Personal tools
EServer » Antislavery Literature » Religious Literature » A Sermon on the Abolition of the Slave Trade
Navigation
Frederick Douglass in Chinese

Running man image from workshop poster

African American literature of slavery has a translation history dating from at least the 1840s.  One of the Project's collections addresses this history, with special attention to translations of Frederick Douglass published from the 19th-century to the present day.  The collection includes podcast readings of selected chapters from Douglass' 1845 narrative in French, Hebrew, Spanish, and most recently a Chinese reading by Prof. John Zou.  Read more...
Log in


Forgot your password?
New user?
 
Document Actions

A Sermon on the Abolition of the Slave Trade

by Antislavery Webmaster last modified 2009-02-01 11:49 2006 by the Antislavery Literature Project

An 1810 New Year's Day sermon against slavery, delivered by William Miller at the African Church in New York City. Digitized by the Antislavery Literature Project.

 

Cover for Teaching Guide to Early African American Antislavery Sermons

 

See also: Teaching Guide to Early African American Antislavery Sermons, Joe Lockard

 

William Miller was a founder and long-serving minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church in New York City, having aided in its establishment in 1796. This is his only published sermon.

 

- Joe Lockard