236:, which advocated against slavery among other issues. Support for Garrison caused a split in the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society, as some members believed Garrison went too far with his anti-government and anti-church views in his newspaper. The people who did not support Garrison's views went to their own organization, the
275:(DAR) to be a Real Daughter, meaning that she is a daughter, and not just a distant descendant, of a Revolutionary soldier or Patriot. She was a member of DAR's Old South Chapter of the DAR.
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Davis was religious. She was the president of the first independent
Baptist Female Society and attended the Zion church in Boston, where she met other
188:. Her mother, Eunice Russ, was born to a white mother and a Native American father. Due to her father's Revolutionary War service, Eunice joined the
226:, where she helped to gather petition signatures in support of anti-slavery legislation. She actively supported other abolitionists, including
219:. Davis worked with abolitionists Margarett Scarlett, Eliza Ann Logan Lawton, and Anna Logan to fight segregation in Boston's public schools.
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Eunice married her first husband in 1819, Robert Ames. With Ames she had two sons and a daughter. Her family resided in
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following the death of her husband, where she married her second husband, John Davis. Davis was an
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legislature to denounce a law restricting interracial marriage. The law was ultimately repealed in 1843.
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380:"Oldest Female Abolitionist.; Mrs. Eunice Davis Celebrates Her Ninety-Sixth Birthday"
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Davis died in Boston in 1901, outliving her husband and children. She was buried at
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358:. Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press. pp. 90–130.
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proclaimed her the "oldest living female abolitionist in the world".
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named her the "oldest living female abolitionist in the world".
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In 1833, Eunice became an officer and a founder of the
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199:, until Eunice was widowed in 1825. Eunice moved to
158:(October 22, 1800 – 1901) was a multiracial
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243:In 1839, Davis and other members petitioned the
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238:American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society
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184:. Her father, Prince Ames, was a black
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180:Eunice Davis was born Eunice Russ in
406:"Funeral notification: Eunice Davis"
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354:Yee, Shirley J. (1992).
211:Abolitionist activities
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250:When in her nineties,
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156:Eunice Russ Ames Davis
197:Lowell, Massachusetts
176:Early life and family
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332:. February 26, 2015
386:. October 27, 1896
384:The New York Times
296:Daughter Dialogues
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160:abolitionist
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166:. In 1896,
108:Robert Ames
33:Eunice Russ
423:Categories
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129:John Davis
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