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The Liberator (newspaper)

The Liberator (1831–1865) was a weekly abolitionist newspaper, printed and published in Boston by William Lloyd Garrison and, through 1839, by Isaac Knapp. Religious rather than political, it appealed to the moral conscience of its readers, urging them to demand immediate freeing of the slaves ("immediatism"). It also promoted women's rights, an issue that split the American abolitionist movement. Despite its modest circulation of 3,000, it had prominent and influential readers, including all the abolitionist leaders, among them Frederick Douglass, Beriah Green, Arthur and Lewis Tappan, and Alfred Niger. It frequently printed or reprinted letters, reports, sermons, and news stories relating to American slavery, becoming a sort of community bulletin board for the new abolitionist movement that Garrison helped foster.

The Liberator
Liberator v.1, No.1, 1831
TypeWeekly newspaper
PublisherWilliam Lloyd Garrison and Isaac Knapp
FoundedJanuary 1, 1831 (January 1, 1831)
Political alignmentAbolitionism
Feminism
Ceased publicationDecember 29, 1865 (December 29, 1865)
CityBoston, Massachusetts
CountryUnited States
OCLC number1728160

History

 
An issue of The Liberator depicting African Americans next to a lynching tree

Garrison co-published weekly issues of The Liberator from Boston continuously for 35 years, from January 1, 1831, to the final issue of December 29, 1865.[1] Although its circulation was only about 3,000, and three-quarters of subscribers (in 1834) were African Americans,[2] the newspaper earned nationwide notoriety for its uncompromising advocacy of "immediate and complete emancipation of all slaves" in the United States. Garrison set the tone for the paper in his famous open letter "To the Public" in the first issue:

 
Fundraising appeal of William Garrison, 1834

... Assenting to the "self-evident truth" maintained in the American Declaration of Independence, "that all men are created equal, and endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights—among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," I shall strenuously contend for the immediate enfranchisement of our slave population. In Park-street Church, on the Fourth of July, 1829, in an address on slavery, I unreflectingly assented to the popular but pernicious doctrine of gradual abolition. I seize this opportunity to make a full and unequivocal recantation, and thus publicly to ask pardon of my God, of my country, and of my brethren the poor slaves, for having uttered a sentiment so full of timidity, injustice and absurdity. A similar recantation, from my pen, was published in the Genius of Universal Emancipation at Baltimore, in September, 1829. My conscience is now satisfied.[3] I am aware, that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity? I will be as harsh as truth, and as uncompromising as justice. On this subject, I do not wish to think, or speak, or write, with moderation. No! no! Tell a man whose house is on fire, to give a moderate alarm; tell him to moderately rescue his wife from the hand of the ravisher; tell the mother to gradually extricate her babe from the fire into which it has fallen;—but urge me not to use moderation in a cause like the present. I am in earnest—I will not equivocate—I will not excuse—I will not retreat a single inch—AND I WILL BE HEARD.  ...

Rather than looking to politics to create change, Garrison utilized nonviolent means, such as moral suasion, as his message throughout the newspaper.[4][5] Garrison felt that slavery was a moral issue and used his way of writing to appeal to the morality of his readers as an attempt to influence them into changing their morally questionable ways. For example, "No Union with Slave-Holders" was a slogan utilized for weeks at a time throughout the newspaper's publication, advocating that the North should leave the Union.[5]

 
Garrison celebrates 13th amendment.

The Liberator continued for three decades from its founding through the end of the American Civil War. It had black columnists and reporters.[6] Garrison ended the newspaper's run with a valedictory column at the end of 1865, when the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery throughout the United States. It was succeeded by The Nation.[7]

Women's rights advocacy

Between January 7, 1832 and May 4, 1833, the Liberator published six articles by Maria W. Stewart, an abolitionist and one of the first American women to lecture before mixed-race and mixed-gender audiences.[8]

The Liberator also became an avowed women's rights newspaper when the prospectus for its 1838 issue declared that as the paper's objective was "to redeem woman as well as man from a servile to an equal condition," it would support "the rights of woman to their utmost extent."[9] In January and February 1838, the Liberator published Sarah Grimké's "Letters on the Province of Woman", and later that year published them as a book, to another of Garrison and Knapp's projects Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society.[10] During the following decades, the Liberator promoted women's rights by publishing editorials, petitions, convention calls and proceedings, speeches, legislative action, and other material advocating women's suffrage, equal property rights, and women's educational and professional equality. The Liberator's printers, Isaac Knapp, James Brown Yerrinton (1800–1866) and James Manning Winchell Yerrinton (1825–1893), and Robert Folger Wallcut (1797–1884), printed many of the women's rights tracts of the 1850s.

