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  2. Rock, a passionate abolitionist and civil rights leader, held a strong belief in the dignity and rights of all Americans. Like other abolitionists in the movement, such as George T. Downing and Robert Purvis , Rock became a renowned public speaker and campaigned for equal rights.

  3. Rock remained in France for eight months recovering from his illness during which time he studied German and French. When he returned to the U.S., he continued his abolitionist activities with new fervor and linguistic abilities. His deepest commitment was to justice for his race, and now, no longer practicing medicine, he began to study law.

  4. Also trained as a dentist and lawyer, Rock was the first African American to be admitted to the bar of the U.S. Supreme Court. He was a passionate abolitionist and civil rights leader and held a strong belief in the dignity and rights of all Americans. Source for information on John Rock: Encyclopedia of World Biography dictionary.

  5. A gifted orator, he lectured on behalf of the abolitionist cause, voting rights for free African Americans, and the newly formed Republican Party. After poor health forced him to give up his medical practice in 1859 (by 1861, he had also given up dentistry), the undaunted Rock pursued a career in law.

  6. Jan 25, 2007 · On March 5, 1858, Dr. Rock delivered a speech at Boston’s Faneuil Hall as part of the annual Crispus Attucks Day observance organized by Boston’s black abolitionists in response to the Dred Scott decision. Rock shared the platform with William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips, and Theodore Parker.

  7. On February 1, 1865, the day after the House of Representatives passed the 13th amendment, John Swett Rock of Boston became the first African American ever admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States. Many toil their entire lives to achieve such an honor.

  8. John S. Rock was an accomplished Black dentist, doctor, lawyer, and abolitionist lecturer who resided on the north slope of Beacon Hill shortly before and during the Civil War. On October 13, 1825, John Swett Rock was born in Salem, New Jersey to free Black parents.