Forten, the Sailmaker; Pioneer Champion of Negro RightsRand McNally, 1968 - 208 pages A biography of James Forten, a free Negro born in 1766 and owner of the leading sailmaking shop in Philadelphia, who spent his life and fortune furthering abolition. |
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Page 93
... thousand of the human race were concerned in our petition . Their thanks , their gratitude to you they now express . Their prayers for you will mount to Heaven , for God knows they are wretched , and He will hear their supplications . A ...
... thousand of the human race were concerned in our petition . Their thanks , their gratitude to you they now express . Their prayers for you will mount to Heaven , for God knows they are wretched , and He will hear their supplications . A ...
Page 191
... thousand people . Unquestionably Pennsylvania Hall was one of the finest meeting places in the nation . On Dedication Day , the fourteenth of May , 1838 , it was announced that the hall had not been erected for antislavery purposes ...
... thousand people . Unquestionably Pennsylvania Hall was one of the finest meeting places in the nation . On Dedication Day , the fourteenth of May , 1838 , it was announced that the hall had not been erected for antislavery purposes ...
Page 198
... thousand persons , white and colored , male and female , about one - half white - to an extent never before ... thousand dollars to a little over sixty - seven thousand dollars . After he was gone , louder and louder grew the 198 Forten ...
... thousand persons , white and colored , male and female , about one - half white - to an extent never before ... thousand dollars to a little over sixty - seven thousand dollars . After he was gone , louder and louder grew the 198 Forten ...
Contents
Letters by a Man of Color | 9 |
Black Pioneers | 10 |
The American Colonization SocietyThe Great Debate | 11 |
Copyright | |
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aboard abolitionists Absalom Jones African American Colonization Society American Negroes Amphyon Anthony Benezet Anti-Slavery asked Beasly Benezet boat Boston British brought Captain Decatur cargo Charlotte Church citizens Colonizationists color Congress crew crowded Cuffe's deck declared Delaware delegates delphia Devany enemy England eyes feel felt fight fire Forten the sailmaker free Negroes freedom Freedom's Journal gathered Granville Sharp guns heard hope House human James Forten James's Jersey knew land Liberator Liberia lived looked marbles meeting morning nation never night pamphlet paper Paul Cuffe Pennsylvania Hall Perhaps persons petition Phila Philadelphia Negroes prison ship Quaker Reverend Richard Allen Robert Bridges Robert Purvis Royal Louis sail loft seamen sent Sierra Leone slaveholders slavery soon streets Thomas thought thousand tion told United vessel voice vote wharves white friends Whittier William Lloyd Garrison wrote young Forten