Angelina Grimke was a pioneering figure in the American abolitionist and women's rights movements. Born on February 20, 1805, and died on October 26, 1879, she and her sister Sarah Grimke were among the most prominent women of the 19th century for their speeches and writings on abolition and women's rights.
Related Quotes
“Duty is ours and events are God's.”
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
“It is through the tongue, the pen, and the press that truth is principally propagated.”
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
“So precious a talent as intellect never was given to be wrapt in a napkin and buried in the earth.”
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
“I recognize no rights but human rights - I know nothing of men's rights and women's rights.”
“One who is a slaveholder at heart never recognizes a human being in a slave.”
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
“I want to be identified with the negro; until he gets his rights, we shall never have ours.”
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters
“We know it matters not what we have been but this and always this: what we shall be.”
Source: On Slavery and Abolitionism: Essays and Letters