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  1. Anthony Benezet (1713-1784) was a French-born American abolitionist and teacher who founded one of the first anti-slavery societies and the first public girls' school in North America. He was a Quaker, a vegetarian, a teetotaller and an advocate for racial equality and universal love.

  2. Learn about Anthony Benezet, a 18th-century American educator, abolitionist, and social reformer who taught girls, blacks, and other minorities. He also wrote and distributed pamphlets against slavery and the slave trade, and left his estate to endow a school for blacks.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Learn about the life and legacy of Anthony Benezet, a French-born Quaker who taught black and white students, challenged slavery, and helped refugees in colonial America. Read his writings, testimonies, and epistles on social justice and human rights.

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    Anthony Benezet is recognized as the founder of the antislavery movement in America in the mid-1700s. Benezet believed the British ban on slavery should have been extended to the colonies, and work...

    Library of Congress
    John W. Kluge Center (Library of Congress), sponsoring body
    - African American History
    - Government, Law
    - Biography, History
    - Classification: History: America.
    - Maurice Jackson.
    - Recorded on 2009-02-26.
    - Researchers.
  4. Learn about Anthony Benezet (1713-1784), a French-born Quaker who founded a school for black children and advocated for the abolition of slavery in colonial America. Find related entries and content in Oxford Reference.

  5. Learn how Anthony Benezet, a Quaker abolitionist, used his writings, contacts, and philanthropy to fight against the slave trade and slavery in the eighteenth century. Explore his impact on black and white abolitionists in North America, England, France, and Africa.

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  7. Jun 11, 2018 · Learn about Anthony Benezet, a French-born Quaker who taught in Philadelphia and wrote against slavery, war, and inhumanity. He founded a school for blacks and corresponded with other abolitionists in England and France.

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