Ahead of Her Time: Abby Kelley and the Politics of Antislavery“[The author] tells this remarkable story with honesty and compassion. Readers will find a wealth of new information not only about Kelley’s outstanding contribution to abolitionism but about the movements to bring about the end of slavery and to advance the cause of women.” —Mari Jo Buhle, Brown University In the tumultuous years before the Civil War, a young white woman from a Quaker background came to embody commitment to the cause of antislavery and equal rights for black people. Abby Kelley became the abolitionist movement’s chief money-raiser and organizer and its most radial member. She traveled hundreds of miles to awaken the country to the evils of slavery, braving hardship and prejudice as well as opening the way for other women, black and white, to take leadership roles. Now the full story of this principled woman has been told in Dorothy Sterling’s compelling biography. |
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... Henry B. Stanton, one of the Band of Seventy agents appointed by the American AntiSlavery Society in a new steppedup propaganda effort. The Seventy—their number chosen to symbolize the seventy disciples Christ appointed to spread his ...
... Henry B. Stanton, one of the Band of Seventy agents appointed by the American AntiSlavery Society in a new steppedup propaganda effort. The Seventy—their number chosen to symbolize the seventy disciples Christ appointed to spread his ...
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... Henry Grafton Chapman, a wealthy merchant. The oldest of the six Weston sisters and the only one who was married, she could always call on Anne or Caroline or Deborah to take charge of her children or her correspondence while she ran ...
... Henry Grafton Chapman, a wealthy merchant. The oldest of the six Weston sisters and the only one who was married, she could always call on Anne or Caroline or Deborah to take charge of her children or her correspondence while she ran ...
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... Henry C. Wright, one of the Band of Seventy who was to report on their tour for the Liberator. In response to Abby's plea, Anne Weston and Henrietta Sargent, who had also attended the women's convention, came as representatives of the ...
... Henry C. Wright, one of the Band of Seventy who was to report on their tour for the Liberator. In response to Abby's plea, Anne Weston and Henrietta Sargent, who had also attended the women's convention, came as representatives of the ...
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... Henry Wright, and one or two others who were curious to hear her took inconspicuous seats in the gallery. Seeing them, a woman asked if her husband couldn't come too. Although the answer was negative, other men whose wives had told them ...
... Henry Wright, and one or two others who were curious to hear her took inconspicuous seats in the gallery. Seeing them, a woman asked if her husband couldn't come too. Although the answer was negative, other men whose wives had told them ...
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Contents
The Education of Abby Kelley 2 A Wider World | |
Women Find Their Voices | |
The Call | |
A PublicSpeaking Woman 6 War to the Knifes Point | |
The Notorious Abby Kelley | |
A New Hampshire Fanatic | |
Lord What a Tongue Shes | |
Conflicting Claims | |
Bloody Feet Sisters | |
General Agent | |
The Irrepressible Conflict | |
Nothing Is Done While Anything Remains to Be Done | |
A Lonely Rocket in a Dark | |
Notes Selected Bibliography | |
Along the Psychic Highway | |
Antislavery Politics | |
The Path of True Love and Other Matters | |
Acknowledgments | |
Index | |
Other editions - View all
Ahead of Her Time: Abby Kelley and the Politics of Antislavery Dorothy Sterling Limited preview - 1991 |
Common terms and phrases
Abby and Stephen Abby Kelley Abby wrote Abby’s abolitionists Alla’s American AntiSlavery Society American Society Angelina Angelina Grimké Anne Weston antislavery April asked attend audience Bugle called church Connecticut convention daughter declared delegates dollars Elizabeth Elizabeth Cady Stanton England Executive Committee farm Female AntiSlavery Society Female Society Frederick Douglass friends Garrisonians Gerrit Smith Grimké Hall Henry Houghton Hudson husband July June Kelley’s lecture letter Liberator Lizzie Lucretia Mott Lucy Stone Lynn March Maria Chapman Maria Child Massachusetts Massachusetts Society Millbury mother NASS nonresistant Ohio organized paper Parker Pillsbury Paulina Philadelphia platform political Quaker Quincy reform reported Republican Sarah Sept sisters slave slavery society’s speak speakers speech Stanton Stephen Foster suffrage Susan thought told vote Wendell Phillips William Lloyd Garrison woman Woman's Journal woman’s rights women Worcester York