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  1. Wendell Phillips Garrison (June 4, 1840 – February 27, 1907) was an American editor and author.

  2. Wendell Phillips (November 29, 1811 – February 2, 1884) was an American abolitionist, advocate for Native Americans, orator, and attorney. According to George Lewis Ruffin , a Black attorney, Phillips was seen by many Blacks as "the one white American wholly color-blind and free from race prejudice". [1]

  3. Contents. Wendell Phillips Garrison. American editor and author. Learn about this topic in these articles: history of “The Nation” In The Nation. …editor of the Post and Wendell Phillips Garrison editor of The Nation, which became a weekly edition of the paper until 1914.

  4. Wendell Phillips was an abolitionist crusader whose oratorical eloquence helped fire the antislavery cause during the period leading up to the American Civil War. After opening a law office in Boston, Phillips, a wealthy Harvard Law School graduate, sacrificed social status and a prospective.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › wendell-phillipsWendell Phillips _ AcademiaLab

    Después de ser convertido a la causa abolicionista por Garrison en 1836, Phillips dejó de ejercer la abogacía para dedicarse al movimiento. Phillips se unió a la Sociedad Estadounidense contra la Esclavitud y con frecuencia pronunció discursos en sus reuniones.

  6. 18 de may. de 2018 · Wendell Phillips (1811-1884), American abolitionist and social reformer, became the antislavery movement's most powerful orator and, after the Civil War, the chief proponent of full civil rights for freed slaves.

  7. 31 de oct. de 2018 · Wendell Phillips, highly educated Boston patrician, became an abolitionist firebrand whose sharp rhetoric served a shrewd strategy.