Fighting Slavery in Chicago by Thomas Campbell

Fighting Slavery in Chicago by Thomas Campbell

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Fighting Slavery in Chicago by Thomas Campbell

Charles Volney Dyer came to Chicago in 1835 as physician to the garrison at Fort Dearborn. Outraged at the assassination of abolitionist editor, Elijah Lovejoy, in Alton, Illinois, he rallied Chicgoans to form the Chicago Chapter of the Anti-Slavery Society. With them, he operated the Illinois Station of the Underground Railroad, freeing over 1000 slaves. Tracing Dyer's activities from 1835-1865, Campbell sweeps in the many players and steps in the fight against slavery. Dyer established newspapers, including National Era which first published Uncle Tom's Cabin, and Western Citizen which became the FreeWest and later the Chicago Tribune. He founded anti-slavery political parties--the Liberty Party, the Free Soil Party and the Illinois Republican Party, which hosted the first Republican Convention, at which Dyer helped secure the nomination for Lincoln in 1860 in Chicago. Lincoln is rightfully immortalized as the Great Emancipator and this book clearly demonstrates that Chicago abolitionists played a significant role in pushing slavery down the road to its ultimate extinction.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780981812625
ISBN 10 0981812627
Title Fighting Slavery in Chicago
Author Thomas Campbell
Condition Unavailable
Publisher Ampersand, Inc.
Year published 2009-01-15
Number of pages 206
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.