Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. James Gillespie Birney (February 4, 1792 – November 18, 1857) [2] was an American abolitionist, politician, and attorney born in Danville, Kentucky. He changed from being a planter and slave owner to abolitionism, publishing the abolitionist weekly The Philanthropist. He twice served as the presidential nominee for the anti-slavery Liberty Party .

  2. James Gillespie Birney (born February 4, 1792, Danville, Kentucky, U.S.—died November 25, 1857, Eagleswood, New Jersey) was a prominent opponent of slavery in the United States who was twice the presidential candidate of the abolitionist Liberty Party.

  3. May 11, 2018 · A biography of James Gillespie Birney, a leading abolitionist and Liberty Party candidate in the United States. Learn about his conversion from slaveholder to abolitionist, his role in the American Anti-Slavery Society, and his presidential campaigns.

  4. Jul 7, 2023 · James G. Birney was a slave owner turned abolitionist who served as the first presidential candidate for the Liberty Party. He advocated for the rights of enslaved people, Native Americans, and women in Alabama, Kentucky, and Ohio.

  5. BIRNEY, JAMES G. (1792–1857) A slaveholder, James Gillespie Birney studied law under alexander dallas, was a mildly antislavery politician in Kentucky and Alabama, and was a spokesman for the American Colonization Society.

  6. Mar 25, 2024 · The James Birney Collection of Anti-Slavery Pamphlets is a trove of print on slavery, colonization, race, and politics in the late eighteenth- and nineteenth-century United States.

  7. May 11, 2017 · James Gillespie Birney, an influential abolitionist editor in the decades leading up to the Civil War, first needed to change his own mind. For starters, he had been a slave owner himself. Born...