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  1. 24 de abr. de 2021 · students withdrew, set up a seminary in exile in Cumminsville, and then moved it to Oberlin College. The Lane Seminary Debates marked the shift in American antislavery efforts from colonization to abolition, and the “Lane Rebels” became ministers, abolitionists, and social reformers across the country.

  2. The Lane Theological Seminary debates which transpired in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1834, occurred because the students wanted to protest the idea of abolition versus colonization. These debates are often overlooked or disregarded in the history of abolition in the United States. My Independent Study, a part of which is this website, aims to shed ...

  3. Debate at the Lane Seminary, Cincinnati: Speech of James A. Thome, of Kentucky, Delivered at the Annual Meeting of the American Anti Slavery Society, May 6, 1834; Letter of the Rev. Dr. Samuel H. Cox, against the American Colonization Society. Boston: Garrison & Knapp, 1834. PHS Call number: PAM E 449 .D25 1834

  4. Lane Seminary: Commencement Exercises,” Cincinnati Enquirer, May 6, 1881 “Chinese New Year,” Cincinnati Commercial Newspaper February 15, 1881 Page 2 “Rev. Mr. Williams, one of the Alumni of Lane Seminary, who has been for twenty years a missionary in China,” Cincinnati Commercial Newspaper May 7, 1880 Page 10

  5. Without the Lane rebels, Oberlin would not have the impetus needed to become a renowned college that accepted all students regardless of race and gender. Displayed on the A Cause for Freedom website are two group letters requesting dismission from Lane Seminary, and three individual letters of dismission. The group letters contain signatures of ...

  6. The Lane Theological Seminary debates which transpired in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1834, occurred because the students wanted to discuss the idea of abolition versus colonization. Both societies present on the seminary campus were formed following the larger organizations of the American Anti-Slavery Society and the American Colonization Society.

  7. The debates were held at the Lane Seminary in Cincinnati, Ohio, in February, 1834 (see my William T. Allan – Lane Rebel from the South blog post for details). Of the approximately 45 total hours of debate time, James Bradley occupied about two hours, but an argument can be made that they were the two most important hours of the debates.