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	<description>Brooklyn Abolitionists</description>
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		<title>Abolitionist Biographies</title>
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		<description><![CDATA[...and educator at Williamsburg’s African School, protested voting discrimination, and led the first recorded West <strong>India</strong> <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='A system under which people are treated as property, to be bought and sold, and are forced to work.'>Emancipation</acronym> Celebration in Williamsburg. After the Civil War, he returned to Virginia and became heavily involved in politics. William was married to Mary Hodges, an Englishwoman listed in the census as white. When she died Brooklynite William E. Whiting, a well-known <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='A radical activist who calls for an immediate end to slavery, political and legal equality for African Americans, and denounces colonization schemes.'>abolitionist</acronym> in the American Anti-Slavery Society delivered he...]]></description>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">BEECHER, Henry Ward<br />
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Henry Ward Beecher</div>
<p><em>June 24, 1813, Lichfield, CT &ndash; March 8, 1887, Brooklyn, NY</em><br />
<strong>Pastor, Newspaper Editor, Brooklyn Heights Resident. </strong></p>
<p>Henry Ward Beecher was the son of Reverend Lyman Beecher and the brother of Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. A graduate of Amherst College and Lane Theological Seminary in Ohio, Beecher became the inaugural pastor of Plymouth Church in Brooklyn Heights. The church was founded in 1847 by a group of Brooklyn Heights residents who held anti-slavery views. </p>
<p>By the 1850s, Beecher had gained a national reputation for his commitment to abolitionism, theatrical preaching style, and ability to fundraise for anti-slavery causes. He assisted in the <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='A system under which people are treated as property, to be bought and sold, and are forced to work.'>emancipation</acronym> of a number of young women and his congregation raised money for the purchase of rifles, called “Beecher’s Bibles,” intended to arm anti-slavery protestors in Kansas. In the lead-up the Civil War, Beecher edited the anti-slavery newspaper the Independent. At the end of the War, he was invited to speak at the raising of the flag at Fort Sumter based on his national reputation. His later life was overshadowed by the Beecher-Tilton scandal in which he was accused of infidelity.</div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">COUSINS, Robert H<br />
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Robert H. Cousins</div>
<p><strong>Anti-Slavery Activist, homeowner, businessman, downtown Brooklyn resident. </strong></p>
<p>Robert Cousins was born in Virginia around 1800 and moved to Brooklyn in 1840. There, he joined the AME Church and the Brooklyn African Tompkins Society, a <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='Arrangements made between people of a community to assist each other.'>mutual aid</acronym> organization committed to the “improvement of the members in morals and literature, by forming a library and other appropriate means.” </p>
<p>By 1850, Cousins, his wife Sarah, and their children Emaly, Charles, and Joseph were living at 201 Jay Street. Cousins owned $1500 worth of property making him eligible to vote.<br />
Cousins fundraised for various anti-slavery causes. When Williamsburg resident James Hamlet was kidnapped after the passage of the <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='One who flees or tries to escape slavery.'>Fugitive</acronym> Slave Act in 1850, Cousins stood on platform with other black abolitionists to raise money for his release. He also gave money to Pomona Brice, a Brooklyn resident, so that she could emancipate her family. In 1853, he was a delegate at the Rochester anti-slavery convention along with Joseph Holly, Charles B. Ray, James Pennington, William J. Wilson, Junius Morel, Lewis H. Nelson, James McCune Smith, and Frederick Douglass. The following year, Cousins led a meeting at City Hall in Albany to protest voting discrimination. </p>
<p>In 1854, when Reverend James Morris Williams led his congregation from Brooklyn’s AME Church on High Street to a new location on Bridge Street, Cousins marched in the procession. Today, Bridge Street AWME Church is the oldest black church in Brooklyn and is located in Bedford-Stuyvesant.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">COX, Samuel H<br />
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Samuel H(anson) Cox</div>
<p><em>August 25, 1793 &ndash; October 2, 1880</em><br />
<strong>Presbyterian Pastor, Brooklyn resident. </strong></p>
<p>Samuel Cox was born in Rahway, NJ and raised as a Quaker. He converted to the Presbyterianism at the age of twenty, studied theology in Newark and Philadelphia, and was ordained on July 1, 1817.</p>
<p>After his home and church were attacked during the anti-abolition riots in Manhattan in 1834, Cox left the city. In 1837, Cox became a key player in the split of the Presbyterian Church over slavery. Cox then moved to Brooklyn where he became pastor of First Presbyterian Church.  </p>
<p>In 1854, Cox moved to Oswego, New York, and later retired and died in Bronxville.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">CROGER, Peter<br />
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Peter Croger</div>
<p><em>?, New York &ndash; 1848, ?</em><br />
<strong>Presbyterian Pastor, Brooklyn resident. </strong></p>
<p>Peter Croger birthed Brooklyn’s anti-slavery movement. He was born in New York and moved to Brooklyn sometime before 1810. With his brother Benjamin, he established the Brooklyn African Woolman Benevolent Society in 1810, a mutual aid society for African Americans. In 1815, he opened a school at his home on James Street to educate people of African descent during gradual emancipation. He was a church trustee and founder of Brooklyn’s AME Church. Peter Croger and his family later moved to Pearl Street, where his neighbors included his brother Benjamin Croger and Weeksville land investor Sylvanus Smith. Peter Croger died in 1848.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">CROGER, Benjamin<br />
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Benjamin Croger</div>
<p><em>1789, New York  &ndash; 1853, Brooklyn, NY</em><br />
<strong>Temperance Advocate, Whitewasher, Laborer, Brooklyn Village resident.</strong></p>
<p>Benjamin Croger was born in New York in 1789 and moved to Brooklyn sometime before 1810. He was a pioneer and birthed Brooklyn’s anti-slavery movement. He and his brother Peter helped to found the Brooklyn African Woolman Benevolent Society, a mutual aid society and Brooklyn’s AME Church. They led Brooklyn’s first wave of anti-slavery activism during gradual emancipation. Benjamin Croger was also a <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='Abstinence from alcohol and the belief that it is wrong to drink.'>temperance</acronym> advocate and led the Brooklyn Temperance Association. Like many Brooklynites, the Crogers signed anti-slavery petitions to Congress.</div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">FREEMAN, Amos N<br />
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Amos N(oe) Freeman</div>
<p><em>1809, Rahway, NJ &ndash; 1893, Brooklyn, NY</em><br />
<strong>Pastor, <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='A network of people and secret escape routes used by fugitives of slavery.'>Underground Railroad</acronym> Agent, and president of the African Civilization Society, Downtown Brooklyn resident.</strong></p>
<p>William J. Wilson described Amos N. Freeman as “efficient, clever and pious.” Freeman attended the Oneida Institute with New York <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='A radical activist who calls for an immediate end to slavery, political and legal equality for African Americans, and denounces colonization schemes.'>abolitionist</acronym> Alexander Crummell and began his career as pastor of Abyssinian Congregational Church in Portland, Maine. </p>
