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  1. Sarah Moore Grimké and Angelina Grimké Weld were born in Charleston, South Carolina. Their father, John Facheraud Grimké, owned many enslaved people. Their mother, Mary Grimké, was the daughter of a wealthy and powerful plantation-owning family. Although Sarah was 13 years older than Angelina, the two sisters were very close.

  2. Sarah Moore Grimké (26 novembre 1792 – 23 décembre 1873) est une militante abolitionniste et féministe américaine qui s'est consacrée à la défense des droits des femmes y compris le suffrage féminin, souvent en compagnie de sa sœur Angelina [1].

  3. 17 de may. de 2016 · Abolitionists. Sarah Moore Grimké, born on November 26, 1792, and her sister Angelina Emily Grimké, born on February 20, 1805, were the daughters of jurist and cotton planter John Faucheraud Grimké and Mary Smith. With familial ties to many of the lowcountry elite, the Grimké family was among the upper echelon of antebellum Charleston society.

  4. Sarah Moore Grimké (26 de noviembre de 1792 - 23 de diciembre de 1873) fue abolicionista, abogado, juez y feminista estadounidense. Debido a que se le impidió recibir una educación formal, se educó a sí misma. Nacida y criada en Carolina del Sur en una prominente y rica familia de plantadores, se mudó a Filadelfia, Pensilvania en la ...

  5. Sarah Moore Grimké was a nineteenth-century abolitionist, suffragist and orator. Born on November 26, 1792, to a family of wealthy slaveholders in Charleston, South Carolina, Grimké learned the evils of slavery at an early age.

  6. Angelina Grimké (syskon) Utmärkelser. National Women's Hall of Fame (1998)[ 7] Namnteckning. Redigera Wikidata. Sarah Grimke, född 1792, död 1873, var en amerikansk författare, abolitionist och kvinnorättsaktivist. På 1820-talet flyttade hon till Philadelphia och blev kväkare och arbetade för slaveriets avskaffande och kvinnors ...

  7. 16 de dic. de 2023 · The work of Sarah Moore Grimké (1792–1873) was shaped by a combination of abolitionist and feminist militancy, since she was an agent of the most radical anti-slavery movement as well as author of one of the very first American texts in favor of extending women’s rights, also influencing the Seneca Falls Convention (1848).