Page:The rising son, or, The antecedents and advancement of the colored race (IA risingsonthe00browrich).pdf/418

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  • peals obtained for her admission into churches when

many others were refused; yet she was as uncompromising as truth.

Oliver Johnson gave his young manhood to the negro's cause when to be an Abolitionist cost more than words. He was, in the earlier days of the movement, one of the hardest workers; both as a lecturer and writer, that the cause had. Mr. Johnson is a cogent reasoner, a deep thinker, a ready debater, an accomplished writer, and an eloquent speaker. He has at times edited the "Herald of Freedom," "Anti-Slavery Standard," and "Anti-Slavery Bugle;" and has at all times been one of the most uncompromising and reliable of the "Old Guard."

Henry C. Wright was also among the early adherents to the doctrine of universal and immediate emancipation, and gave the cause the best years of his life.

Giles B. Stebbins, a ripe scholar, an acute thinker, earnest and able as a speaker, devoted to what he conceives to be right, was for years one of the most untiring of freedom's advocates.

Of those who occasionally volunteered their services without money and without price, few struck harder blows at the old Bastile of slavery than James N. Buffum, a man of the people, whose abilities have been appreciated and acknowledged by his election as mayor of his own city of Lynn.

James Miller McKim was one of the signers of the Declaration of Sentiments, at Philadelphia, in 1833, and ever after gave his heart and his labors to the slave's cause. For many years the leading man in the Anti-slavery Society in Pennsylvania, Mr. McKim's labors were arduous, yet he never swerved