<p>In 1852, Freeman moved to Brooklyn, where he succeeded James N. Gloucester as pastor at Siloam Presbyterian Church. His tenure there lasted more than thirty years. established a flourishing Sabbath school at the church. In the 1860s, he led the African Civilization Society, in Weeksville, working to shift the organization’s focus from emigration to education. Amos Freeman was a friend and colleague to Lewis Tappan and James Pennington and delivered the eulogy at Tappan’s funeral.</p>
<p>Amos Freeman married <strong>Christiana Taylor Williams</strong> on December 24, 1839 in Newark, NJ. She was born on June 4, 1812 in Manhattan to Caribbean parents. Christiana worked closely with other women associated with Siloam Presbyterian – Elizabeth Gloucester and Mary Wilson –to raise funds for the church and the Colored Orphan Asylum. Christiana died on December 3, 1909.</div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">GLOUCESTER, James N  &lt;br /&gt; &amp;<br />
Elizabeth<br />
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James N(ewton) Gloucester</div>
<p><em>Philadelphia &ndash; ? </em><br />
<strong>Clergyman, Abolitionist, Downtown Brooklyn resident.</strong></p>
<div class="subpage_header">Elizabeth Gloucester</div>
<p>ca. 1817, Virginia &ndash; August 9, 1883, Brooklyn, NY<br />
<strong>Businesswoman, Abolitionist, Downtown Brooklyn resident.</strong></p>
<p>James Gloucester was the son of John Gloucester, the founder of the first Black Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia. In 1847, James became the founding pastor of Siloam Presbyterian Church, in Brooklyn. He also served as principal of the African School in Carsville and supported Lewis Tappan’s American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. </p>
<p>James married Elizabeth Gloucester in 1838 and moved to Brooklyn in the late 1840s. The couple were close friends and colleagues with Frederick Douglass and John Brown, and offered financial support for Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry. After Elizabeth died in 1883, James became a physician and moved to Long Island.</p>
<p>Elizabeth Gloucester was born in Virginia and moved to Philadelphia at age 6. She married Presbyterian minister James Gloucester and the couple moved to Brooklyn. Elizabeth was heavily involved in fundraising for Siloam Presbyterian Church, and the Colored Orphan Asylum in New York. During the Civil War and in its aftermath, she led fundraising efforts for freedmen and <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='The name given to the group of states that were opposed to the secession of the Confederate states in the South. The Union states included California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.'>Union</acronym> soldiers through the Ladies National Union Fair and the American Freedmen’s Friend Society. </p>
<p>Elizabeth was an astute businesswoman and owned several rental properties in Brooklyn as well as a boarding house on Remsen Street. When she died, on August 8, 1883, many prominent figures in Brooklyn and Manhattan, both black and white, attended her funeral. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle stated that she was one of the richest women in the country, worth around $2.25 million in today’s money.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">HARNED, William<br />
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William Harned</div>
<p><strong>Publisher, Brooklyn resident. </strong></p>
<p>William Harned spent his early years in Philadelphia’s Quaker community, where he was active in the temperance and anti-slavery movements. Around 1840, he moved to New York to work for the American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. By 1847, Harned was a Brooklyn resident. He lived on Smith Street, then at 130 Bridge Street, and finally, Duffield Street. </p>
<p>In 1850, Harned published a pamphlet protesting the Fugitive Slave Law and the unjust arrest of New Yorker James Hamlet. He also served as treasurer for the New York State Vigilance Committee and assistant treasurer for the American Missionary Association. He worked closely with abolitionists Lewis Tappan and James Pennington.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">HODGES, William<br />
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William Hodges</div>
<p><em>1803? Princess Anne County, VA &ndash; ?</em><br />
<strong>Pastor, entrepreneur, grocer, educator, land agent, Williamsburg resident.</strong></p>
<p>William Hodges was born free in Virginia in a family of twelve children. He was the “pride of the family” and “mother’s son” according to his brother Willis, William was forced to leave Virginia after he was accused of forging free papers on behalf of others. He fled to Canada and later relocated to Manhattan, where his family had moved. In 1839, he bought several lots of land in the village of Williamsburg, and built a brick house on South 8th Street and Bedford. </p>
<p>William was an agent for the Colored American newspaper, founder and educator at Williamsburg’s African School, protested voting discrimination, and led the first recorded West India Emancipation Celebration in Williamsburg. After the Civil War, he returned to Virginia and became heavily involved in politics. </p>
<p>William was married to Mary Hodges, an Englishwoman listed in the census as white. When she died Brooklynite William E. Whiting, a well-known abolitionist in the American Anti-Slavery Society delivered her eulogy.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">HODGES, Willis<br />
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Willis Hodges</div>
<p><em>Feb. 12 1815, Princess Anne County, VA &ndash; Feb. 24, 1890, VA</em><br />
<strong>Entrepreneur, Grocer, Williamsburg residents.</strong></p>
<p>Willis Hodges followed his brother William to New York and then Williamsburg. Dissatisfied with the occupations available to African American men in <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='The time period before the Civil War.'>antebellum</acronym> New York, the two brothers opened their own temperance grocery store at William’s home on South 8th Street. Willis then bought a lot on South 7th Street, where he built his own home. </p>
<p>He co-founded the newspaper the Ram’s Horn with Manhattanite Thomas Van Rensellaer. He was introduced to John Brown through the newspaper and a decade-long friendship ensued. Together, the Hodges brothers established an African school in Williamsburg (later Colored School #3) and were early supporters of Lincoln’s Republican Party. During Reconstruction, Willis was active in Virginia politics and educational initiatives.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">JOCELYN, Simeon<br />
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Simeon Jocelyn</div>
<p><em>1799, New Haven, CT &ndash; 1879</em><br />
<strong>Pastor, engraver, Williamsburg resident.</strong></p>
<p>Simeon Jocelyn led an African American congregational church in New Haven, CT before moving to Brooklyn. By the mid-1840s, he settled in Williamsburg, where he served as pastor of First Congregational Church. He attended the first annual black convention in Philadelphia in 1831, along with his white abolitionist colleagues, Arthur Tappan and William Lloyd Garrison. In 1846, he founded the American Missionary Association (AMA), along with Lewis Tappan and James Pennington. The AMA was created in response to the sensational Amistad trial. When Africans attempted to resist their enslavement by attempting to overthrow the Spanish crew on board the schooner Amistad, they crashed into Long Island. With abolitionist support, the Africans eventually returned to Sierra Leone. In the 1850 census, Jocelyn was listed as an engraver, living with his wife Harriet and six children. His brother Nathaniel was also an engraver and created portraits of the Amistad freedom fighters including Joseph Cinque.</p>
<p>Jocelyn’s funeral service was held at the New New-England Congregational Church on South 9th Street, Williamsburg. African American men and women attended his funeral. New York abolitionist Charles Ray called Jocelyn “one of the bravest advocates of the anti-slavery cause.”</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">MOREL, Junius<br />