Inspiration among abolitionists

 
1850 Liberator masthead, designed by Hammatt Billings

The Liberator inspired abolitionist Angelina Grimké to publicly join the abolitionist movement. She sent a letter to William Lloyd Garrison recalling her experiences as a member of an upper class, white, slaveholding family. Angelina Grimké's letter to William Lloyd Garrison was soon after published in The Liberator.[11]

Frederick Douglass was at first inspired by The Liberator. As he commented upon in his first issue of The North Star, Douglass felt that it was necessary for African Americans, such as himself, to speak out about their own experiences with injustice. He claimed that those that experienced injustice were the ones that must demand justice.[12] Soon after, Douglass began writing his own abolitionist newspaper, The North Star.[13] By 1851 Douglass broke bitterly with Garrison and now worked for abolition and equality through the U.S. Constitution and political system.[14]

in 1836, five years after he agreed to be The Liberator's agent in Rhode Island, Alfred Niger helped to found the Rhode Island Anti-Slavery Society, one of only two Black men in the entire organization.[15]

Resistance

What changed The Liberator from a small abolitionist organ to a national one was the attention paid to it in the South. Southern papers reprinted and editorialized its articles and announcements, thus bringing them further to the attention of Northern readers and editors.[16]

The Liberator faced harsh resistance from several state legislatures and local groups: for example, North Carolina indicted Garrison for felonious acts, and the Vigilance Association of Columbia, South Carolina, offered a reward of $1,500 (equivalent to $43,970 in 2022) to those who identified distributors of the paper.[17]

Garrison also faced resistance, even to the point of violence. In 1835, a Boston mob formed with support from local newspapers in resistance to the announcement that George Thompson would speak at the first anniversary meeting of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society. The mob, unable to find Thompson, redirected their aggression towards Garrison who was in the society's meeting hall. Eventually escalation of the situation led to destruction of the society's antislavery sign, and even calls to lynch Garrison, around whose neck a piece of rope made into a noose was put. Garrison eventually managed a narrow escape; the mayor put him in the city jail for his protection.[18]

Contents online

  • The Liberator full online archives at Fair Use Repository, including archives of full-page scans of all issues from 1831–1865 (Vols. I–XXXV).
  • The Liberator Complete Archives at the Digital Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Original copy owned by Garrison and served as the copy of reference at The Liberator offices[19].
  • The Liberator Files searchable (basic search only) collection maintained by Horace Seldon, which says on its home page that it contains "only a tiny portion of what appeared in the 1,803 editions of the paper".

Garrison's articles

Garrison wrote much of the content. He wrote while typesetting; that is to say, most was not written out on paper first. The following are examples of articles and editorials written by him:

  • , Garrison's introductory column, January 1, 1831.
  • Truisms, January 8, 1831.
  • Walker's Appeal, January 8, 1831.
  • The Insurrection, Garrison's reaction to the news of Nat Turner's slave rebellion in Virginia, September 3, 1831.
  • The Great Crisis!, December 29, 1832, one of Garrison's first explicit condemnations of the Constitution and the Union.
  • Declaration of Sentiments, adopted by the Boston Peace Convention September 18, 1838, reprinted in The Liberator, September 28, 1838.
  • Abolition at the Ballot Box, June 28, 1839.
  • The American Union, January 10, 1845.
  • American Colorphobia, June 11, 1847.
  • On the Dissolution of the Union, June 15, 1855.
  • The Tragedy at Harper's Ferry, Garrison's first public comments on John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, October 28, 1859.
  • , a speech given at a meeting in the Tremont Temple, Boston, on December 2, 1859, the day that John Brown was hanged, printed December 16, 1859.
  • The War – Its Cause and Cure, May 3, 1861.
  • Valedictory: The Final Number of The Liberator, Garrison's closing column, December 29, 1865.

