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  1. Wendell Phillips Garrison (June 4, 1840 – February 27, 1907) was an American editor and author. Early life [ edit ] Garrison was born on June 4, 1840, at Cambridgeport, Massachusetts .

  2. Wendell Phillips, William Lloyd Garrison, and George Thompson, 1851. In the mid-1862, Phillips's nephew, Samuel D. Phillips, died at Port Royal, South Carolina , where he had gone to take part in the so-called Port Royal Experiment to assist the slave population there in the transition to freedom.

  3. Phillips, a magnificent orator, was the society‘s most popular public speaker, able to describe their aims and method with eloquence. Phillips also wrote numerous pamphlets and editorials on slavery and was a financial contributor to the movement. In 1865 Wendell Phillips replaced Garrison as president of the Anti-Slavery Society. However, he ...

  4. Wendell Phillips (* 29. November 1811 in Boston, Massachusetts; † 2. Februar 1884 ebenda) war ein US-amerikanischer Abolitionist und Politiker . Wendell Phillips war neben William Lloyd Garrison einer der wichtigsten Abolitionisten (Gegner der Sklaverei) in Neuengland und kämpfte als einer der größten Redner der Nordstaaten für die ...

  5. Garrison, Wendell Phillips Entry updated 12 September 2022. Tagged: Author. (1840-1907) US editor – he was co-founder of The Nation, and served as its literary editor from 1865 to 1906 – and author of The New Gulliver (1898), a sequel to Jonathan Swif ...

  6. Wendell Phillips was an abolitionist and president of the American Anti-Slavery Society, whose letter in the Narrative is written to Douglass as a friend. Similar to Garrison’s preface, Phillips’s letter writes about the importance of Douglass’s Narrative for providing factual accounts of the experience of slaves that is not marred by the selective information released by slaveholders.

  7. 18. Mai 2018 · Wendell Phillips was born on Nov. 29, 1811, into a wealthy, aristocratic Boston family. Gifted, handsome, and brilliant, he excelled in his studies at Harvard, where he graduated in 1831, and in the study of law, which he undertook with the great Joseph Story. Phillips was admitted to the bar in 1834 and opened an office in Boston.