Abolitionist Movement
in NH
Slavery and Slave Trade
in NH
New England & NH
Abolitionists
New England & NH Abolitionists & Figures (Bonus)
100

True or False: everyone in NH was an abolitionist

False, there were many who were pro-slavery

100

City in NH that built ships and transported slaves in the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade

Portsmouth

100

Famous orator, author, abolitionist, former slave, & women's rights activist; spoke multiple times in NH

Frederick Douglass

100

George Washington's slave, escaped to freedom in Portsmouth

Ona Marie Judge Staines

200

An anti-slavery newspaper led by William Lloyd Garrison, connected to and wrote about NH

The Liberator

200

Years slavery was legal in NH

1696-1857 or 1865

200

Former slave, activist, spoke "Ain't I a Women?", abolitionist,  women's rights activist, met Abraham Lincoln

Sojourner Truth

200

Famous and popular writer and poet, used poetry to support abolition and educate people about slavery, traveled to South

John Greenleaf Whittier

500

A group of abolitionists in NH, worked to change laws and achieve rights for Black Americans

The NH Anti-Slavery Society

500

How many slaves were in NH in 1775?

656

500

Dedicated editor & owner of the Herald of Freedom, writer, part of Underground Railroad Network

Nathaniel Peabody Rodgers

500

Author of The Brotherhood of Thieves: A True Picture of the American Church and Clergy, member of the "New Hampshire radicals", "aggressive style" of speaking out

Stephen Symonds Foster

800

A petition to the NH government by African residents to end slavery, used phrases similar to Declaration of Independence to defend their freedom

The 1779 Petition for Liberation from Slavery

800

What was the Dred Scott v. Sandford Supreme Court decision in 1857?

It ruled that African-Americans could not be guaranteed citizenship and slavery could not be abolished

800

Dedicated abolitionist in Lyme as well as state, house was part of Underground Railroad

Samuel Balch

800

African-American abolitionist, writer, hydropathic practitioner, mentored Frederick Douglass & Sojourner Truth

David Ruggles

1000

What percent of the population was part of the Abolitionist Society in the whole U.S.?

~ 1%

1000

When was slavery officially abolished in NH?

1857 under an act, or 1865, under the 13th Amendment

1000

Considered first African-American to publish a novel in America, wrote Our Nig; or Sketches From the Life of A Free Black

Harriet Wilson

1000

America's first protest singers, composed and performed songs about abolition and social reform

Hutchinson Family Singers

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