See also

References

  1. ^ Boston Directory, 1831, Garrison & Knapp, editors and proprietors Liberator, 10 Merchants Hall, Congress Street
  2. ^ Ripley, C. Peter (1991). The Black Abolitionist Papers: Vol. III: The United States, 1830–1846, p. 9. UNC Press. ISBN 0807819263.
  3. ^ "The Liberator". Library of Congress. from the original on March 3, 2020. Retrieved March 3, 2020.
  4. ^ "The Liberator | American newspaper". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on 2022-06-07. Retrieved 2017-05-22.
  5. ^ a b "Book Review: All on Fire: William Lloyd Garrison and the Abolition of Slavery, by Henry Mayer". The Independent Institute. from the original on 2015-09-20. Retrieved 2017-05-22.
  6. ^ Hayden, Robert C. (1992). African-Americans in Boston: More than 350 Years. Trustees of the Boston Public Library. p. 112. ISBN 0890730830.
  7. ^ The Anti-Slavery Reporter, August 1, 1865, p. 187.
  8. ^ Henderson, Christina (2013). "Sympathetic Violence: Maria Stewart's Antebellum Vision of African American Resistance". MELUS. 38 (4): 52–75. ISSN 0163-755X.
  9. ^ Liberator, December 15, 1837.
  10. ^ Grimké, Sarah (1838). Letters on the equality of the sexes, and the condition of woman : addressed to Mary S. Parker, President of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society. Boston: Isaac Knapp.
  11. ^ Berkin, Carol. . Archived from the original on 2017-12-04. Retrieved 2017-05-24.
  12. ^ "The North Star | American newspaper". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on 2017-09-11. Retrieved 2017-05-15.
  13. ^ "Abolitionist Movement | HistoryNet". www.historynet.com. from the original on 2014-12-31. Retrieved 2017-05-15.
  14. ^ David W. Blight, Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom (2018) pp. 216–220.
  15. ^ Martin, CJ (August 1, 2019). "The "Mustard Seed": Providence's Alfred Niger, Antebellum Black Voting Rights Activist". SmallStateBigHistory.com. from the original on August 10, 2021.
  16. ^ Thomas, John L. (1963). The Liberator: William Lloyd Garrison. p. 66.
  17. ^ "Baltimore Niles Register, Oct. 29". nat-turner. from the original on 2021-08-24. Retrieved 2021-08-24.
  18. ^ Mayer, Henry (1998). All on fire : William Lloyd Garrison and the abolition of slavery (1st ed.). St. Martin's Press. pp. 200–205. ISBN 0312187408.
  19. ^ "The Liberator (Boston, Mass. : 1831–1865) – Digital Commonwealth". www.digitalcommonwealth.org. from the original on 2021-01-24. Retrieved 2020-11-28.

Bibliography

  • Fanuzzi, Robert A. " 'The Organ of an Individual': William Lloyd Garrison and the Liberator." Prospects 23 (1998): 107-127.
  • Jacobs, Donald M. "William Lloyd Garrison's Liberator and Boston's Blacks, 1830-1865." New England Quarterly (1971): 259-277. online
  • Nord, David Paul. "Tocqueville, Garrison and the perfection of journalism." Journalism History 13.2 (1986): 56-63. online
  • Rohrbach, Augusta. " 'Truth Stranger and Stronger than Fiction': Reexamining William Lloyd Garrison’s The Liberator." in Truth Stranger Than Fiction: Race, Realism, and the US Literary Market Place (Palgrave Macmillan US, 2002) pp. 1-27.
  • Streitmatter, Rodger (2001). Voices of Revolution. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 21–35. ISBN 0231122497.
  • Williams, Cecil B. "Whittier's Relation to Garrison and the 'Liberator'." New England Quarterly (1952): 248-255. online

Primary sources

  • Cain, William E. ed. William Lloyd Garrison and the Fight Against Slavery: Selections from The Liberator (Bedford Books of St. Martin’s Press, 1992)
  • Garrison, William Lloyd. Documents of Upheaval: Selections from William Lloyd Garrison's The Liberator, 1831-1965 (Hill and Wang, 1966).

