116:. He earned a reputation for successfully dealing with hostile crowds through non-resistance tactics. His support for non-resistance led to service on the executive committee of the New Hampshire Non-Resistance Society. Consequently, Pillsbury was not an active supporter of the
65:. His work in the ministry suffered after he made a number of sharp attacks on the churches' complicity with slavery. His Congregational license to preach was revoked in 1840. However Pillsbury became active in the ecumenical
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issues. He became a lecturing agent for the New
Hampshire, Massachusetts, and American antislavery societies, and held these posts for over two decades. He edited the
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McPherson, James M. "The
Struggle for Equality: Abolitionists and the Negro in the Civil War and Reconstruction." Princeton, 1964.
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109:. Both John and Mary became involved in Pillsbury's problematic correspondence with the British activist Louis Chamerovzow.
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53:, Pillsbury entered Gilmanton Theological Seminary in 1835, graduating in 1839. He studied an additional year at
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in 1865, and served as vice-president of the New
Hampshire Woman Suffrage Association. With feminist
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Pillsbury lectured widely on abolition and social reform, often in the company of fellow abolitionist
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led him into active writing and lecturing for the abolitionist movement and other progressive
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David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript
Library, Parker Pillsbury Diaries, 1864-1896
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over the need for continued activity by the
American Anti-Slavery Society. He edited the
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22:(September 22, 1809 – July 7, 1898) was an American minister and advocate for
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in 1840, and again in 1845 and 1846. In 1854, he served as an emissary from the
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American minister, abolitionist and advocate for women's rights
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Parker
Pillsbury : radical abolitionist, male feminist
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Pillsbury helped to draft the constitution of the feminist
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57:, and there came under the influence of social reformer
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Colby-Sawyer
College Archives, Parker Pillsbury Papers
305:People of Massachusetts in the American Civil War
146:In 1865, Pillsbury broke with longtime associate
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46:where he later farmed and worked as a wagoner.
101:to Great Britain. He stayed with the surgeon
120:effort. However, he defended the actions of
174:Pillsbury completed his abolition memoirs,
69:and preached to its societies in New York,
135:. He was a supporter of the abolitionist
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139:, which challenged Lincoln during the
280:American Congregationalist ministers
49:With the encouragement of his local
310:People from Henniker, New Hampshire
275:People from Hamilton, Massachusetts
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290:American women's rights activists
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176:Acts of the Anti-Slavery Apostles
161:American Equal Rights Association
320:Congregationalist abolitionists
61:, before accepting a church in
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105:and his abolitionist daughter
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99:American Anti-Slavery Society
330:19th-century American clergy
315:Activists from New Hampshire
185:, drafted the bylaws of the
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325:American feminist musicians
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141:1864 presidential election
126:the raid on Harper's Ferry
118:Union (American Civil War)
67:Free Religious Association
133:Emancipation Proclamation
80:Pillsbury's hostility to
295:American male feminists
137:Radical Democracy Party
44:Henniker, New Hampshire
40:Hamilton, Massachusetts
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285:American abolitionists
165:Elizabeth Cady Stanton
148:William Lloyd Garrison
114:Stephen Symonds Foster
38:Pillsbury was born in
63:Loudon, New Hampshire
51:Congregational church
207:Robertson, Stacey M.
183:Albert E. Pillsbury
171:, founded in 1868.
128:, and he applauded
300:American feminists
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270:1898 deaths
265:1809 births
178:, in 1883.
107:Mary Estlin
103:John Estlin
259:Categories
193:References
122:John Brown
156:in 1866.
130:Lincoln's
24:abolition
209:(2007).
75:Michigan
82:slavery
55:Andover
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124:after
73:, and
187:NAACP
217:ISBN
71:Ohio
34:Life
26:and
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