Stern lectures for the logically-challenged. Others have opinions, I have convictions.
Thursday, October 27, 2005
This Day in Republican History 10/28/05
October 28, 1842
Birth of Republican suffragist and abolitionist Anna Dickinson, “Joan of Arc of the Union cause,” whose campaign speeches in many states contributed to victories of Republican candidates
Born in Philadelphia to an orthodox Quaker family, Anna Dickinson began to write and speak about abolition while still in her teens. She contributed an essay to William Lloyd Garrison's Liberator in 1856, and addressed the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society in 1860. Her intensity, youth, and dedication to emancipation attracted curious, sympathetic audiences and earned the notice of such well-known abolitionists as Hannah Longshore and Lucretia Mott. But Dickinson's greatest success came in 1863, when the Republican Party asked her to tour on behalf of its candidates. When Dickinson reached New York, an audience of 5,000 greeted her as the Joan of Arc of the abolition cause. Throughout the 1860s, Dickinson continued to lecture on the rights of women and African Americans.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment