creating a more equitable society, she used her skills as a lecturer and educator to advocate for the rights of African Americans and women.

  7. Abby Kelley was described as a woman of considerable charm, tall, blue-eyed, and quite attractive in her younger days. Because she was totally committed to reform, quite willing, if necessary, to risk health, reputation, and physical safety for the cause, she could also be dogmatic and humorless.

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