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Junius Morel</div>
<p><em>1801/ 1806  &ndash; 1874</em><br />
<strong>Journalist, Lecturer, Political Activist, Weeksville resident.</strong></p>
<p>North Carolina-born Junius Morel moved to Brooklyn from Philadelphia where became a journalist, lecturer, political activist, and prominent citizen of Weeksville. For more than 30 years, he served as principal of the black school there, called Colored School No. 2.</p>
<p>A prolific writer, Morel reported for The North Star, The Christian Recorder and other local and national abolitionist journals. He was a key Brooklyn member of the Committee of Thirteen, a New York organization dedicated to aiding freedom seekers and thwarting the colonization movement. Morel’s wife, Caroline Richards, was an abolitionist and activist in the local Underground Railroad. After Caroline died in 1838, Morel married a woman named Sarah (born in 1835). <strong>Sarah Morel</strong> worked with Elizabeth Gloucester and Mary Wilson to raise funds for various organizations that supported African Americans living in New York.</div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">PENNINGTON, James WC<br />
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James W(illiam) C(harles) Pennington</div>
<p><em>1807, Maryland &ndash; 1870, Jacksonville, FL</em><br />
<strong>Pastor, Educator, Blacksmith. Brooklyn Heights later South Brooklyn resident.</strong></p>
<p>James W. C. Pennington was born James Pembroke, enslaved in Maryland in 1807. By 1829, he had changed his name and settled in Brooklyn. Pennington worked at the home of Adrian Van Sinderen, president of the Brooklyn Colonization Society, while he studied at the Sabbath school in Newtown, Long Island. His education inspired a lifelong commitment to political activism and a religious awakening that led to a life in the church. He recorded these insights in his autobiography, <em>The Fugitive Blacksmith</em>.</p>
<p>Pennington attended several of the National Black Conventions in the early 1830s and spoke at the 1831 anti-colonization protest in Brooklyn. He became central to the anti-slavery movement, gaining an international reputation for his work with the American Missionary Association and his public speaking engagements. </p>
<p>Pennington attended classes at Yale Divinity School but was denied admission due to discrimination. In 1848, he returned to New York and became pastor of Shiloh Presbyterian Church, Manhattan. He received an honorary doctorate from the University of Heidelberg, Germany in 1849. As a civil rights activist in Brooklyn he tackled racial discrimination on the city’s public transportation. </p>
<p>During the Civil War he advocated for the inclusion of African American soldiers in the Union Army and was an outspoken opponent of emigration. He died in Jacksonville, FL while doing missionary work.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">SMITH, Sylvanus<br />
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Sylvanus Smith</div>
<p>Described as a “hog driver” from Brooklyn according to the City Directory, Sylvanus Smith was one of the original land investors in Weeksville. He became a trustee for Colored School No. 1 in what is now Downtown Brooklyn and for the Citizens’ Union Cemetery, in Weeksville.</p>
<p>His daughter <strong>Susan Smith McKinney Steward</strong> became the first female African-American doctor in New York. Another daughter, <strong>Sarah Smith Tompkins Garnet</strong> (b. 31 Aug, 1831 &ndash; d. 17 Sep. 1911) worked as an educator and women’s suffrage activist.</div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">STEWART, Maria W<br />
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Maria W. Stewart</div>
<p><em>1803, Hartford, CT &ndash; Dec 17, 1879, Washington, D.C</em><br />
<strong>Educator, public speaker, Williamsburg resident.</strong></p>
<p>Maria Stewart was a pioneering activist in Boston, a colleague of David Walker and William Lloyd Garrison, and contributor to the Liberator. She was the first American woman to lecture in public on political themes and publish her work (Productions of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart, 1835). Between 1832 and 1833, Stewart delivered at least four public lectures in Boston. She gave her first speech at the Boston Afric-Female Intelligence Society. The recurrent themes in her speeches were community organization, self-determination, and equal rights. But she left New England disillusioned and arrived in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where she taught at the African School. There is very little written evidence of her life in Williamsburg other than a notice in the Williamsburg Gazette stating that she was the lead educator at one of the school exhibitions. She died in 1879 in Washington, D.C. where she had relocated after the Civil War.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">TAPPAN, Lewis &lt;br /&gt; &amp; Arthur<br />
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Lewis Tappan</div>
<p><em>May 23, 1788, Northampton, MA &ndash; June 21, 1873, Brooklyn, NY</em></p>
<div class="subpage_header">Arthur Tappan</div>
<p><em>May 22, 1786, Northampton, MA &ndash; July 23, 1865, Brooklyn, NY</em></p>
<p><strong>Evangelical Reformers, Businessmen. Brooklyn Heights residents. </strong></p>
<p>The Tappan Brothers were New England reformers spurred to action by an evangelical impulse. Like a number of merchants, they worked in Manhattan but lived in Brooklyn Heights. They originally favored colonization, and Arthur paid for a man named Abdul Rahman to travel to Liberia. But they modified their views after Rahman died and they saw waves of anti-colonization protests among African Americans. They began to call for an immediate end to slavery.</p>
<p>The brothers were executive officers of the American Anti-Slavery Society (AA-SS) and directed numerous anti-slavery petition drives. They financed the abolitionist newspaper the Emancipator and Oberlin College. In 1840, they broke with Garrison and the AA-SS over the issue of women serving on its Executive Committee and formed the American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society.</p>
<p>Lewis founded Chatham Street Chapel in Manhattan, which had a mixed congregation. The church and his home in Manhattan were attacked during the Anti-Abolition Riots in 1834. Years later, Lewis moved to Brooklyn Heights and remained a resident there until his death. With fellow Brooklyn abolitionists Simeon Jocelyn James Pennington, he assisted the Amistad captives during their sensational trial. Lewis prayed at Siloam Presbyterian Church under Amos Freeman and then Plymouth Church under Henry Ward Beecher.</p>
<p>His wife and children were also involved in the anti-slavery movement. His daughter <strong> Julianna</strong> served as an officer in the Ladies New York Anti-Slavery Society and attended the Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women. His second wife <strong>Sarah</strong> was integral in helping fugitive Ann Maria Weems escape to Canada. Lewis Tappan died in Brooklyn Heights in 1873.</div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">TRUESDELL, Harriet  &lt;br /&gt; &amp; Thomas<br />
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Harriet Truesdell</div>
<p><strong><em>July 10, 1786 &ndash; June 29, 1862</em></strong></p>
<div class="subpage_header">Thomas Truesdell</div>
<p><em>July 10, 1789 &ndash; March 10, 1874</em></p>
<p>The Truesdells were prominent abolitionists in New England before moving to Brooklyn, where they lived on Duffield St. in what is now Downtown Brooklyn (1851-1863). Harriet Truesdell served on the organizing committee of the Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women that convened in Philadelphia in 1838. She was also the treasurer of the Providence Ladies Anti-Slavery Society. Thomas Truesdell was a founding member of the Rhode Island Anti-Slavery Society and a colleague of Lewis Tappan. </p>
<p>The Truesdells were friends with William Lloyd Garrison. The couple attended the annual meeting of the American Anti-Slavery Society in New York in 1840 when the abolitionists split. Garrison stayed with the couple in Brooklyn after the meeting ended and before he left for the World’s Anti-Slavery Convention in London.</p></div>
