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William Lloyd Garrison Biography

Antislavery Activist / Publisher

Publisher of the newspaper The Liberator, William Lloyd Garrison was a famously fierce opponent of slavery in the two decades preceding the American Civil War. From poor beginnings in Massachusetts, he got his start as printer, then writer and editor of his hometown paper, the Newburyport Herald in the 1820s. He joined the abolitionist movement, but his advocacy of the immediate abolition of slavery was more radical than their approach, and his insistence on broader reforms soon led him to form his own operation. He published the first copy of The Liberator in 1831, and in 1833 he co-founded the American Anti-Slavery Society. Until he folded The Liberator in 1865, Garrison was one of the most famous abolitionists in the U.S. and England, known for his uncompromising stance, fiery rhetoric and belief in "moral suasion" rather than violent opposition. For years he railed against the U.S. Constitution and its government, but when the Civil War erupted he supported President Lincoln, and during the war he encouraged the use of blacks as soldiers. After the war and the end of slavery, he closed down The Liberator and shifted his attentions to suffrage for women, the temperance movement and the rights of Native Americans.

Four Good Links

The Liberator Files

Collection of articles from Garrison's famous newspaper

The Angry Abolitionist

Brief profile that puts his actions into some historical context

William Lloyd Garrison

Profile with many related links

William Lloyd Garrison and The Liberator

Brief profile from a site on U.S. History

Vital Stats

Birth

13 December 1805

Birthplace

Newburyport, Massachusetts

Death

24 May 1879
(age 73)

Best Known As

Civil War-era abolitionist who published The Liberator