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Black Abolitionist Archive
Theodore S. Wright
William Andrew Jackson
Henry Highland Garnet
Colored American - April 17, 1841
Frederick Douglass' Paper - June 23, 1854
Provincial Freeman - May 5, 1855
Impartial Citizen - November 21, 1849
Charles Hughes Langston
Voice of the Fugitive - January 15, 1851
Weekly Anglo-African - January 26, 1861
Weekly Anglo-African - April 13, 1861
Pacific Appeal - August 22, 1863
Colored American - May 11, 1839
Alexander Crummell
William Howard Day
Elevator - July 14, 1865
Alexander Crummell
Provincial Freeman - July 4, 1857

From the 1820s to the Civil War, African Americans assumed prominent roles in the transatlantic struggle to abolish slavery. In contrast to the popular belief that the abolitionist crusade was driven by wealthy whites, some 300 black abolitionists were regularly involved in the antislavery movement, heightening its credibility and broadening its agenda. The Black Abolitionist Digital Archive is a collection of over 800 speeches by antebellum blacks and approximately 1,000 editorials from the period. These important documents provide a portrait of black involvement in the anti-slavery movement; scans of these documents are provided as images and PDF files.

Please contact the library reference desk at edesk@udmercy.edu  or 313-993-1071 for assistance with this collection. 

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