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<h3 class="wp-tab-title">WILSON, William J &lt;br /&gt; &amp; Mary<br />
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William J(oseph) Wilson</div>
<p><em>1818, New Jersey  &ndash; ?</em><br />
<strong>Educator, Journalist, Community Organizer, Fort Greene Resident.</strong></p>
<div class="subpage_header">Mary Wilson</div>
<p><em>1822, New York &ndash; ?</em><br />
<strong>Fundraiser, Businesswoman, Fort Greene resident.</strong></p>
<p>William J. Wilson was born in New Jersey but dedicated his life’s work to the city of Brooklyn. He was the longest serving educator at the African School in Downtown Brooklyn (later Colored School #1), a strong advocate of investing in the city, and an anti-slavery activist. As a national correspondent for the Frederick Douglass’ Paper, writing under the pseudonym “Ethiop,” he examined life, culture, race, and politics in Brooklyn and reported from the black state and national conventions that met annually during the antebellum decades. His tone and style were typified by irreverence, humor and satire. He was a member of the Committee of Thirteen, a vigilance committee also opposed to emigration. The organization formed some time after 1850 and attracted other Brooklynites Junius C. Morel, John N. Still, and a number of other anti-slavery activists from New York. Towards the end of his life, Wilson died in poverty and relative obscurity.</p>
<p>Mary (née Marshall) married William on November 2, 1837 in New York. She owned her own crockery and clothing store on Atlantic and worked closely with Elizabeth Gloucester fundraising for the Colored Orphan Asylum in Manhattan. The Wilsons were active at Siloam Presbyterian Church where they were church elders. In 1863, William, Mary and their daughter Ann moved to Washington, D.C. where they taught in various freedmen schools.</p></div>
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		<title>Abolitionist Brooklyn (1828 &#8211; 1849)</title>
		<link>http://pursuitoffreedom.org/abolitionist-brooklyn/</link>
		<comments>http://pursuitoffreedom.org/abolitionist-brooklyn/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Oct 2013 18:10:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Prithi]]></dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[.... Teacher’s Manual Section 2: Lesson 9 Critics often demonized abolitionists in the press, by arguing that they <strong>promo</strong>ted miscegenation, or interracial relationships, a sexual perversity in their eyes. In doing so they belittled the abolition movement which represented the first time that Americans crossed race and gender lines to work with mutual political purpose. Prints such as E. W. Clay’s “Fruits of Amalgamation” reflected the contemporary pr...]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='three_fifth last_column'><span class="collapseomatic italic_header" id="id3547"  title="Land speculation led to Brooklyn’s rapid urban transformation in the early nineteenth century. Following the Anti-Abolition Riot in Manhattan (1834), white abolitionists moved to the emerging city. While they focused on building a national campaign, black Brooklynites sustained the city’s anti-slavery movement by continuing to build strong communities.">Land speculation led to Brooklyn’s rapid urban transformation in the early nineteenth century. Following the Anti-Abolition Riot in Manhattan (1834), white abolitionists moved to the emerging city. While they focused on building a national campaign, black Brooklynites sustained the city’s anti-slavery movement by continuing to build strong communities.</span>
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By 1834, Brooklyn evolved from Manhattan’s agricultural neighbor to a flourishing urban center with a city charter. Land speculation fueled this change. Plots of farmland previously owned by slaveholders were systemically parceled and sold off to investors. Brooklyn was a city on the rise.</p>
<p>A new set of political activists fled to the emerging city. The abolitionists were a radical minority who had established the American Anti-Slavery Society in Philadelphia in 1833 with headquarters in Manhattan. It was the first movement in American history in which men and women, black and white, came together with mutual purpose – to end slavery immediately and demand political and legal equality for all Americans. In July 1834, anti-abolition riots flared across Manhattan. In response, a number of white abolitionists relocated to Brooklyn, where they joined a thriving anti-slavery movement led by black Brooklynites for over two decades.</p>
<p>The Panic of 1837 led to a decade-long economic depression that ended Brooklyn’s rapid growth. Reduced property prices enticed black New Yorkers to buy land. In doing so they confronted an 1821 amendment to New York State’s constitution which introduced a $250 property requirement for black men to vote while removing all qualifications for white men. Owning property became a political tool that allowed black men to be counted as full citizens with voting rights. The result was the mobilized community of Williamsburg and the vibrant village of Weeksville – where independence, safety, and economic prosperity thrived.
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<h3>Anti-Colonization Debate</h3>
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<div class="gallery_left_content"><a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/026_full.jpg" rel="lightbox"><img alt="Hooker's new pocket plan of the village of Brooklyn. 1827. B A-1827.Fl. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/026_full.jpg" /></a>
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Hooker&#8217;s new pocket plan of the village of Brooklyn. 1827. B A-1827.Fl. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>The map shown here represents the village of Brooklyn contained within the town of the same name in 1827 – the same year that slavery ended in New York State. By this time, Brooklyn transformed from Dutch farmland to a bustling town while <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='Kings County, New York originally consisted of six colonial towns: Brooklyn, Bushwick, Flatbush, Flatlands, Gravesend, and New Utrecht. During the 19th Century, as Brooklyn transformed from town to city, it absorbed some of the other towns.'>Kings County</acronym>’s other five towns remained largely rural.</strong></p>
<p>The town contained ropewalks, taverns, stores, one-story homes, and unpaved streets. Its residents settled around the Fulton ferry landing. These Brooklynites were Irish immigrants, transplants from new England, descendants of the early Dutch and English settlers, and free African Americans. Though racial prejudice and discrimination were widespread, this diverse community of early Brooklynites lived in close quarters, inhabiting the same streets and public spaces. They lived in neighborhoods that are known today as Downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO and Vinegar Hill.
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<img class="group1b" alt="Hooker's new pocket plan of the village of Brooklyn. 1827. B A-1827.Fl. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/026_crop.jpg" width="220" />
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[70 Willow Street]. Eugene L. Armbruster. 1922. Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbooks. V1974.32.99. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p>In 1831, Adrian Van Sinderen, president of the Brooklyn Savings Bank, was also president of the Brooklyn Colonization Society, a local branch of the American Colonization Society (ACS). The organization sought to relocate free black communities to Liberia, and Van Sinderen raised a significant amount of money for that purpose. They did not believe American society could or should be culturally diverse. Ironically, James W. C. Pennington, one of the earliest opponents of colonization schemes, worked as Van Sinderen’s coachman. The lives of pro- and anti-slavery activists were intimately intertwined.
