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The Burleigh Family: Who They Were, and Why They Matter
Causes and Tangents
Family Members
Seven Core Siblings
Mary Frances Burleigh: The Only Sister
John Oscar Burleigh: The Oldest, But Least Famed Brother
Charles Calistus Burleigh: An Unkempt but Powerful Force for Abolition
William Henry Burleigh: Earnest and Affable Editor
Lucian Rinaldo Burleigh: Preacher and Teacher
Cyrus Moses Burleigh: Quick-Witted Activist
George Shepard Burleigh: Poet of Reform, Nature, and Sentiment
Parents, Spouses, and Children
The Parents: Rinaldo and Lydia Bradford Burleigh
Gertrude Kimber Burleigh: Quaker Partner to Charles
Celia Burleigh: First Female Unitarian Minister and William's Second Wife
Margaret Jones Burleigh: Friend to Cyrus; Wife to Mary Grew
Ruth Burgess Burleigh: Abolitionist and Poetic Partner to George
Charles Calistus Burleigh, Jr.: Exquisite Painter
L. R. Burleigh Jr.: Lithographer of Bird's-Eye Views
Sydney Richmond Burleigh: Artist of Multiple Skills in Rhode Island
Chapters in the Family Story
The Canterbury Female Academy, Prudence Crandall, and the Black Women Students
Agency and Activity in the 1830s
Abolitionist Schism and the Burleigh Family
Success, Struggles, and Sorrows: The 1850s
Radical Retirements: 1860-1903
Thematic Vectors in the Burleigh Story
Newspapers Edited by Burleighs
The Life of an Anti-Slavery Agent
African-American Allies and Associates of the Burleigh Siblings
Anti-Racism: Definitions and Examples
Women's Rights
Queer Subtexts
Understanding the Temperance Cause
Pacifism and Non-Resistance in Theory and Practice
Utopia and Religion
Transcendentalism
Aesthetics, the Arts, and Social Change
Pilgrims
Geography: Range and Mobility
Networks of Friends, Neighbors, Close Associates
Glimpses of Technological Change
Secondary Sources and Archival Collections that Focus on the Burleigh Family
Coming Burleigh Attractions
Newspapers Edited by Burleighs
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Newspapers Edited by Burleighs
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1935 U.S. Postage Stamp commemorating the legend of Connecticut's Charter Oak
The Charter Oak is also depicted on Connecticut's State Quarter
Banner of The Unionist Unified Digital Humanities Project
Prudence Crandall superimposed on image of The Unionist's interior banner that reads "The Tyrant's Foe, the People's Friend" atop a printing press.
Christian Freeman
Christian Freeman Masthead
Issue found at Brookside Farm Museum, Niantic, Connecticut
Christian Freeman Terms
Christian Witness and Temperance Banner
Collage of Burleigh Newspaper Mastheads
Mastheads for four prominent Burleigh newspapers:
Internal Masthead of The Literary Journal
Mary Burleigh's testimony for Frederick Olney
Mary Burleigh's testimony in favor of Frederick Olney, as reported in The Unionist. Her testimony is part of what exonerated Olney from a fabricated charge of arson.
Masthead of The Charter Oak
Masthead of The Liberator
Masthead of The Literary Journal
Masthead of The Literary Journal
Masthead of the National Enquirer
Masthead of the Pittsburgh Christian Witness 1837-31-5
Masthead of the Stonington Phenix
Masthead of the Voice of Freedom
Masthead of The Wreath
National Enquirer
Abolitionist newspaper. Charles Calistus Burleigh assisted Benjamin Lundy in editing it in August-September 1837.
Pekin Tea Company Advertisement
Advertisement in the Charter Oak New Series v. 2, no. 13, p. 3 (April 1, 1847).
Pennsylvania Freeman
Pennsylvania Freeman Masthead
Stonington Phenix symbol
The Charter Oak
Leading anti-slavery newspaper in Connecticut
The Liberator
The foremost, and longest-running, Abolitionist newspaper in the United States
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