External links

  • Seldon, Horace. "The Liberator Files". Horace Seldon's collection and summary. non-searchable PDFs of every issue.
  • "The Liberator". LibriVox (public domain audiobooks).
  • Works by or about The Liberator at Internet Archive
  • "The Liberator". Newspapers.com. (searchable; subscription required)
  • "Angelina and Sarah Grimke: Abolitionist Sisters".

liberator, newspaper, this, article, about, abolitionist, newspaper, other, uses, liberator, disambiguation, liberator, 1831, 1865, weekly, abolitionist, newspaper, printed, published, boston, william, lloyd, garrison, through, 1839, isaac, knapp, religious, r. This article is about the abolitionist newspaper For other uses see Liberator disambiguation The Liberator 1831 1865 was a weekly abolitionist newspaper printed and published in Boston by William Lloyd Garrison and through 1839 by Isaac Knapp Religious rather than political it appealed to the moral conscience of its readers urging them to demand immediate freeing of the slaves immediatism It also promoted women s rights an issue that split the American abolitionist movement Despite its modest circulation of 3 000 it had prominent and influential readers including all the abolitionist leaders among them Frederick Douglass Beriah Green Arthur and Lewis Tappan and Alfred Niger It frequently printed or reprinted letters reports sermons and news stories relating to American slavery becoming a sort of community bulletin board for the new abolitionist movement that Garrison helped foster The LiberatorLiberator v 1 No 1 1831TypeWeekly newspaperPublisherWilliam Lloyd Garrison and Isaac KnappFoundedJanuary 1 1831 January 1 1831 Political alignmentAbolitionismFeminismCeased publicationDecember 29 1865 December 29 1865 CityBoston MassachusettsCountryUnited StatesOCLC number1728160Media of the United StatesList of newspapers Contents 1 History 2 Women s rights advocacy 3 Inspiration among abolitionists 4 Resistance 5 Contents online 5 1 Garrison s articles 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 Primary sources 9 External linksHistory nbsp An issue of The Liberator depicting African Americans next to a lynching treeGarrison co published weekly issues of The Liberator from Boston continuously for 35 years from January 1 1831 to the final issue of December 29 1865 1 Although its circulation was only about 3 000 and three quarters of subscribers in 1834 were African Americans 2 the newspaper earned nationwide notoriety for its uncompromising advocacy of immediate and complete emancipation of all slaves in the United States Garrison set the tone for the paper in his famous open letter To the Public in the first issue nbsp Fundraising appeal of William Garrison 1834 Assenting to the self evident truth maintained in the American Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights among which are life liberty and the pursuit of happiness I shall strenuously contend for the immediate enfranchisement of our slave population In Park street Church on the Fourth of July 1829 in an address on slavery I unreflectingly assented to the popular but pernicious doctrine of gradual abolition I seize this opportunity to make a full and unequivocal recantation and thus publicly to ask pardon of my God of my country and of my brethren the poor slaves for having uttered a sentiment so full of timidity injustice and absurdity A similar recantation from my pen was published in the Genius of Universal Emancipation at Baltimore in September 1829 My conscience is now satisfied 3 I am aware that many object to the severity of my language but is there not cause for severity I will be as harsh as truth and as uncompromising as justice On this subject I do not wish to think or speak or write with moderation No no Tell a man whose house is on fire to give a moderate alarm tell him to moderately rescue his wife from the hand of the ravisher tell the mother to gradually extricate her babe from the fire into which it has fallen but urge me not to use moderation in a cause like the present I am in earnest I will not equivocate I will not excuse I will not retreat a single inch AND I WILL BE HEARD Rather than looking to politics to create change Garrison utilized nonviolent means such as moral suasion as his message throughout the newspaper 4 5 Garrison felt that slavery was a moral issue and used his way of writing to appeal to the morality of his readers as an attempt to influence them into changing their morally questionable ways For example No Union with Slave Holders was a slogan utilized for weeks at a time throughout the newspaper s publication advocating that the North should leave the Union 5 nbsp Garrison celebrates 13th amendment The Liberator continued for three decades from its founding through the end of the American Civil War It had black columnists and reporters 6 Garrison ended the newspaper s run