Angelina Emily GRIMKÉ
Characteristics
Type | Value | Date | Place | Sources |
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name | Angelina Emily GRIMKÉ |
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Events
Type | Date | Place | Sources |
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death | 26. October 1879 | Boston, Massachusetts, USA
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birth | 20. February 1805 | Charleston, South Carolina, USA
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marriage | 14. May 1838 | New York City
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Marriage | ??spouse_en_US?? | Children |
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14. May 1838
New York City |
Theodore Dwight WELD |
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Notes for this person
Sarah Moore Grimké (1792–1873) and Angelina Emily Grimké (1805–1879), known as the Grimké sisters, were the first nationally-known white American female advocates of abolition of slavery and women's rights. They were speakers, writers, and educators.
They grew up in a slave-owning family in South Carolina, and in their twenties, became part of Philadelphia’s substantial Quaker society. Theybecame deeply involved with the abolitionist movement, traveling on its lecture circuit and recounting their firsthand experiences with slavery on their family's plantation. Among the first American women to actpublicly in social reform movements, they were ridiculed for their abolitionist activity. They became early activists in the women's rights movement. They eventually founded a private school.
Sources
1 | Wikipedia. |
files
Title | Noblesse européenne - European nobility |
Description | |
Id | 65643 |
Upload date | 2025-05-30 16:03:17.0 |
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frebault@telefonica.net | |
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