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<div class="gallery_left_content"><a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/030_full.jpg" rel="lightbox3"><img alt="&#091;Certificate of membership&#093;. 1849. Colonization Society of the State of New-York membership certificate to A. Hamilton Bishop. 1985.029. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/030_full_alt.jpg" /></a>
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[Certificate of membership]. 1849. Colonization Society of the State of New-York membership certificate to A. Hamilton Bishop. 1985.029. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>Prominent white men founded the American Colonization Society in 1816. The society received support from James Madison, Andrew Jackson, Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and Brooklyn Savings Bank President Adrian Van Sinderen.</strong></p>
<p>Their aim was to send free people of color, born in the United States, to a colony on the west coast of Africa. Many white members argued that racism and slavery were so deeply embedded in American society, relocation was more humane. In fact, the removal of the country’s free black community only strengthened slaveholding interests and avoided the question of equality regardless of race in a democratic society.
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<a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/031_full.jpg" rel="lightbox4"><img alt="&#091;Notice of anti-colonization protest in Brooklyn&#093;. The Long Island Star. June 3, 1831. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/031_full.jpg" /></a>
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[Notice of anti-colonization protest in Brooklyn]. The Long Island Star. June 3, 1831. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p>From 1817, free black communities across the North protested the white-led colonization movement. Anti-colonization meetings were held in Philadelphia, Manhattan, Baltimore, and Brooklyn.</p>
<p>On June 3, 1831, a group of Brooklyn’s anti-slavery activists met at the African Hall on Nassau Street to discuss colonization. The meeting was led by Henry C. Thompson (future Weeksville founder), George Hogarth (pastor of the AME Church and educator at the African School), and Pennington (a recent arrival in Brooklyn). Insisting on their right to remain on U.S. soil, they argued:</p>
<p><strong>The colored citizens of this village have, with friendly feelings, taken into consideration the objects of the American Colonization Society, together with all of its auxiliary movements, preparatory for our removal to the coast of Africa; and we view them as wholly gratuitous, not called for by us, and not essential to the real welfare of our race.</strong><br />
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<strong>We shall be active in our endeavors to convince the members of the Colonization Society, and the public generally, that were are <em>brethren</em>, that we are <em>countrymen</em> and <em>fellow-citizens</em>; and demanded an equal share of protection from our Federal Government with any other class of citizens in the community. </strong></p>
<p>These black led protests inspired a new generation of white activists. Bostonian William Lloyd Garrison, brothers Lewis and Arthur Tappan, and Gerrit Smith were initially sympathetic to colonization. But their views changed after witnessing colleagues speak out against colonization. This radicalization informed, in part, their decision to identify as abolitionists calling for an immediate end to slavery and the denunciation of colonization schemes.</p>
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<img class="group1b" alt="&#091;Notice of anti-colonization protest in Brooklyn&#093;. The Long Island Star. June 3, 1831. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/031_crop.jpg" width="220" />
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A Tribute for the Negro. Wilson Armistead. 1848. Slavery pamphlet collection. PAMP Armistead-1. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>In 1828, a freedom seeker from Maryland arrived in Brooklyn. Born enslaved, James Pembroke changed his name to James William Charles Pennington. As a free man, he worked as a coachman in Brooklyn and enrolled in a Sabbath school in Newtown, Queens. His education emancipated his mind and inspired a lifetime commitment to racial justice.</strong><br />
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<div id="target-id1092" class="collapseomatic_content ">Pennington joined a group of like-minded activists including Brooklynites Henry C. Thompson and George Hogarth. In 1831, he attended the first black national convention in Philadelphia as the Long Island delegate. The black conventions were part of a grassroots movement devoted to finding practical solutions to political inequality. Ordinary men from all over the North, traveled long distances to discuss issues affecting their communities. The national conventions met a total of twelve times between 1831 and 1864.
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<h3>Abolitionism in<br />
Black and White</h3>
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&#8220;The Liberator Commenced January 1st 1831.&#8221; Cotton banner by unknown maker, [1840s]. Massachusetts Historical Society.</div>
<div class="manuals_link">
<strong>Teacher’s Manual</strong><br />
Section 2: <a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/section2_lesson7/lesson7.pdf" target="_blank">Lesson 7</a> | <a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/section2_lesson8/lesson8.pdf" target="_blank">Lesson 8</a>
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<p><strong>In the 1830s, the abolitionists, a group of humanitarian reformers, burst onto the political scene in the United States. </strong></p>
<p>On December 4, 1833, sixty-two reformers met in Philadelphia to form the American Anti-Slavery Society, establishing their headquarters in Manhattan. Abolitionism resulted from two political impulses – black activism and white evangelical perfection. As a result, the movement attracted men and women, black and white, from different social classes. It was the first time in U.S. history that activists crossed racial and gender lines to work together with mutual purpose.<br />
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Abolitionists differed from previous anti-slavery activists in their rejection of gradual <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='A system under which people are treated as property, to be bought and sold, and are forced to work.'>emancipation</acronym> schemes. Instead they called for the immediate end to slavery. They denounced compensation to slaveholders, condemned colonization schemes, criticized institutional ties (both secular and religious) to slavery, and agitated for political and legal equality for African Americans.</p>
<p>The American Anti-Slavery Society’s brand of abolitionism, or immediatism, became closely associated with Bostonian, William Lloyd Garrison. George Hogarth, pastor of the AME Church and an educator at the first public African school in Brooklyn, was an early supporter of the interracial movement and a Garrisonian. He distributed the <em>Liberator</em>, Garrison’s <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='A radical activist who calls for an immediate end to slavery, political and legal equality for African Americans, and denounces colonization schemes.'>abolitionist</acronym> newspaper throughout Brooklyn. It featured letters, poems, news, and notices intended to build a national anti-slavery network.</p>
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[Abolition disclaimer]. The Long Island Star. July 14, 1834. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<strong>Teacher’s Manual</strong><br />
Section 2: <a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/section2_lesson9/lesson9.pdf" target="_blank">Lesson 9</a>
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<p><strong>Six months after forming the American Anti-Slavery Society, the abolitionist battle against racism and slavery was firmly entrenched in the city of New York.</strong></p>
<p>But the city’s deep economic ties to the South made the situation volatile. In July 1834, the tension erupted. Mobs attacked black and white abolitionist homes and places of worship. They also targeted scores of ordinary black New Yorkers. In the immediate aftermath of these riots, white abolitionists sought to clarify they were radical activists but not anarchists. Two white abolitionists who founded the American Anti-Slavery Society, Arthur Tappan and John Rankin, signed and posted handbills across New York and placed notices in a variety of newspapers including the <em>Long Island Star</em>.<br />
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Brooklyn residents were appalled by the violence. Describing the riots as “disgraceful to the character of the city,” the Long Island Star simultaneously indicted Manhattan and praised the emerging city of Brooklyn. By no means a bastion of tolerance and equality, Brooklyn did offer new opportunities for activists wishing to mold the city’s character.</p>
<p>Manhattan’s Anti-Abolition Riot became a turning point in abolitionism in Brooklyn. White abolitionists such as Lewis Tappan, Samuel Cox and Joshua Leavitt eventually left Manhattan and moved to Brooklyn, where they built upon a vibrant anti-slavery movement long established by black Brooklynites.</p>
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<img class="group2b" alt="&#091;Abolition disclaimer&#093;. The Long Island Star. July 14, 1834. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/037_crop.jpg" width="220" />
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<div class="gallery_left_content"><a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/038_full.jpg" rel="lightbox8"><img alt="Samuel H. Cox. Portrait collection. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/038_full.jpg" /></a><a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/038b_full.jpg" rel="lightbox8"><br />
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Samuel H. Cox. Portrait collection. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>Samuel H. Cox was an abolitionist and pastor in Manhattan.</strong></a></p>
<p>When Samuel Cornish, the founder of <em>Freedom’s Journal</em>, the first anti-slavery newspaper in the United States, sat in a pew at his church, Cox’s white parishioners reacted in horror.<br />
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<div id="target-id1943" class="collapseomatic_content ">The New York Press used the incident to foster anti-abolitionist sentiment. During the Anti-Abolition Riots in Manhattan (1834), mobs vandalized and destroyed Cox’s home and church. He moved to Brooklyn and became the pastor of First Presbyterian Church. Perhaps the riots created deep psychological trauma as Cox did not remain an outspoken abolitionist once he relocated to Brooklyn.