with a valedictory column at the end of 1865 when the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery throughout the United States It was succeeded by The Nation 7 Women s rights advocacyBetween January 7 1832 and May 4 1833 the Liberator published six articles by Maria W Stewart an abolitionist and one of the first American women to lecture before mixed race and mixed gender audiences 8 The Liberator also became an avowed women s rights newspaper when the prospectus for its 1838 issue declared that as the paper s objective was to redeem woman as well as man from a servile to an equal condition it would support the rights of woman to their utmost extent 9 In January and February 1838 the Liberator published Sarah Grimke s Letters on the Province of Woman and later that year published them as a book to another of Garrison and Knapp s projects Boston Female Anti Slavery Society 10 During the following decades the Liberator promoted women s rights by publishing editorials petitions convention calls and proceedings speeches legislative action and other material advocating women s suffrage equal property rights and women s educational and professional equality The Liberator s printers Isaac Knapp James Brown Yerrinton 1800 1866 and James Manning Winchell Yerrinton 1825 1893 and Robert Folger Wallcut 1797 1884 printed many of the women s rights tracts of the 1850s Inspiration among abolitionists nbsp 1850 Liberator masthead designed by Hammatt BillingsThe Liberator inspired abolitionist Angelina Grimke to publicly join the abolitionist movement She sent a letter to William Lloyd Garrison recalling her experiences as a member of an upper class white slaveholding family Angelina Grimke s letter to William Lloyd Garrison was soon after published in The Liberator 11 Frederick Douglass was at first inspired by The Liberator As he commented upon in his first issue of The North Star Douglass felt that it was necessary for African Americans such as himself to speak out about their own experiences with injustice He claimed that those that experienced injustice were the ones that must demand justice 12 Soon after Douglass began writing his own abolitionist newspaper The North Star 13 By 1851 Douglass broke bitterly with Garrison and now worked for abolition and equality through the U S Constitution and political system 14 in 1836 five years after he agreed to be The Liberator s agent in Rhode Island Alfred Niger helped to found the Rhode Island Anti Slavery Society one of only two Black men in the entire organization 15 ResistanceWhat changed The Liberator from a small abolitionist organ to a national one was the attention paid to it in the South Southern papers reprinted and editorialized its articles and announcements thus bringing them further to the attention of Northern readers and editors 16 The Liberator faced harsh resistance from several state legislatures and local groups for example North Carolina indicted Garrison for felonious acts and the Vigilance Association of Columbia South Carolina offered a reward of 1 500 equivalent to 43 970 in 2022 to those who identified distributors of the paper 17 Garrison also faced resistance even to the point of violence In 1835 a Boston mob formed with support from local newspapers in resistance to the announcement that George Thompson would speak at the first anniversary meeting of the Boston Female Anti Slavery Society The mob unable to find Thompson redirected their aggression towards Garrison who was in the society s meeting hall Eventually escalation of the situation led to destruction of the society s antislavery sign and even calls to lynch Garrison around whose neck a piece of rope made into a noose was put Garrison eventually managed a narrow escape the mayor put him in the city jail for his protection 18 Contents onlineThe Liberator full online archives at Fair Use Repository including archives of full page scans of all issues from 1831 1865 Vols I XXXV The Liberator Complete Archives at the Digital Commonwealth of Massachusetts Original copy owned by Garrison and served as the copy of reference at The Liberator offices 19 The Liberator Files searchable basic search only collection maintained by Horace Seldon which says on its home page that it contains only a tiny portion of what appeared in the 1 803 editions of the paper Garrison s articles Garrison wrote much of the content He wrote while typesetting that is to say most was not written out on paper first The following are examples of articles and editorials written by him To the Public Garrison s introductory column January 1 1831 Truisms January 8 1831 Walker s Appeal January 8 1831 The Insurrection Garrison s reaction to the news of Nat Turner s slave rebellion in Virginia September 3 1831 The Great Crisis December 29 1832 one of Garrison s first explicit condemnations of the Constitution and the Union Declaration