Napoleon - An Intimate Portrait Napoleon - An Intimate Portrait



On eBay Now...

original NATIONAL ANTI-SLAVERY STANDARD newspaper 9-22-1866 NITROUS OXIDE GAS For Sale


original NATIONAL ANTI-SLAVERY STANDARD newspaper  9-22-1866 NITROUS OXIDE GAS
When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.


Buy Now

original NATIONAL ANTI-SLAVERY STANDARD newspaper 9-22-1866 NITROUS OXIDE GAS:
$155.72

interesting early original ANTI-SLAVERY newspaper
------------this issue - some highlights -- SPEECH of ANNA E DICKINSON, SPEECH of FREDERICK DOUGLASS, a NITROUS OXIDE GAS adgeneral info/history about the newspape in general
National Anti-Slavery Standard was the official weekly newspaper of the American Anti-Slavery Society, an abolitionist society founded in 1833 by William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan to spread their movement across the nation with printed materials. Frederick Douglass was a key leader of this society and often addressed meetings at its New York City headquarters.

National Anti-Slavery Standard was established in 1840 by the husband and wife team of Lydia and David Child, who both were affirmed abolitionists as well as recognized successful writers (Lydia Child was the author of the poem “over the river and through the woods”). Using the motto “Without Concealment–Without Compromise” the Standard sought to extend the rights of slaves across the country. It implied not only suffrage rights for colored males, but also advocated suffrage for women. With perhaps the exception of Willaim Lloyd Garrison's Liberator, also published by the Society, the Standard was the most influential voice for abolition leading up to the Civil War.

A weekly newspaper published concurrently in New York City and Philadelphia (1854–1865), and begun during a time when the American Anti-Slavery Society was torn over tactics of how to go about emancipation, National Anti-Slavery Standard featured writings from influential abolitionists fighting for suffrage, equality and most of all, emancipation. It contained essays, debates, speeches, events, reports and anything else deemed newsworthy in relation to the question of slavery in the United States and other parts of the world. Its audience was the members of the Society and abolitionists in the north. Its two key focuses in the elimination of slavery were on politics and religion, which considered slavery an evil institution. Although it asserted that God was the only being that could end slavery, it also recognized the value of political action. While the Standard was small by today’s modern measures — four pages containing only six columns — its personal accounts of slavery helped express the feelings and moods surrounding the controversy for thirty years.

During its publishing life National Anti-Slavery Standard had various editors: N.P. Rogers, 1840–1841; Lydia M. Child, 1841–1843; D.L. Child, 1843–1844; S.H. Gay, 1844–1854; Oliver Johnson, 1863–1865; A.M. Powell, 1866–1870. One, Lydia Maria Child, edited and supplied the preface for a book entitled Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, by a former slave, Harriet Jacobs, under the pseudonym, Linda Brent, written for northerners to reveal the horrors and tragedies that enslaved colored people had to face. The events depicted in the book helped to highlight the impact of the Fugitive Slave Act and its effects on people in the north as well as the south. A letter from the author, “Linda Brent,” was published in the paper to stress the validity of her non-fiction novel. This gave the paper a literary flare that appealed to educated readers.

National Anti-Slavery Standard continued to contribute to the fight against slavery in the United States, past the issuing of the Emancipation Proclamation, until ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution on February 15, 1870 effectively granted African Americans the right to vote. The final issue was dated April 16, 1870 although the paper continued to publish for an additional two years under a variety of short-lived names.

-------- i will ship this folded as it has been stored for years. musty.


as you see it, no surprises
check my response for any concerns
and ask any questions you may have. - the scale behind the item is in inches
i will always combine items to save you shipping costs.




Buy Now

Vintage Postcard Lot Huge 550+ USA Location - Linen, Pre Linen + Chrome - Estate picture

Vintage Postcard Lot Huge 550+ USA Location - Linen, Pre Linen + Chrome - Estate

$149.00



National Security Agency NSA Challenge Coin picture

National Security Agency NSA Challenge Coin

$10.71



Argentina National Football Team Logo Real Glass Neon Sign Light Artwork 17

Argentina National Football Team Logo Real Glass Neon Sign Light Artwork 17"x14"

$135.00



Funko Pop NBA Denver Nuggets Nikola Jokic #88 with POP Protector picture

Funko Pop NBA Denver Nuggets Nikola Jokic #88 with POP Protector

$19.99



Bear Lake Rocky Mountain National Park Colorado Longs Peak Postcard picture

Bear Lake Rocky Mountain National Park Colorado Longs Peak Postcard

$13.45



Arizona Indian Watchtower Grand Canyon National Park Postcard c1940 picture

Arizona Indian Watchtower Grand Canyon National Park Postcard c1940

$13.45



Donald Trump Patriotic Fist-Pump Assassination Attempt High-Res Prints Various picture

Donald Trump Patriotic Fist-Pump Assassination Attempt High-Res Prints Various

$27.99



Funko Pop Vinyl NFL Walter Payton #78 White Jersey picture

Funko Pop Vinyl NFL Walter Payton #78 White Jersey

$9.98



Images © photo12.com-Pierre-Jean Chalençon
A Traveling Exhibition from Russell Etling Company (c) 2011