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<img class="group2b" alt="Samuel H. Cox. Portrait collection. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/038_crop.jpg" width="220" />
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The Fruits of Amalgamation. E. W. Clay.1839. Courtesy of the American Antiquarian Society.</div>
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<strong>Teacher’s Manual</strong><br />
Section 2: <a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/section2_lesson9/lesson9.pdf" target="_blank">Lesson 9</a>
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<p><strong>Critics often demonized abolitionists in the press, by arguing that they promoted miscegenation, or interracial relationships, a sexual perversity in their eyes. In doing so they belittled the abolition movement which represented the first time that Americans crossed race and gender lines to work with mutual political purpose. </strong></p>
<p>Prints such as E. W. Clay’s “Fruits of Amalgamation” reflected the contemporary prevalent racism and hostility towards the abolitionists’ interracial cooperation.
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<h3>Print Propaganda</h3>
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<img alt="The Anti-Slavery Record. Ranson G. Williams. 1835. Slavery pamphlet collection. PAMP Anti-1. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/044_full.jpg" /></a>
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The Anti-Slavery Record. Ranson G. Williams. 1835. Slavery pamphlet collection. PAMP Anti-1. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<strong>Teacher’s Manual</strong><br />
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<p><strong>In May 1835, less than a year after the anti-abolition riots, the American Anti-Slavery Society reported that it had published over 1 million pieces of printed material. The sophisticated print <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='A technique used to sway people’s opinions, adopt a certain behavior, or perform a particular action.'>propaganda</acronym> campaign furthered their anti-slavery agenda. It took advantage of newer print technologies that allowed for materials to be cheaply mass-produced. Anti-slavery propaganda included illustrated periodicals, newspapers, pamphlets, and broadsides. </strong></p>
<p>The abolitionists bombarded the federal postal service with anti-slavery materials. Lewis Tappan led the postal campaign despite threats of violence. Thousands of anti-slavery publications were sent to post offices in the North and South intended to persuade readers that slavery was a sin through moral suasion. But the avalanche of materials incited violence in Charleston, South Carolina. On July 29, 1835, a mob descended on the post office, and burned both the bags and mock effigies of Lewis Tappan and William Lloyd Garrison.
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Slave Market of America. 1836. M1975.838.1. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<strong>Teacher’s Manual</strong><br />
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<p><strong>Anti-slavery print materials conveyed slavery’s horrors including sexual abuse and physical suffering. “Slave Market of America” emphasized American hypocrisy by showing slavery in the capital city of a nation founded on the premise of liberty. </strong></p>
<p>The visual language of anti-slavery prints was intended to persuade the most cynical of audiences. Consequently, it erased black agency, casting African Americans as victims. These images removed achievements of black people – free and enslaved – from the visual record, leaving behind a complicated historical legacy.
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[Cover of Annual Report of the Brooklyn Anti-Slavery Society] printed by W.S. Dorr, 1840. Negative #85469d. Collection of The New-York Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>In 1839, white abolitionists founded the Brooklyn Anti-Slavery Society, an auxiliary of the American Anti-Slavery Society. The organization promised to organize prayer meetings and public lectures so that Brooklynites could “sympathize with human woe.” Abolitionists were able to spread their message quickly through such local groups, including female auxiliaries, established throughout the North. </strong><br />
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The Brooklyn Anti-Slavery Society was one of the last local auxiliaries to be established. No African Americans served on its executive committee despite several Brooklyn’s many prominent black anti-slavery activists. It is difficult to say why, as little evidence on the organization exists.</p>
<p>The Society’s founders were John Rankin, Edward Corning, and William E. Whiting, all white men from the merchant class, and ardent abolitionists. They were also residents of Brooklyn Heights, a neighborhood particularly welcoming to wealthy people who worked in the financial epicenter of lower Manhattan.</p>
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<h3>Practical Abolitionism</h3>
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The Anti-Slavery Record. Ranson G. Williams. 1835. Slavery pamphlet collection. PAMP Anti-1. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p>New York’s cultural, economic and political ties to the South ran deep, and it became a fertile hunting ground for slavecatchers in the post emancipation decades. The city’s judges often favored the slavecatcher. The problem was so percasive that abolitionist David Ruggles promised to publish a “Slaveholders Directory with names; residences of all members of the bar, police officers, city marshalls, constables, and other persons who lend themselves in the nefarious business of kindnapping and the names of slaveholders residing in the city of Brooklyn.”
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The Anti-Slavery almanac, for 1839. S.W. Benedict. 1839. PAMP American-5. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>The kidnapping of free black people was prevalent in New York and Brooklyn. Anti-slavery materials, intended to convince readers of slavery’s moral bankruptcy, proved insufficient. In response, abolitionists formed the New York Vigilance.</strong></p>
<p>Twenty-six year old David Ruggles, born free in Connecticut, emerged as its most visible activist. He combined the print propaganda tactics of the American Anti-Slavery Society with a new form of activism. Historian Graham Hodges labeled it a “practical abolitionism.” Ruggles physically intervened in many cases and this came to typify the style of his anti-slavery activity.
