Theodore Weld:
by Thomas, Benjamin P.
Published by : Rutgers Univisty Press (New Brunswick, New Jersey) Physical details: xi, 307 p. Year: 1950Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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900 - 999 | 923.673 Tho (Browse shelf) | Available | Gift | 43562 |
"Measured by his influence, Theodore Weld was not only the greatest of the abolitionists; he was also one of the greatest figures of his time." Soon after his death in 1895 , the public forgot the man thus described by the Dictionary of American Biography, and even to historians he was little more than a name until a few years ago. It is as if Weld deliberately sought this obscurity; he refused to hold office in any of the antislavery organizations or to speak at their conventions; he avoided city life and worked in country districts; his writings were published anonymously, and he would seldom allow his speeches or his letters from the field to appear in print at all.
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