Thursday, 13 November 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : THE ANTI-SLAVERY BUGLE - WAS AN ABOLITIONIST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED FROM JUNE 20, 1845.

    BLACK            SOCIAL         HISTORY                                                                                                            

































































































































The Anti-Slavery Bugle


The Anti-Slavery Bugle was an abolitionist newspaper published from June 20, 1845, to May 4, 1861. It was first published in New Lisbon (later renamed Lisbon), Ohio, and moved shortly after five issues to Salem, Ohio. Salem was home to many Quaker families and an active station of the Underground Railroad, providing the paper with more subscribers. James Barnaby was the publisher of the paper and received support from the Anti-Slavery Society, such as Abby Kelley. This allowed the paper to continue to be in circulation for 18 years and was shipped to other states, including IllinoisIowaIndiana and Wisconsin. The paper stated its goal in the first issue: “Our mission is a great and glorious one. It is to preach deliverance to the captive, and the opening of the prison door to them that are bound; to hasten in the day when ‘liberty shall be proclaimed throughout all the land, unto all inhabitants thereof.”[1] Later, the paper expanded its mission from Anti-Slavery to include the Women’s Right Movement. It ran letters and speeches such as Sojourner Truth’s “Ain't I a Woman?

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