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  1. William Cooper Nell (December 16, 1816 – May 25, 1874) was an American abolitionist, journalist, publisher, author, and civil servant of Boston, Massachusetts, who worked for the integration of schools and public facilities in the state. Writing for abolitionist newspapers The Liberator and The North Star, he helped publicize the anti-slavery ...

    • William Cooper Nell, Jr.; Frank Ames Nell
    • Frances Ann (Ames) Nell
    • May 25, 1874 (aged 57), Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
    • December 16, 1816, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
  2. May 25, 2021 · Cemetery Name: Forest Hills Cemetery. Born December 16, 1816 to activist parents and raised in the free Black community of Beacon Hill, William Cooper Nell became one of Boston's most influential and respected community leaders. As a teenager, Nell helped organize the Juvenile Garrison Independent Society, an abolitionist youth organization.

  3. Portrait of William Cooper Nell. Massachusetts Historical Society. Born December 16, 1816 and raised in the free Black community of Beacon Hill, William Cooper Nell became one of Boston's most influential and respected community leaders. Much of his life centered on and around Smith Court. As a student, he attended school at the African Meeting ...

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  4. Jan 18, 2007 · William Cooper Nell (1816-1874) William C. Nell was an African American civic activist, abolitionist, and historian. Born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts, Nell was the son of William Guion Nell, a prominent tailor and black activist. William C. Nell was introduced to racial inequality and black activism from birth.

  5. William Cooper Nell was born on December 20, 1816 to William Guion Nell and Louisa Marshall, free African Americans who lived on 64 Kendall Street on the north slope of Beacon Hill. William Cooper’s father was originally from the free black community of Charleston, South Carolina, as an apprentice to tailor and hotel owner Jehu Jones.

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  7. William Nell. William Cooper Nell, a Black lecturer, journalist, abolitionist, and historian, was born on this date in 1816. He was born in Boston to William and Louise Cooper. A frequent reader of William Lloyd Garrison’s “ Liberator ,” Nell joined the antislavery movement and began working for the Liberator newspaper in the 1840s.

  8. William Cooper Nell was an American abolitionist, journalist, publisher, author, and civil servant of Boston, Massachusetts, who worked for the integration of schools and public facilities in the state. Writing for abolitionist newspapers The Liberator and The North Star, he helped publicize the anti-slavery cause. He published the North Star from 1847 to 18xx, moving temporarily to Rochester ...

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