biography
| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1797–1874)
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| biography:
| Philanthropist and reformer, born in Utica, New York, USA. Born into a wealthy family (with money from the fur trade and in land dealings), he studied law but spent most of his life managing the family fortune. He was active nationally as a leader of the anti-slavery Liberty Party (1824–74), was vice-president of the American Peace Society (1830s), and from 1835 was a well-known abolitionist (his house was a stop on the Underground Railroad). Elected to one term in the US House of Representatives as an independent (1853–5), he ran unsuccessfully for governor of New York on the People's Party ticket (1858), advocating temperance, abolition, and land reform. Although he had supported John Brown's 1859 raid on the federal arsenal at Harper's Ferry, he denied doing so. He supported the Union and campaigned for Abraham Lincoln in 1864. Although he later backed giving the vote to African-Americans, he also advocated moderate policies toward Southern whites. He donated much of his fortune to building churches and theological schools, as well as to various colleges. |
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