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  1. Nathaniel Peabody Rogers (June 3, 1794 – October 16, 1846) was an American attorney turned abolitionist writer, who served, from June 1838 until June 1846, as editor of the New England anti-slavery newspaper Herald of Freedom. [1] He was also an activist for temperence, women's rights, and animal rights .

  2. Nathaniel Peabody (March 1, 1741 – June 27, 1823) was an American physician from Rockingham County, New Hampshire. He represented New Hampshire as a delegate to the Continental Congress in 1779 and 1780. Nathaniel was born to Jacob Peabody in Topsfield, Massachusetts.

  3. 28 de abr. de 2021 · April 28, 2021. Nathaniel Peabody Rogers. Born in Plymouth in 1794, Nathaniel Peabody Rogers abandoned a successful legal career for a position as editor of a radical anti-slavery newspaper, Herald of Freedom, which he ran until he lost his position in a factional dispute with other abolitionists.

  4. NATHANIEL PEABODY ROGERS: 1794-1846. ROBERT ADAMS. I N a passage of brilliant symbolism, V. marked that from earliest days two mighty. chant and the minister, struggled over land.'. He has traced with some care the. flict. As he tells the story, it is easy to see sented by these figures came into rivalry. estimate the extent of their opposition.

  5. Collection Overview. Collection Organization. Container Inventory. Scope and Contents. Letters of Nathaniel Peabody Rogers (1794-1846), American abolitionist, to his wife, Mary Porter Farrand Rogers, and members of his family; also, to friends interested in the anti-slavery movement.

  6. by. Rogers, Nathaniel Peabody, 1794-1846; Child, Lydia Maria, 1802-1880; Child, David Lee, 1794-1874; Gay, Sydney Howard, 1814-1888; Johnson, Oliver, 1809-1889; Powell, Aaron M. (Aaron Macy), 1832-1899; American Anti-Slavery Society; Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society. Publication date. 1840. Topics. Antislavery movements, African Americans.

  7. This digital compilation was developed in support of the NYPL website, "The African American Migration Experience," a sweeping 500-year historical narrative from the transatlantic slave trade to the Western migration, the colonization movement, the Great Migration, and the contemporary immigration of Caribbeans, Haitians, and sub-Saharan Africans.