Theodore Dwight Weld
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Theodore Dwight Weld (November 23, 1803 – February 3, 1895), was one of the leading architects of the American abolitionist movement during it's formative years, from 1830 through 1844. He played a key role as writer, editor, speaker, and organizer, and is best known for his co-authorship of the authoritative compendium, American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses, published in 1839.
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[edit] Family
Weld was the son of Ludovicus Weld and Elizabeth Clark Weld; he was brother to Ezra Greenleaf Weld, a famous daguerreotype photographer. The Welds were members of the very notable Weld Family of New England, and share common ancestry with William Weld, Tuesday Weld, and others.[1]
Weld lived in Hampton, Connecticut, until his family moved to Pompey, New York.[2]
[edit] Evangelism and abolitionism
Weld studied at Phillips Academy from 1820 to 1822, when failing eyesight caused him to discontinue his studies. Several years later he entered the Oneida Manual Labor Institute in Oneida, New York. Weld then studied at Hamilton College, where he became the disciple of Charles Finney, a famous evangelist. Influenced by Charles Stuart, a retired British army officer, Weld joined the cause of black emancipation. Weld traveled about lecturing on the virtues of manual labor, temperance, and moral reform.
While a student at Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, Weld became a leader of the "Lane Rebels." This group of students held a series of slavery debates over 18 days in 1834 that divided the community. When the school's board of directors, including president Lyman Beecher, tried to prohibit the students from supporting abolitionism, Weld and a group of students left the seminary and were accepted by Oberlin College.
After 1830 he became one of the leaders of the antislavery movement working with Arthur and Lewis Tappan, New York philanthropists, James G. Birney, Gamaliel Bailey, Angelina Emily Grimké and Sarah Grimké.
Weld married the younger Grimké, Angelina, in 1838. From 1836 to 1840, Weld worked as the editor of the Emancipator. He also directed the national campaign for sending antislavery petitions to Congress and assisted John Quincy Adams when Congress tried Adams for reading petitions in violation of the gag rule.
In 1839, he and the Grimké sisters co-wrote the pivotal book American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses, on which Harriet Beecher Stowe partly based Uncle Tom's Cabin. As Weld used pen names for all of his writings, he is not as well known as many other notable 19th century civil rights advocates.
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ Harvard Magazine, "The Welds of Harvard Yard" by associate editor Craig A. Lambert
- ^ Contrast the views of Theodore Dwight Weld with those of distant relative Gen. Stephen Minot Weld Jr.
[edit] External sources
[edit] References
- Letters of Theodore Dwight Weld, Angelina Grimke and Sarah Grimke, 1822-1844: Vols. 1 & 2. ISBN 0-8446-1055-0.
- Robert H. Abzug, Passionate Liberator: Theodore Dwight Weld & the Dilemma of Reform. New York: Oxford University Press, 1980. ISBN 0-19-503061-3.
- Gilbert Hobbs Barnes. The Anti-Slavery Impulse, 1830-1844. With an Introduction by William G. McLoughlin. New York: Harcourt, 1964.
- Robert K. Nelson, "'The forgetfulness of sex': Devotion and Desire in the Courtship Letters of Angelina Grimké and Theodore Dwight Weld," Journal of Social History 37 (Spring 2004): 663-679.