No reserve
Lot Closed
December 2, 05:01 PM GMT
Estimate
1,200 - 1,800 USD
Lot Details
Description
Abolitionism
The Constitution of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, and the Relief of Free Negroes, unlawfully held in Bondage ... Philadelphia: Printed by Francis Bailey for the Society, 1788
8vo (201 x 121 mm). 29 pp.; lightly toned, closed split to inner margin of title page. Early blue paper wrappers; stitching lac🌺king but partially adhered, dampstained. Housed in a folding cloth chemise.
In 1774 Anthony Benezet called the first meeting o🏅f the Society for the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully held in Bondage; most of its members were Quakers. The Society grew in numbers and reorganized several times; and it was joined by such prominent figures as Benjamin Franklin and Benjamin Rush, who helped write the Society's new constitution.
In 1788 the group successfully petitioned the Pennsylvania legislature to amend the gradual abolition act of 1780. As a result of their petition, the legislature prohibited the transportation of enslaved children or pregnant wo🥂men out of Pennsylvania, as well as the building, outfitting, or issuing of slave ships from Philadelphia. The amended act also made it illegal to separate enslaved families by more t🎃han 10 miles and imposed heavier fines for kidnapping.
REFERENCE:
ESTC W30522; Evans 21831