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Amistad Collection. Amistad Research Center at Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana.</div>
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<p><strong>David Ruggles, born free in Connecticut, led the New York Vigilance Committee, pioneering a practical abolitionism. He often risked his life to physically intervene in the abduction of free black people in Brooklyn and New York.</strong></p>
<p><strong>Kidnapping in Brooklyn</strong><br />
Margaret Baker and her children were living at the Brooklyn Almshouse in Flatbush, when they were kidnapped the family and sold into slavery. Ruggles approached Land Van Nostrandt, the overseer of the Almshouse, at his home and demanded the family’s return. The historical record does not reveal whether or now he was successful.<br />
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Daniel K. Dodge and his wife were slaveholders from South Carolina. They spent their summer vacations in Brooklyn, at their second home on the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Henry Street. They kept three enslaved people – Jesse, Jim, and Charity – there. Although slavery was illegal in New York, Southerners were allowed to keep enslaved people in the state for up to nine months, after which they were legally free under the state’s personal liberty law.</p>
<p>Ruggles charged the Dodges with couple with the enslaved people captive for years. He burst into their home and an argument ensued. Ruggles eventually succeeded in legally emancipating Jesse, Jim and Charity. But white abolitionists criticized his aggressive style of activism. Despite their mutual purpose, black and white abolitionists did not always agree. In 1839, Ruggles was forced to resign from his position with the New York Vigilance Committee.
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<img class="group4b" alt="Amistad Collection. Amistad Research Center at Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/056_crop.jpg" width="220" />
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<h3>Amistad</h3>
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Simeon S. Jocelyn. 81.374. Massachusetts Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>In 1839, the Amistad, a Spanish schooner from Cuba containing 59 enslaved Africans was found shipwrecked off the coast of Long Island. Joseph Cinque, a Sierra Leonean, and others had overthrown the crew and demanded to be taken back to Africa. Instead the Spanish crew commandeered the schooner towards the American coast and asked for government protection. The African survivors were taken to New London, CT, imprisoned and charged with piracy and murder.</strong></p>
<p>Brooklyn abolitionists Simeon Jocelyn, a Williamsburg resident, and Lewis Tappan, a Brooklyn Heights resident, worked closely with the African prisoners, and after a high-profile court case, they were freed.</p>
<p>Later, Jocelyn and others, formed the American Missionary Association, an organization dedicated to abolitionism through evangelicalism. During Reconstruction, they concentrated on educational activities.
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<h3>Land, Voting,<br />
Citizenship: Weeksville</h3>
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Sylvanus Smith. ca. 1870. M1989.4.1. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<strong>Teacher’s Manual</strong><br />
Section 3: <a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/section3_lesson11/lesson11.pdf" target="_blank">Lesson 11</a>
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<p><strong>Established by 1838, Weeksville was one of New York’s earliest and most successful black communities intended as a political base.<br />
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Sylvanus Smith was a free black man living in the village of Brooklyn. He was one of the earliest land investors in Weeksville, a free black community that thrived during the <acronym class='c2c-text-hover' title='The time period before the Civil War.'>antebellum</acronym> decades.<br />
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<strong>From Suburb to City</strong><br />
The town of Brooklyn was transformed by land speculation during the early nineteenth century. In 1804, Hezekiah Beers Pierrepont, a pioneering developer purchased a sixty-acre farm in Brooklyn Heights. When his friend, Robert Fulton, developed the steam ferry that reduced commuting times between Brooklyn and Manhattan, the first U.S. suburb was born. By 1817, Pierrepont owned most of Brooklyn Heights and began to parcel it off to individual land investors. In 1834, Brooklyn had outgrown its suburban status and was an independent city.</p>
<p>But the Panic of 1837 brought Brooklyn’s rapid urbanization to an end. Property prices plunged and stayed low as a ten year economic depression followed.</p>
<p><strong>Founding of Weeksville</strong><br />
Just one year following the Panic, free black Brooklynites including Smith intentionally founded the village of Weeksville. In 1821, the New York State Constitution eliminated all property qualification for white men and introduced a $250 property requirement for black men. Weeksville was established, in part, as an answer to this discrimination. Brooklyn’s free black community created a landowning community that would support them as full citizens with voting rights.</p>
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Chancery Sale of Real Estate Belonging to the Heirs of Samuel Garrittsen, decd., situated in the 9th Ward of the city of Brooklyn. George Hayward. 1839. B P-[1839].Fl. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<strong>Teacher’s Manual</strong><br />
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<p><strong>African Americans began to acquire land in the city’s ninth ward, the most distant and secluded of Brooklyn’s wards from the bustling downtown area as early as 1832.</strong></p>
<p>Three years later, Henry C. Thompson purchased 32 lots in the area indirectly from John Lefferts’ estate. In 1838, James Weeks, an African American longshoreman, purchased two lots. He was the only original land investor to reside in the area and for whom Weeksville was named.
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<img class="group6b" alt="Chancery Sale of Real Estate Belonging to the Heirs of Samuel Garrittsen, decd., situated in the 9th Ward of the city of Brooklyn. George Hayward. 1839. B P-&#091;1839&#093;.Fl. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/061_crop.jpg" width="220" />
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[Hunterfly Road Houses]. Eugene L. Armbruster. 1922. Eugene L. Armbruster photograph and scrapbook collection. V1987.11.2. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>The Hunterfly Road Houses are the last remnant structures of the once thriving community of Weeksville. It was the second largest free black community in antebellum America.</strong></p>
<p>Historian Judith Wellman’s research shows that it boasted high levels of homeownership and it was the only free black community with an urban rather than rural economic base. By 1855, it had 521 residents.
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<img class="group6b" alt="&#091;Hunterfly Road Houses&#093;. Eugene L. Armbruster. 1922. Eugene L. Armbruster photograph and scrapbook collection. V1987.11.2. Brooklyn Historical Society." src="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/062_crop.jpg" width="220" />
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[Colored School No. 2 (Public School No. 68)]. 1892. V1974.36.17. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>Junius Morel was a long serving educator at Colored School #2, or the African School in Weeksville. He was also a prominent activist and a national correspondent for a variety of anti-slavery newspapers.</strong></p>
<p>It is no coincidence that the majority of educators in Brooklyn’s African Schools were anti-slavery activists. Education was a powerful weapon to fight racism and inequality. Henry C. Thompson, Sylavnus Smith, and George Hogarth were all instrumental in establishing the African School in what is now Downtown Brooklyn and used the resources at the AME Church to do so. Willis and William Hodges and their neighbors founded the African School in Williamsburg.<br />
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Brooklyn had a total of three African schools during the antebellum period, located in modern day downtown Brooklyn, Weeksville and Williamsburg. When the Brooklyn Board of Education took over their management, they were renamed Colored School No 1, 2, and 3 respectively. However, the schools often suffered from overcrowding and a lack of public funding.
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<h3>Land, Voting,<br />
Citizenship: Williamsburg</h3>
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Portrait of Willis A. Hodges. Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library.</div>
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<p><strong>“[It is] my opinion that the people of color have to leave the crowded cities and town of New York, Brooklyn, Syracuse, Albany, Troy, Utica and the rest and move into country and small growing villages like Williamsburg, and grow up with a small town. I believe in that way they would overcome much of the prejudice against them, for, as a rule, there is a fraternal feeling between the people of small towns or places (even in the South) that is unknown in the large cities.” </strong><br />
Willis Hodges, <em>A Free Man of Color. </em></p>
<p>In 1839, at the height of Williamsburg’s land speculation, William Hodges, a free man from Norfolk, VA, bought his first plot of land there. He erected his home at the corner of 4th Street (modern day Bedford) and South 8th Street, a highly desirable location, and a short walk to the Peck Slip Ferry with views of the city. His brother Willis moved nearby to South 7th Street where he lived with his wife Sarah Ann Corprew, whose parents lived in Weeksville.<br />
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Willis Hodges noted that in the late 1830s there was only one abolition society in Williamsburg, and he and William were its only members of color. In the ten years that followed, the brothers and their neighbors cemented Williamsburg’s reputation as a site of anti-slavery activism. They collectively shaped its public spaces to reflect their ideals. The result was the creation of the public West India Emancipation Day celebrations, an African school, and a mobilized black community.
