20:34, 13 March 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/schools(
←Created page with 'In the nineteenth century, Clinton, because of Hamilton College, was an educational center. But it was a center for more than the college: it was a village with a profusion of schools at the primary and secomdary levels. UThe Hamilton-Oneida Academy had given Clinton a reputation as a city of schools.')
21:01, 1 February 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/stmylife(
←Created page with ''''Preliminary''' {{quote|''In which the author summarizes basic facts for the reader.''}} I was born on October 4, 1946, in Astoria, Queens, New York. My father was Louis Eisenberg M.D. and my mother Marcia (née María) Jesiek Eisenberg. I was followed by a brother Joel David, who died of schizophrenia and Krone's disease in his early 30's, my sister Sharon Louise, who is a retired CPA, and my brothers Ronald Allen and Jonathan Lee Eisenberg, who are at...')
19:00, 16 January 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
James Monroe Jones(
←Created page with ''''James Monroe Jones''' (1821/22–1906), born enslaved in North Carolina, purchased his freedom and was eventually able to graduate from
Oberlin. He was a gunsmith and engraver with a profitable shop in
Chatham, Ontario, where he served as a
justice of the peace.<ref>{{cite book |page=36 |first=Steven |last=Lubet |title=John Brown's Spy. The Tragic Life and Tragic Confession of John E. Cook |location=New Haven, Connecticut |pub...')
18:56, 16 January 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/jones(
←Created page with ''''James Monroe Jones''' (1821/22–1906), born enslaved in North Carolina, purchased his freedom and was eventually able to graduate from
Oberlin. He was a gunsmith and engraver with a profitable shop in
Chatham, Ontario, where he served as a
justice of the peace.<ref>{{cite book |page=36 |first=Steven |last=Lubet |title=John Brown's Spy. The Tragic Life and Tragic Confession of John E. Cook |location=New Haven, Connecticut |pub...')
18:20, 9 January 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
Ethiopian Manifesto(
←Created page with 'The ''Ethiopian Manifesto, Issued in Defence of the Black Man’s Rights in the Scale of Universal Freedom,'' was a pamphlet issued in New York by Robert Alexander Young early in 1829, only months before
David Walker's much more influential ''Appeal''. Little is known about the author, who was an obscure Black New Yorker who likely served as a popular preacher among the working class.<ref>{{cite journal |journal=The North Sta...')
19:11, 8 January 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/Ethiopian(
←Created page with 'The 'kEthiopian Manifesto'' was a pamphlet issuedd in , only months before David Walker's In which the author envisions the coming of a Black messiah. It contains one of the earliest extent calls for the reassembling of the African "race", of their need ''to become a people'', ''a nation in themselves''. He makes no distinction between African people throughout the world; for him, they are all African, regardless of their place of birth. Pan-negroism (or P...')
02:22, 20 November 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
American Female Anti-Slavery Society(
←Created page with 'The ''American Female Anti-Slavery Society'' held its first meeting in May of 1837, in New York City. Seventy-one delegates attended. The
Grimké sisters represented South Carolina, along with
Lucretia Mott and other Philadelphians, and many Boston delegates. The Grimké sisters introduced a resolution calling for race prejudice to be fought in the North as well as the South. The meeting vowed to work against the
gag rule, which prohibited petit...')
00:52, 20 November 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/female(
←Created page with 'The ''American Female Anti-Slavery Society'' held its first meeting in May of 1837, in New York City. Seventy-one delegates attended. The
Grimké sisters represented South Carolina, along with
Lucretia Mott and other Philadelphians, and many Boston delegates. The Grimké sisters introduced a resolution calling for race prejudice to be fought in the North as well as the South. The meeting vowed to work against the
gag rule, which prohibited petit...')
16:06, 7 November 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/Ritchie(
←Created page with 'Robert Everett was a Congregational minister who came to the United States in 1823; he had a reputation as a preacher and scholar in Wales. An abolitionist already in Wales, he began preaching against slavery upon his arrival. He started his career in Utica NY at what now is the
Plymouth Bethesda Church. His early years were not peaceful since mainstream people felt the abolitionist’s cause was too extreme. He was often threatened and harassed. He w...')
14:36, 26 October 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/Thome(
←Created page with ''''James Armstrong Thome''' (1813-1873) H was born in
Augusta, Kentucky Was professor at Oberlin, 1838–1848, and pastor in Cleveland, 1848-1871.<ref name= >{{rp|107}} James A. Thome and J. Horace Kimball, Emancipation in the West Indies (New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1838) Debate at the Lane Seminary, Cincinnati; Speech of James A. Thome, of Kentucky, Delivered at the Annual Meeting of the American Anti-Slavery Society, Letter of the Rev....')
18:59, 18 September 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/kirklandtownlibrary(
←Created page with 'The '''Kirkland Town Library''' is located at 55 1⁄2 College St., Clinton, New York. It was founded in 1901 and occupies what was once the Sigma Phi fraternity house at Hamilton College. 2013, the library had 71,552 visits, 100,657 circulated items, and 5,500 answered reference questions.In 2013, the library had 71,552 visits, 100,657 circulated items, and 5,500 answered reference questions.')
