Home
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
v
t
e
Boston African American community prior to the Civil War
Boston African American National Historic Site
Black Heritage Trail
Slavery in the colonial United States
Prominent individuals
Macon Bolling Allen
(lawyer, judge)
William G. Allen
(college professor)
Crispus Attucks
(killed during
Boston Massacre
)
Leonard Black
(minister, slave memoirist)
John P. Coburn
(abolitionist, soldier)
Ellen and William Craft
(slave memoirists, abolitionists)
Rebecca Lee Crumpler
(physician)
Lucy Lew Dalton
(abolitionist)
Thomas Dalton
(abolitionist)
Hosea Easton
(abolitionist, minister)
Moses Grandy
(abolitionist, slave memoirist)
Leonard Grimes
(abolitionist, minister)
Primus Hall
(abolitionist, Rev. War soldier)
Prince Hall
(freemason, abolitionist)
Lewis Hayden
(abolitionist, politician)
John T. Hilton
(abolitionist, author, businessman)
Thomas James
(minister)
Barzillai Lew
(Rev. War soldier)
George Latimer
(escaped slave)
Walker Lewis
(abolitionist)
George Middleton (1735–1815)
(Rev. War soldier, Freemason, activist)
Robert Morris
(lawyer, abolitionist, judge)
William Cooper Nell
(abolitionist, writer)
Susan Paul
(teacher, abolitionist, author)
Thomas Paul
(minister)
John Swett Rock
(dentist, doctor, lawyer, abolitionist)
John Brown Russwurm
(college grad., teacher)
John J. Smith
(abolitionist, politician)
Maria W. Stewart
(abolitionist, public speaker, journalist)
Baron Stow
(minister)
Samuel Snowden
(minister, abolitionist)
Edward G. Walker
(abolitionist, lawyer, politician, son of David Walker)
David Walker
(abolitionist, father of Edward G. Walker)
Phillis Wheatley
(poet, author)
Relevant topics and
associated individuals
Black nationalism
Back-to-Africa movement
(See
Paul Cuffe
-
William Gwinn
)
Legal cases
Dred Scott v. Sandford
1857 Supreme Court decision
Freedom suits
of 1781 (See
Elizabeth Freeman
-
Quock Walker
)
Fugitive Slave Act of 1850
(See:
Anthony Burns
-
Shadrach Minkins
-
Thomas Sims
)
History of slavery
Charles Apthorp
Bunch-of-Grapes
Merchants Row
Organizations
Abolitionism
Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society
(interracial)
Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society
(interracial)
Massachusetts General Colored Association
(abolitionism, equality)
Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society
(interracial)
Prince Hall Freemasonry
Education
Home of Primus Hall
(1798–1806)
African Meeting House
(1806–1835)
Abiel Smith School
(1835-?)
Religion
African Meeting House
Charles Street African Methodist Episcopal Church
Twelfth Baptist Church
Other
Bucks of America
(Mass. Rev. War soldiers)
Prince Hall Freemasonry
Historic sites
or neighborhoods
Abiel Smith School
African Meeting House and Museum
Black Beacon Hill
(Joy Street, Southack Street (now Phillips))
Black Heritage Trail
Boston African American National Historic Site
Charles Street Meeting House
John Coburn House
Lewis and Harriet Hayden House
George Middleton House
William C. Nell House
Phillips School
John J. Smith House
Influential publications
Freedom's Journal
The Liberator
Walker's Appeal
Related
Copp's Hill Burying Ground
William Lloyd Garrison
Isaac Knapp
Abolition Riot of 1836
Categories
:
African American templates
Boston navigational boxes
United States history navigational boxes