Online Encyclopedia

SARAH MOORE GRIMKE (1792–1873)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 599 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

SARAH

MOORE GRIMKE (1792–1873)  and ANGELINA EMILY (1805–1879),
See also:
American reformers, born in
See also:
Charleston, South Carolina—Sarah on the 6th of November 1792, and Angelina on the loth of
See also:
February 1805—were daughters of John Fachereau Grimke (1752–1819), an artillery officer in the
See also:
Continental army, a jurist of some distinction, a man of
See also:
wealth and culture and a slave-holder . Their older
See also:
brother, THOMAS SMITH GRIMKE (1786-1834), was born in Charleston; graduated at Yale in 1807; was a successful lawyer, and in 1826–1830 was a member of the state Senate, in which he, almost alone of the prominent lawyers of the state, opposed
See also:
nullification; he strongly advocated spelling-reform,
See also:
temperance and absolute non-resistance, and published Addresses on Science,
See also:
Education and Literature (1831) . His early intellectual influence on Sarah was strong . In her thirteenth
See also:
year Sarah was godmother to her
See also:
sister Angelina . Sarah in 1821 revisited
See also:
Philadelphia, whither she had accompanied her
See also:
father on his last illness, and there, having been already dissatisfied with the Episcopal Church and with the Presbyterian, she became a Quaker; so, too, did Angelina, who joined her in 1829 . Both sisters (Angelina first) soon grew into a belief in immediate abolition, strongly censured by many
See also:
Quakers, who were even more shocked by a sympathetic letter dated " 8th Month, 30th, 1835 " written by Angelina to W . L . Garrison, followed in 1836 by her
See also:
Appeal to the Christian
See also:
Women of the South, and at the end of that year, by an
See also:
Epistle to the Clergy of the
See also:
Southern States, written by Sarah, who now thoroughly agreed with her younger sister . In the same year, at the invitation of Elizur Wright (1804–1885), corresponding secretary of the American Anti-
See also:
Slavery Society, Angelina, accompanied by Sarah, began giving talks on slavery, first in private and then in public, so that in 1837, when they set to
See also:
work in Massachusetts, they had to secure the use of large halls . Their speaking from public platforms resulted in a letter issued by some members of the General Association of Congregational Ministers of Massachusetts, calling on the clergy to close their churches to women exhorters; Garrison denounced the attack on the Grimke sisters and Whittier ridiculed it in his poem " The Pastoral Letter." Angelina pointedly answered
See also:
Miss Beecher on the Slave Question (1837) in letters in the Liberator . Sarah, who had never forgotten that her studies had been curtailed because she was a girl, contributed to the Boston Spectator papers on " The Province of Woman " and published Letters on the Condition of Women and the Equality of the Sexes (1838)—the real beginning of the " woman's rights "
See also:
movement in
See also:
America, and at the time a cause of anxiety to Whittier and others, who urged upon the sisters the prior importance of the anti-slavery cause . In 1838 Angelina married Theodore Dwight Weld (1803–1895), a reformer and abolition orator and pamphleteer, who had taken
See also:
part in the famous Lane Seminary debates in 1834, had
See also:
left the Seminary for the lecture platform when the anti-slavery society was broken up by the Lane trustees, but had lost his voice in 1836 and had become editor of the publications of the American Anti-Slavery Society) .

They lived, with Sarah, at Fort

Lee, New Jersey, in 1838–184o, then on a
See also:
farm at
See also:
Belleville, New Jersey, and then conducted a school for black and white alike at Eagleswood, near Perth Amboy, New Jersey, from 1854 to 1864 . Removing to Hyde Park, Massachusetts, the three were employed in Dr Lewis's school . There Sarah died on the 23rd of December 1873, and Angelina on the 26th of
See also:
October 1879 . Both sisters indulged in various " fads "—Graham's
See also:
diet, bloomer-wearing, absolute non-resistance . Angelina did no public speaking after her
See also:
marriage, save at Pennsylvania Hall (Philadelphia), destroyed by a
See also:
mob immediately after her address there; but besides her domestic and school duties she was full of
See also:
tender charity . Sarah at the age of 62 was still eager to study law or
See also:
medicine, or to do some-thing to aid her sex; at 75 she translated and abridged Lamar-tine's
See also:
life of
See also:
Joan of Arc . See Catherine H . Birney, The Grimke Sisters (Boston, 1885) .

End of Article: SARAH MOORE GRIMKE (1792–1873)
[back]
JOSEPH GRIMALDI (1779–1837)
[next]
I FRIEDRICH MELCHIOR GRIMM

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.