20:34, 13 March 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/schools(
←Created page with 'In the nineteenth century, Clinton, because of Hamilton College, was an educational center. But it was a center for more than the college: it was a village with a profusion of schools at the primary and secomdary levels. UThe Hamilton-Oneida Academy had given Clinton a reputation as a city of schools.')
21:01, 1 February 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/stmylife(
←Created page with ''''Preliminary''' {{quote|''In which the author summarizes basic facts for the reader.''}} I was born on October 4, 1946, in Astoria, Queens, New York. My father was Louis Eisenberg M.D. and my mother Marcia (née María) Jesiek Eisenberg. I was followed by a brother Joel David, who died of schizophrenia and Krone's disease in his early 30's, my sister Sharon Louise, who is a retired CPA, and my brothers Ronald Allen and Jonathan Lee Eisenberg, who are at...')
19:00, 16 January 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
James Monroe Jones(
←Created page with ''''James Monroe Jones''' (1821/22–1906), born enslaved in North Carolina, purchased his freedom and was eventually able to graduate from
Oberlin. He was a gunsmith and engraver with a profitable shop in
Chatham, Ontario, where he served as a
justice of the peace.<ref>{{cite book |page=36 |first=Steven |last=Lubet |title=John Brown's Spy. The Tragic Life and Tragic Confession of John E. Cook |location=New Haven, Connecticut |pub...')
18:56, 16 January 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/jones(
←Created page with ''''James Monroe Jones''' (1821/22–1906), born enslaved in North Carolina, purchased his freedom and was eventually able to graduate from
Oberlin. He was a gunsmith and engraver with a profitable shop in
Chatham, Ontario, where he served as a
justice of the peace.<ref>{{cite book |page=36 |first=Steven |last=Lubet |title=John Brown's Spy. The Tragic Life and Tragic Confession of John E. Cook |location=New Haven, Connecticut |pub...')
18:20, 9 January 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
Ethiopian Manifesto(
←Created page with 'The ''Ethiopian Manifesto, Issued in Defence of the Black Man’s Rights in the Scale of Universal Freedom,'' was a pamphlet issued in New York by Robert Alexander Young early in 1829, only months before
David Walker's much more influential ''Appeal''. Little is known about the author, who was an obscure Black New Yorker who likely served as a popular preacher among the working class.<ref>{{cite journal |journal=The North Sta...')
19:11, 8 January 2024Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/Ethiopian(
←Created page with 'The 'kEthiopian Manifesto'' was a pamphlet issuedd in , only months before David Walker's In which the author envisions the coming of a Black messiah. It contains one of the earliest extent calls for the reassembling of the African "race", of their need ''to become a people'', ''a nation in themselves''. He makes no distinction between African people throughout the world; for him, they are all African, regardless of their place of birth. Pan-negroism (or P...')
02:22, 20 November 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
American Female Anti-Slavery Society(
←Created page with 'The ''American Female Anti-Slavery Society'' held its first meeting in May of 1837, in New York City. Seventy-one delegates attended. The
Grimké sisters represented South Carolina, along with
Lucretia Mott and other Philadelphians, and many Boston delegates. The Grimké sisters introduced a resolution calling for race prejudice to be fought in the North as well as the South. The meeting vowed to work against the
gag rule, which prohibited petit...')
00:52, 20 November 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/female(
←Created page with 'The ''American Female Anti-Slavery Society'' held its first meeting in May of 1837, in New York City. Seventy-one delegates attended. The
Grimké sisters represented South Carolina, along with
Lucretia Mott and other Philadelphians, and many Boston delegates. The Grimké sisters introduced a resolution calling for race prejudice to be fought in the North as well as the South. The meeting vowed to work against the
gag rule, which prohibited petit...')
16:06, 7 November 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/Ritchie(
←Created page with 'Robert Everett was a Congregational minister who came to the United States in 1823; he had a reputation as a preacher and scholar in Wales. An abolitionist already in Wales, he began preaching against slavery upon his arrival. He started his career in Utica NY at what now is the
Plymouth Bethesda Church. His early years were not peaceful since mainstream people felt the abolitionist’s cause was too extreme. He was often threatened and harassed. He w...')
14:36, 26 October 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/Thome(
←Created page with ''''James Armstrong Thome''' (1813-1873) H was born in
Augusta, Kentucky Was professor at Oberlin, 1838–1848, and pastor in Cleveland, 1848-1871.<ref name= >{{rp|107}} James A. Thome and J. Horace Kimball, Emancipation in the West Indies (New York: American Anti-Slavery Society, 1838) Debate at the Lane Seminary, Cincinnati; Speech of James A. Thome, of Kentucky, Delivered at the Annual Meeting of the American Anti-Slavery Society, Letter of the Rev....')
18:59, 18 September 2023Deisenbetalkcontribs created page
User:Deisenbe/sandbox/kirklandtownlibrary(
←Created page with 'The '''Kirkland Town Library''' is located at 55 1⁄2 College St., Clinton, New York. It was founded in 1901 and occupies what was once the Sigma Phi fraternity house at Hamilton College. 2013, the library had 71,552 visits, 100,657 circulated items, and 5,500 answered reference questions.In 2013, the library had 71,552 visits, 100,657 circulated items, and 5,500 answered reference questions.')