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  1. Nov 2, 2022 · 13 Most Famous Abolitionists. Reformers like William Lloyd Garrison (who established the American Anti-Slavery Society) and authors like Wendell Phillips, John Greenleaf Whittier, and Harriet Beecher Stowe spearheaded the white abolitionist movement in the North. Former slaves like Frederick Douglass and free blacks like Charles Henry Langston ...

  2. Oct 27, 2009 · Famous Abolitionists. Many Americans, including free and formerly enslaved people, worked tirelessly to support the abolitionist movement. Some of the most famous abolitionists included:

  3. Jan 25, 2024 · Sojourner Truth was born enslaved in 1797 in Ulster County, New York, before the abolishment of slavery in the state. During her early life, four different people enslaved her. As a teenager, Truth was given to an enslaved man as his wife and together they had five children. In 1826, just one year before a law was passed freeing slaves in the ...

  4. When the abolitionist John Brown seized the largest Federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, in October of 1859, he forced the citizens of the United States to reconsider the immorality of the institution of slavery and the injustices enforced by the government. The raid on Harpers Ferry and the resulting execution of Brown was a major ...

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  6. John Brown. Title Radical Abolitionist. Date of Birth - Death May 9, 1800 - December 2, 1859. Born in Torrington, Connecticut, John Brown belonged to a devout family with extreme anti-slavery views. He married twice and fathered twenty children. The expanding family moved with Brown throughout his travels, residing in Ohio, Massachusetts ...

  7. May 7, 2005 · Facebook. John Brown's violent campaign against slavery — punctuated by the dramatic 1859 raid at Harper's Ferry, Va. — made him a divisive figure, then and now. A new biography by David ...

  8. John Brown’s Raid On Harpers Ferry. Nearly 1,000 miles northeast of Mobile, on the night of October 16, 1859, John Brown—the radical abolitionist who had killed proslavery settlers in Kansas— led 21 men in a raid to capture the U.S. arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia).

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