harriet
No, and most abolitionists were white, because most blacks were slaves. Some blacks might have contributed by doing stuff as an abolitionist, but an abolitionist did not have to be a slave. (More appropreatly slaves couldent, only freed slaves could do anything)
Northeast U.S.
Melissa Harris-Perry is considered by some to be the most prominent Black intellectual as of 2014. Others include Dr. Peniel Joseph, and Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
its mostly because of the fugitive slave act.
Maybe Moncure D. Conway.
The letter of Lewis Douglass to his fiancee was likely written in the mid-19th century, around the 1850s to 1860s. Lewis Douglass was the son of Frederick Douglass, a prominent figure in the abolitionist movement during that time. The content and language of the letter would reflect the historical context of that era.
It was Frederick Douglass.
Stokely Carmichael
there was over 100 abolitionist in her day. believe it or not a most of black and whites did not believe in the acts of slevery,although every many did more than that didn't
Some of the most prominent antebellum abolitionists included William Lloyd Garrison (founder of the American Anti-Slavery Society), Frederick Douglass (freed slave and writer), and Harriet Beecher Stowe (author of Uncle Tom's Cabin).
William E. B. Du Bois
1850s
Textiles
In the 1850s, most Mexican Texans settled in southern Texas, specifically along San Antonio de Bexar, Victoria and Laredo.
The most prominent to wear is malong
china