Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. THE ADDRESS TO WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON, ESQ. “SIR:—We heartily welcome you to England in the name of thousands of Englishmen who have watched with admiring sympathy your labors for the redemption of the negro race from slavery, and for that which is a higher object than the redemption of any single race, the vindication of the universal principles of humanity and justice; and who, having ...

  2. 21 de out. de 2022 · The abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison thought the U.S. Constitution was the result of a terrible bargain between freedom and slavery. Calling the Constitution a "covenant with death" and "an agreement with Hell," he refused to participate in American electoral politics because to do so meant supporting "the pro-slavery, war sanctioning Constitution of the United States."

  3. William Lloyd Garrison ( Newburyport, 12 dicembre 1805 – New York, 24 maggio 1879) è stato un giornalista, abolizionista e riformista sociale statunitense . È conosciuto soprattutto come direttore del giornale abolizionista radicale The Liberator, e come uno dei fondatori dell' American Antislavery Society; promosse l'"immediata ...

  4. 2 de fev. de 2011 · Online archive @ Fair Use Repository. This is a complete online archive of full issues of William Lloyd Garrison’s newspaper The Liberator (1831-1865), the most prominent periodical of radical Abolitionism in the united states of America.

  5. William Lloyd Garrison (Newburyport, Massachusetts, 12 de diciembre de 1805 – Nueva York; 24 de mayo de 1879) fue un prominente abolicionista, periodista y reformador social estadounidense. Es más conocido por ser el editor del periódico abolicionista radical The Liberator , y como uno de los fundadores de la Sociedad Antiesclavista Estadounidense.

  6. William Lloyd Garrison’s early life and career famously illustrated this transition toward immediatism . As a young man immersed in the reform culture of antebellum Massachusetts, Garrison had fought slavery in the 1820s by advocating for both black colonization and gradual abolition.

  7. William Lloyd Garrison was an outspoken abolitionist for most of his life. He started Liberator, an anti-slavery newspaper, which he published weekly from 1831 to 1865. Garrison also published articles in support of woman's suffrage. Garrison was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts in 1805, the son of a merchant sailing master.