of Sentiments adopted by the Boston Peace Convention September 18 1838 reprinted in The Liberator September 28 1838 Abolition at the Ballot Box June 28 1839 The American Union January 10 1845 American Colorphobia June 11 1847 On the Dissolution of the Union June 15 1855 The Tragedy at Harper s Ferry Garrison s first public comments on John Brown s raid on Harpers Ferry October 28 1859 John Brown and the Principle of Nonresistance a speech given at a meeting in the Tremont Temple Boston on December 2 1859 the day that John Brown was hanged printed December 16 1859 The War Its Cause and Cure May 3 1861 Valedictory The Final Number of The Liberator Garrison s closing column December 29 1865 See alsoAbolitionist publications North Star an anti slavery newspaper owned and run by Frederick Douglass Women s suffrage publications List of newspapers in MassachusettsReferences Boston Directory 1831 Garrison amp Knapp editors and proprietors Liberator 10 Merchants Hall Congress Street Ripley C Peter 1991 The Black Abolitionist Papers Vol III The United States 1830 1846 p 9 UNC Press ISBN 0807819263 The Liberator Library of Congress Archived from the original on March 3 2020 Retrieved March 3 2020 The Liberator American newspaper Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2022 06 07 Retrieved 2017 05 22 a b Book Review All on Fire William Lloyd Garrison and the Abolition of Slavery by Henry Mayer The Independent Institute Archived from the original on 2015 09 20 Retrieved 2017 05 22 Hayden Robert C 1992 African Americans in Boston More than 350 Years Trustees of the Boston Public Library p 112 ISBN 0890730830 The Anti Slavery Reporter August 1 1865 p 187 Henderson Christina 2013 Sympathetic Violence Maria Stewart s Antebellum Vision of African American Resistance MELUS 38 4 52 75 ISSN 0163 755X Liberator December 15 1837 Grimke Sarah 1838 Letters on the equality of the sexes and the condition of woman addressed to Mary S Parker President of the Boston Female Anti Slavery Society Boston Isaac Knapp Berkin Carol Angelina and Sarah Grimke Abolitionist Sisters Archived from the original on 2017 12 04 Retrieved 2017 05 24 The North Star American newspaper Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2017 09 11 Retrieved 2017 05 15 Abolitionist Movement HistoryNet www historynet com Archived from the original on 2014 12 31 Retrieved 2017 05 15 David W Blight Frederick Douglass Prophet of Freedom 2018 pp 216 220 Martin CJ August 1 2019 The Mustard Seed Providence s Alfred Niger Antebellum Black Voting Rights Activist SmallStateBigHistory com Archived from the original on August 10 2021 Thomas John L 1963 The Liberator William Lloyd Garrison p 66 Baltimore Niles Register Oct 29 nat turner Archived from the original on 2021 08 24 Retrieved 2021 08 24 Mayer Henry 1998 All on fire William Lloyd Garrison and the abolition of slavery 1st ed St Martin s Press pp 200 205 ISBN 0312187408 The Liberator Boston Mass 1831 1865 Digital Commonwealth www digitalcommonwealth org Archived from the original on 2021 01 24 Retrieved 2020 11 28 BibliographyFanuzzi Robert A The Organ of an Individual William Lloyd Garrison and the Liberator Prospects 23 1998 107 127 Jacobs Donald M William Lloyd Garrison s Liberator and Boston s Blacks 1830 1865 New England Quarterly 1971 259 277 online Nord David Paul Tocqueville Garrison and the perfection of journalism Journalism History 13 2 1986 56 63 online Rohrbach Augusta Truth Stranger and Stronger than Fiction Reexamining William Lloyd Garrison s The Liberator in Truth Stranger Than Fiction Race Realism and the US Literary Market Place Palgrave Macmillan US 2002 pp 1 27 Streitmatter Rodger 2001 Voices of Revolution New York Columbia University Press pp 21 35 ISBN 0231122497 Williams Cecil B Whittier s Relation to Garrison and the Liberator New England Quarterly 1952 248 255 onlinePrimary sources Cain William E ed William Lloyd Garrison and the Fight Against Slavery Selections from The Liberator Bedford Books of St Martin s Press 1992 Garrison William Lloyd Documents of Upheaval Selections from William Lloyd Garrison s The Liberator 1831 1965 Hill and Wang 1966 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Liberator anti slavery newspaper External linksSeldon Horace The Liberator Files Horace Seldon s collection and summary non searchable PDFs of every issue The Liberator LibriVox public domain audiobooks Works by or about The Liberator at Internet Archive The Liberator Newspapers com searchable subscription required Angelina and Sarah Grimke Abolitionist Sisters The story of The Liberator is retold in Richard Durham s radio drama The Liberators Part I a presentation from Destination Freedom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Liberator newspaper amp oldid 1206570098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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