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  1. 27 de jun. de 2018 · Paul Leroy Robeson was born in Princeton, New Jersey, on April 9, 1898, the fifth and last child of Maria Louisa Bustill and William Drew Robeson. During these early years the Robesons experienced both family and financial losses.

  2. Founded. 1732. Founder. Cyrus Bustill. Connected families. Robeson family. Douglass family. The Bustill family is a prominent American family of largely African, European and Lenape Native American descent. The family has included artists, educators, journalists and activists, both against slavery and against Jim Crow.

  3. Introduction. Many intellectuals describe Paul Robeson as one of the nation’s greatest musicians, scholars, actors, athletes, and activists of the 20th century. Born on 9 April 1898, in Princeton, New Jersey, Robeson was the youngest of five children born to William Drew Robeson, a runway enslaved African American who went on to graduate from ...

  4. William Drew Robeson I (July 27, 1844 – May 17, 1918) was the father of Paul Robeson and the minister of Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church in Princeton, New Jersey from 1880 to 1901. The Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church had been built for its black members by the First Presbyterian Church of Princeton.

  5. Le père de Paul Robeson, William Drew Robeson [3], s'est enfui à l'âge de quinze ans d'une plantation de Caroline du Nord où il était né esclave. Il entreprend des études et, diplômé de l'université Lincoln, il devient pasteur de l'Église presbytérienne de Princeton de 1880 à 1901.

  6. Entertainer and activist Paul Robeson 's political philosophies and outspoken views about domestic and international Communist countries and movements were the subject of great concern to the western mass media and the United States Government, during the Cold War. His views also caused controversy within the ranks of black organizations and ...

  7. 4 de abr. de 1998 · Robeson was the name of a white, slave-owning family in North Carolina before the American Civil War. Their Black slaves took the same surname and among them was William Drew Robeson, who ran away from the plantation, fought for the North in the Civil War and later became a Presbyterian minister and subsequently a pastor in the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church.