A Discourse Before the Young Men's Colonization Society of Pennsylvania: Delivered October 24, 1834, in St. Paul's Church, Philadelphia, Band 6society, 1834 - 63 Seiten |
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... carrying the fruits of light and knowledge , and capable of scattering their pre- cious seeds upon a soil which has lain neglected and buried , for centuries , in the grossest ignorance and night . Such is the first step which the Young ...
... carrying the fruits of light and knowledge , and capable of scattering their pre- cious seeds upon a soil which has lain neglected and buried , for centuries , in the grossest ignorance and night . Such is the first step which the Young ...
Seite 21
... carry into the heart , and to the remote extremities of Africa , our religion , laws , civilization , and language . The fierceness of opposition , and the easiness of popular credulity , have combined in casting the most cruel ...
... carry into the heart , and to the remote extremities of Africa , our religion , laws , civilization , and language . The fierceness of opposition , and the easiness of popular credulity , have combined in casting the most cruel ...
Seite 22
... carried off by sickness , caused by the change of climate . And death occa- sionally takes a victim from our number , without any regard at all to the time of his residence in this country . But we never hoped , by leaving America , to ...
... carried off by sickness , caused by the change of climate . And death occa- sionally takes a victim from our number , without any regard at all to the time of his residence in this country . But we never hoped , by leaving America , to ...
Seite 24
... carry with them through life , in strength of limb and rotundity of form , abundant proof of the excellence of their native air . The original emigrants to Liberia were not exempt from those hardships and privations to which first ...
... carry with them through life , in strength of limb and rotundity of form , abundant proof of the excellence of their native air . The original emigrants to Liberia were not exempt from those hardships and privations to which first ...
Seite 25
... carried two thou- sand five hundred colonists . One thousand of these fell vic- tims to disease . Notwithstanding these sad indications of a fatal temperature , and the mortality which , at the conclusion of the last and beginning of ...
... carried two thou- sand five hundred colonists . One thousand of these fell vic- tims to disease . Notwithstanding these sad indications of a fatal temperature , and the mortality which , at the conclusion of the last and beginning 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 41 - 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 44 - 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 29 - 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 12 - An act respecting fugitives from justice, and persons escaping from the service of their masters...
Seite 24 - Somerset, had established the axiom, that " as soon as any slave sets his foot on English ground, he becomes free," there were many negroes in London who had been brought over by their masters.
Seite 22 - 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...
Seite 22 - 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 28 - Caldwcll is about seven miles from Monrovia, on St. Paul's river, and contains a population of five hundred and sixty agriculturists. The soil is exceedingly fertile, the situation pleasant, and the people satisfied and happy.
Seite 23 - In the early 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 were attended with great mortality. But we look back to those times as to a season of trial long past, and nearly forgotten.
Seite 16 - ... 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.' Among all that I conversed with, I did not find a discontented person, or hear one express a desire to return to America.