An Antislavery Journey: Garrison and Douglass in Pennsylvania, 1847

EXCERPT: “What had Garrison and Douglass accomplished on their four stops in Pennsylvania on their way to Ohio? The answer is probably “not much.” In Norristown and Philadelphia they had addressed several hundred members of a well-established antislavery society and a small group of blacks. In Harrisburg their meeting had been broken up by a group of rowdies. In Pittsburgh they may have made some new converts. They had held two meetings in New Brighton, a village near the western border of the state. In Ohio, on the other hand, they spoke at eighteen communities. The Western Reserve was a hotbed of abolitionism. At New Lyme, Oberlin, and Salem they addressed audiences of several thousand” (Brown, 548).

Note: A handwritten letter by Frederick Douglass referencing the “canal boat to Youngstown, Ohio” journey (Brown, 547) is on display at the Little Beaver Historical Society.

MOST RELEVANT KEYWORD SEARCHES: “New Brighton,” “Townsend”

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Beaver County Sesquicentennial 1800-1950: souvenir programme

c. 1950.  Souvenir programme for the Beaver County Sesquicentennial Celebration (1800-1950).

Contains references to Darlington area and Greersburg Academy.

Subject

  • Beaver County (Pa.)–History
    Beaver County (Pa.)–Centennial celebrations, etc

Ohio and Pennsylvania reminiscences : illustrations from photographs taken mainly in Mahoning, Columbiana and Beaver Counties, 1880 to 1916

c. 1916.  Ohio And Pennsylvania Reminiscences: Illustrations From Photographs Taken Mainly In Mahoning, Columbiana And Beaver Counties, 1880 To 1916 has been considered by academicians and scholars of great significance and value to literature. This forms a part of the knowledge base for future generations. So that the book is never forgotten we have represented this book in a print format as the same form as it was originally first published. Hence any marks or annotations seen are left intentionally to preserve its true nature.

 

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