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- A. S. Petition for the rights of the Col'd Citizen
- Petition letter [from the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society] asking the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to protest in United States Supreme Court against the wrongful imprisonment of "colored citizens" employed on trade ships arriving at the ports of slaveholding states., New-York Historical Society
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- Copy of a correspondence between Edmund Jackson & Hon. Robt. C. Winthrop in 1840
- Manuscript copy of a correspondence between Edmund Jackson and Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, in which Jackson asks for Winthrop's position on slavery before his election to United States Congress. Includes Winthrop's response dated November 2, 1840, in which he replies that he "cannot regard it as desirable or expedient to attempt any alteration of the Constitution in relation to slavery.", New-York Historical Society
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- Resolves relating to Slavery & the Slave Trade & the admission of new States into the Union.
- Resolution produced by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts that the United States Congress must abolish slavery in the District of Columbia. Includes note that the "resolves were passed by the House in the 21st, & by the Senate of the 23 March" and that the resolutions are the same as are referred to in the letters of E. Jackson and R. C. Winthrop., New-York Historical Society
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- Bradburns Petition
- Unsigned and undated petition to the Massachusetts Senate and House of Representatives to condemn the imprisonment of African American sailors when docked in particular United States ports., New-York Historical Society
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- [Draft of circular letter from the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society]
- Draft of letter from the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society to S. E. Sewall regarding gathering signatures for petitions oppsoing the Texas Constitution's endorsement of slavery., New-York Historical Society
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- S. E. Sewall's Draft of a Petition
- Undated draft of a petition by S. E. Sewall to the Massachusetts Senate and House of Representatives to condemn the imprisonment of African American sailors when docked in particular United States ports., New-York Historical Society
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- Legislative Resolutions drawn up by E. G. Loring & passed by the Legislature with trifling amendments
- Undated draft of legislative resolutions by E. G. Loring in support of the abolition of slavery., New-York Historical Society
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- [Letter from Francis Jackson, et al., to Lawrence Abbott]
- Four-page letter from Francis Jackson, Charles T. Hildreth, Thomas B. Sewall, and Ellis Gray Loring of Boston [Massachusetts] to Abbott Lawrence inquiring about his political position on slavery in the United States Congress., New-York Historical Society
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- [Letter from Lawrence Abbott to Francis Jackson, et al.]
- Two-page response letter from Lawrence Abbott to Francis Jackson, Charles T. Hildreth, Thomas B. Sewall, and Ellis Gray Loring of Boston [Massachusetts] regarding his political position on slavery in the United States Congress., New-York Historical Society
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- Circular
- Printed circular by Elizur Wright, Jr., Secretary of the Anti-Texas Committee, asking Massachusetts citizens to collect signatures for petitions against the admittance of Texas into the Union as a Slave state. On back, list of circa 40 names of participants., New-York Historical Society
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- Charles Warren's communication to Public Meeting 1846
- Three-page resolution submitted by Charles Warren presented to the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society opposing the admission of Texas into the Union as a Slave state., New-York Historical Society
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- Mayor & Aldermen, Faneuil Hall, Refused
- Letter to the Mayor [Samuel Atkins Eliot] and Aldermen of Boston [Massachusetts] from Francis Jackson and 11 other committee members [of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society] arguing a recent denial for permission to use Faneuil Hall for a meeting about slave trade in the District of Columbia., New-York Historical Society
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- Resolutions against 1838 Gag Law
- Resolutions agreed upon during a January 25, 1838, Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society meeting criticizing the Congressional Gag Law and slaveholding in general., New-York Historical Society