A Discourse Before the Young Men's Colonization Society of Pennsylvania: Delivered October 24, 1834, in St. Paul's Church, PhiladelphiaSociety, 1834 - 63 Seiten |
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... bondage by the active philanthropy of this association , they seek , in the establishment of a new colony , the enjoyment of freedom . They embark , the first emigrants to the Pennsylvan Colony , on the one hundred and fifty - second ...
... bondage by the active philanthropy of this association , they seek , in the establishment of a new colony , the enjoyment of freedom . They embark , the first emigrants to the Pennsylvan Colony , on the one hundred and fifty - second ...
Seite 5
... bondage by the active philanthropy of this association , they seek , in the establishment of a new colony , the enjoyment of freedom . They embark , the first emigrants to the Pennsylvan Colony , on the one hundred and fifty - second ...
... bondage by the active philanthropy of this association , they seek , in the establishment of a new colony , the enjoyment of freedom . They embark , the first emigrants to the Pennsylvan Colony , on the one hundred and fifty - second ...
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... bondage has remained unimpaired and unaffected by the exertions of the Abolition Society , whose laudable zeal in the maintenance of human rights , must be greatly scandalised by its continuance . In Connecticut and Rhode Island slavery ...
... bondage has remained unimpaired and unaffected by the exertions of the Abolition Society , whose laudable zeal in the maintenance of human rights , must be greatly scandalised by its continuance . In Connecticut and Rhode Island slavery ...
Seite 12
... bondage . Persuasion and remonstrance too often proved wholly ineffectual ; for what could these effect against a line of conduct prompted by compassion for the slave , and the belief that it was a sacred duty to protect him ? * act of ...
... bondage . Persuasion and remonstrance too often proved wholly ineffectual ; for what could these effect against a line of conduct prompted by compassion for the slave , and the belief that it was a sacred duty to protect him ? * act of ...
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... bondage , that he might once more have the pains of hunger satisfied . There are hundreds there who say they would rather come back and be slaves than stay in Liberia . They would sit down and tell us their tale of suffering and of ...
... bondage , that he might once more have the pains of hunger satisfied . There are hundreds there who say they would rather come back and be slaves than stay in Liberia . They would sit down and tell us their tale of suffering and of ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
00 John 00 William abolition act Abolition Societies Africa American Colonization Society Anthony Benezet Aylett Hawes Bassa Cove benevolent blessings Board of Managers bondage Capt cause census of 1830 Christian Church civilization climate colonists Coloniza coloured brethren comfort Committee condition Constitution effects Elisha Tyson Elliott Cresson emancipation emigrants existence extinc favour feeling foreign Francis Thornton free blacks freedom friends Granville Sharp Hannah Kilham happy honour hope hundred inhabitants institution Isaac Isaac Walker James James G labour land laws legislative letter liberty manumission manumitted masters Mechlin Men's Colonization Society ment Monrovia moral native negro Ninus nists North Northern objects oppressed parent Society persons Philadelphia philanthropy population present prospects reason respectable Samuel says sentiment servitude settlement settlers Sierra Leone slave-holding slave-trade slaves Society of Pennsylvania South Southern spirit testimony thousand tion trade United Virginia visited Liberia William Wilberforce Young Men's Colonization
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 35 - Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery," etc., issued the following letter: — "AN ADDRESS TO THE PUBLIC. " From the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, and the Relief of Free Negroes unla-wfully held in Bondage.
Seite 38 - You have gladdened my heart by convincing me that sanguine as had been my hopes of the happy effects to be produced by your institution, all my anticipations are scanty and cold compared with the reality.
Seite 16 - The true character of the African climate is not well understood in other countries. Its inhabitants are as robust, as healthy, as long lived, to say the least, .as those of any other country. Nothing like an epidemic has ever appeared in this Colony; nor can we learn from the natives, that the calamity of a sweeping sickness ever yet visited this part of the continent. But the change from a temperate to a tropical country is a great one — too great not to affect the health more or less — and...
Seite 23 - All my expectations in regard to the aspect of things, the health, harmony, order, contentment, industry, and general prosperity of the settlers, were more than realized. There are about two hundred buildings in the town of Monrovia, extending along the Cape Montserado, not far from a mile and a quarter.
Seite 6 - An act respecting fugitives from justice, and persons escaping from the service of their masters...
Seite 17 - The population is now 1,200,* and is healthy and thriving. The children born in the country are fine looking, and, I presume, can be raised as easily as those of the natives. All the colonists with whom I had any communication (and with nearly the whole I did communicate in person, or by my officers,) expressed their decided wish to remain in their present situation, rather than to return again to- the United States.
Seite 10 - ... brethren in America. So much was I pleased with what I saw, that I observed to the people, should I make a true report, it would hardly be credited in the United States.
Seite 16 - We enjoy health, after a few month's residence in the country, as uniformly, and in as perfect a degree, as we possessed that blessing in our native country. And a distressing scarcity of provisions, or any of the comforts of life, has for the last two years been entirely unknown, even to the poorest persons in this community. On these points there are, and have been, much misconception, and some malicious misrepresentations in the United States.
Seite 17 - ... years of the colony, want of good houses, the great fatigues and dangers of the settlers, their irregular mode of living, and the hardships and discouragements they met with, greatly helped the other causes of sickness, which prevailed to an alarming extent, and was attended with great mortality.
Seite 23 - ... far above those of their Coloured brethren, even the most prosperous of them, that we have seen in the United States. They feel that they have a home. They have no fear of the White Man or the Coloured Man. They have no superiors. They do not look up to others, but they are looked up to by them. Their laws grow out of themselves, and are their own.