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  1. Hezekiah Joslyn (1797 – October 30, 1865) was an American physician and abolitionist. Joslyn homesteaded at what is today (2020) 8560 Brewerton Rd. in Cicero, New York. The homestead is now considered a potential archaeological site. He was an Onondaga County, New York, doctor after 1823 and in 1865 an officer in the county medical ...

  2. Hezekiah Joslyn (1757–1865) was a physician, a nationally known abolitionist, and the father of woman’s rights leader Matilda Joslyn Gage. (Nineteenth-century practice was to use the singular, woman's, when referring to women as a class; later practice was to use the plural, women's.) Matilda's leadership abilities in part reflected Joslyn ...

  3. Hezekiah Joslyn (1757–1865) was a physician, a nationally known abolitionist, and the father of woman’s rights leader Matilda Joslyn Gage. (Nineteenth-century practice was to use the singular, woman's, when referring to women as a class; later practice was to use the plural, women's.)

  4. Brief Life History of Hezekiah. When Dr Hezekiah Joslyn M D, Abolitionist was born in 1797, in Massachusetts, United States, his father, Hezekiah Joslin, was 40 and his mother, Chloe Hall, was 33. He married Clara Loomis on 6 May 1820. They were the parents of at least 1 daughter.

  5. Hace 3 días · Fue la única hija del doctor Hezekiah Joslyn y su esposa, una pareja muy activa en favor del abolicionismo y profundamente creyentes protestantes, que había organizado en su propia casa uno de ...

  6. “I think I was born with a hatred of oppression.” Matilda's childhood home was a station on the Underground Railroad and her father, Hezekiah Joslyn, was a noted abolitionist. Editor of an anti-slavery newspaper, he was a founder of the first anti-slavery political party, the Liberty Party.

  7. Her mother, Helen Leslie Joslyn, had a passion for historical research and her father, Dr. Hezekiah Joslyn, was an abolitionist who made their family home into a station on the Underground Railroad. As a child, Gage handed out abolitionist pamphlets and admired powerful anti-slavery speakers like Fredrick Douglass.