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A map of the village of Williamsburgh, Kings County, N.Y. Isaac Vieth. 1845. B A-[1845].Fl. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>Until 1855, Williamsburg was separate from the city of Brooklyn. It was part of the town of Bushwick, one of Kings County’s original six towns and remained distinctly rural until its incorporation as a village in 1827. During Williamsburg’s early growth, the village council opened and improved streets, dug wells, and established a district school. </strong>
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[View of Williamsburgh]. 1834. Eugene L. Armbruster photographs and scrapbooks. V1974.1.1260. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>In 1829, Williamsburg had a post office, 148 homes, 10 stores and taverns, 5 ropewalks, 1 distillery, 1 slaughterhouse, 2 butchers, a Dutch Reformed Church, and a Methodist Episcopal Church.</strong></p>
<p>Just six years later, its population had tripled to 3,000. There were 72 village streets, approximately 300 houses, a newspaper called the Williamsburg Gazette. In 1836, two ferries connected the growing town of Williamsburg to New York. In 1852, it received a city charter and was complete separate from the town of Bushwick in which it had originally started.
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48 valuable lots in the village of Williamsburgh, Kings County. 1845. B P-[1845].Fl. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p>Williamsburg’s growth was made possible by developers who recognized its commercial advantages. The land stood 45 feet above water which prevented it from flooding, it looked out at a waterfront that stretched 1.5 miles along the East River, and it was in close proximity to the financial hub of Manhattan. The influx of merchants, industrialists, and laborers, mostly from Germany, transformed Williamsburg from a village (1827) to a town (1840) to a city (1852) that was eventually annexed to Brooklyn in 1855. Home to the second largest black community in Kings County, Williamsburg was a bastion of anti-slavery activity.
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[Public School 191]. Eugene L. Armbruster. 1929. Eugene L. Armbruster photograph and scrapbook collection. V1991.106.125. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<strong>Teacher’s Manual</strong><br />
Section 3: <a href="http://pursuitoffreedom.org/wp-content/uploads/resources/section3_lesson12/lesson12.pdf" target="_blank">Lesson 12</a>
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<p><strong>In 1841, Williamsburg activists opened an African School after the village school refused admission to approximately 40 students of color aged 5 to 16.</strong></p>
<p>Willis Hodges, William Hodges, Samuel Ricks, Lewis H. Nelson, Thomas Wilson, and Henry Davis raised funds and formed the school committee. William Hodges was elected to act as both teacher and principal. When the Brooklyn Board of Education took over the management of all public schools, the African School in Williamsburg was renamed Colored School #3. Abolitionist Maria Stewart and Weeksville founder Sylavnus Smith’s daughter Sarah J. Tompkins Garnet were among its many educators.
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Petition of Voters of Williamsburgh against Gag Rule, December 14, 1841. Records of the U.S. House of Representatives. HR27A-H1-6. Courtesy of the National Archives.</div>
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<p><strong>In 1841, Williamsburg’s black and white voters used new and old tactics to fight slavery. They showed support for the newly formed Liberty Party which reflected their anti-slavery stance. But they also used the decade old strategy used by abolitionists of petitioning Congress.</strong></p>
<p>Beginning in the early 1830s, abolitionists advocated for the end of slavery by petitioning state legislatures and the House of Representatives. It is estimated that the American Anti-Slavery Society sent more than 600,000 anti-slavery petitions containing over 2 million signatures in total. Congress responded to the onslaught of these petitions by passing a series of resolutions between 1836 and 1844 that tabled them, known as the gag rule.</p>
<p>This petition asks Congress to remove the gag rule placed on anti-slavery petitions. Signatures came from James Warner, his son James H. Warner, Taylor C. Warner, Samuel Shapter, William Hodges, and Willis Hodges. These men knew each other through their Liberty Party activities.</p>
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Liberty Party Notice. SY1841 no. 19. Collection of The New-York Historical Society.</div>
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<p><strong>In 1840, abolitionists divided into two ideological camps: the Garrisonians and Tappanites. The split occurred because Lewis Tappan felt that William Lloyd Garrison was becoming too radical. In particular, he insisted that women be allowed to serve alongside men on the executive committee of the American Anti-Slavery Society (until then women had worked in separate anti-slavery societies). </strong></p>
<p>The split continued to give rise to new strands of anti-slavery activism. In particular, black activists recognized the need for a two-pronged approach – a demand for the end to slavery and a redress of basic civil rights for all people of color.<br />
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During the 1840s many of Brooklyn’s black homeowners, educators, and organizers led the protest at the ballot box. They fought for the removal of the $250 property requirement for African American voters. And they supported the newly formed Liberty Party. The political party was intended to act as a valid alternative to the two party system – Whigs and Democrats – that had dominated U.S. politics. The party brought anti-slavery ideologies into American electoral politics so that the issue could no longer be simply sidelined, tabled, or gagged in the form of petitions by state and federal governments.</p>
<p>On December 29, 1841, Kings County activists met in Williamsburg to show their support for the Liberty Party. The meeting was led by James Warner, a hatmaker, who had first met William Hodges at an American Anti-Slavery Society gathering. For William Hodges, and countless men like him, the support for party politics was a reaffirmation of the full privileges of citizenship with voting rights. The Liberty Party dissolved by 1848 having failed to get a foothold in national politics.</p>
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Gerrit Smith. 1865. Civil War carte-de-visite album. SCRAP.2009.19. Brooklyn Historical Society.</div>
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<p>Gerrit Smith was a wealthy white landowner and abolitionist. He established a utopian community called Timbuctoo on 120,000 acres of his own land in the Adirondacks. Between 1846 and 1853, Smith donated 40-60 acre lots to 3,000 African American men, creating a community of black voters in New York State. Timbuctoo was a response to New York’s failure to amend the voting requirements for black men in 1846 and the continued protest for black citizenship.</p>
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Free Black Farmers at North Elba, New York. Photographer Unknown. Courtesy of the Adirondack Museum.</div>
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<p>Gerrit Smith’s Timbuctoo valued independence, self-sufficiency, and community. Residents were expected to live off the land while being able to escape some of the racism they encountered on a daily basis. Many Kings County residents participated in the democratic experiment including Willis Hodges. But life in Timbuctoo was difficult. They were unprepared as farmers, lacked basic supplies, and faced a dearth of fertile soil. By the mid-1850s, Timbuctoo was no longer operational.</p>
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