they are gay fagets
He accomplish to free African Americans from slavery in the south.
No, they didnt.
William Lloyd Garrison, founder of the weekly journal the Liberator and abolitionist newspaper. You know you could just refer to Wikipedia.
Hey guys, guess what, superman likes cheese, i just meet him in school the other day and he told me!!!
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton met through their mutual friend Amelia Bloomer in 1851 at National Women's Rights Convention in Worcester, Massachusetts. It was a followup convention from the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention in which Stanton and Anthony addressed the issues of enfranchising woman's rights, such as suffrage and ownership of property. Both conventions brought awareness to the feminist cause, although Seneca Falls, for the drafting of the Declaration of Sentiments, is more famous.
yes because they were both against slavery
He accomplish to free African Americans from slavery in the south.
No, they didnt.
William Lloyd Garrison, founder of the weekly journal the Liberator and abolitionist newspaper. You know you could just refer to Wikipedia.
Hey guys, guess what, superman likes cheese, i just meet him in school the other day and he told me!!!
well 1866 is not even close, some say it was in 1851 but it wouldn't make sense due to the seneca falls declaration which was in 1848
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton met through their mutual friend Amelia Bloomer in 1851 at National Women's Rights Convention in Worcester, Massachusetts. It was a followup convention from the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention in which Stanton and Anthony addressed the issues of enfranchising woman's rights, such as suffrage and ownership of property. Both conventions brought awareness to the feminist cause, although Seneca Falls, for the drafting of the Declaration of Sentiments, is more famous.
Frederick Douglass
no he met his mom only a few times his Gram raised him
Yes, Sojourner Truth and Frederick Douglass were both prominent abolitionists and advocates for civil rights. They did meet and interact at various events and conventions in the mid-19th century, where they shared their experiences and beliefs in the fight against slavery.
Douglass did meet with John Brown and could have been charged with conspiracy. But Douglass thought the idea of a "slave war" was a mistake, one that would lead to reprisals and the deaths of innocent slaves.
They met in 2003