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===United States=== * ''The Emancipator'' (1819β20): founded in [[Jonesboro, Tennessee]] in 1819 by [[Elihu Embree]] as the ''[[Manumission Intelligencier]]'', ''The Emancipator'' ceased publication in October 1820 due to Embree's illness. It was sold in 1821 and became ''[[The Genius of Universal Emancipation]]''. * ''[[Genius of Universal Emancipation]]'' (1821β39): an [[Abolitionism in the United States|abolitionist]] newspaper published and edited by [[Benjamin Lundy]]. In 1829 it employed [[William Lloyd Garrison]], who would go on to create ''The Liberator''. * ''[[The Liberator (newspaper)|The Liberator]]'' (1831β65): a weekly newspaper founded by [[William Lloyd Garrison]]. * ''[[The Emancipator (newspaper)|The Emancipator]]'' (1833β50): different from ''The Emancipator'' above. Published in New York and later Boston. * ''[[The Slave's Friend]]'' (1836β38): an anti-slavery magazine for children produced by the [[American Anti-Slavery Society]] (AASS). * ''[[The Philanthropist (Cincinnati, Ohio)|The Philanthropist]]'' (1836β37): newspaper published in Ohio for and owned by the [[Anti-Slavery Society (1823β1838)|Anti-Slavery Society]]. * ''[[The Liberty Bell (annual)|The Liberty Bell, by Friends of Freedom]]'' (1839β58): an annual [[gift book]] edited and published by [[Maria Weston Chapman]], to be sold or gifted to participants in the anti-slavery bazaars organized by the [[Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society]]. * ''[[National Anti-Slavery Standard]]'' (1840β70): the official weekly newspaper of the [[American Anti-Slavery Society]], the paper published continuously until the ratification of the [[Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution]] in 1870. * ''True Wesleyan'' (1843βpresent), founded by [[Orange Scott]] and Jotham Horton, this became the periodical of the [[Wesleyan Methodist Church (United States)|Wesleyan Methodist Church]] and had a focus on abolitionism<ref>{{cite web |title=The True Wesleyan |url=https://secure.wesleyan.org/342/the-true-wesleyan |publisher=[[Wesleyan Church]] |access-date=16 July 2024}}</ref> * ''[[The Unconstitutionality of Slavery]]'' (1845): a [[pamphlet]] by [[Lysander Spooner]] advocating the view that the [[U.S. Constitution]] prohibited slavery. * ''[[The Anti-Slavery Bugle]]'' (1845β1861): a newspaper published in [[Lisbon, Ohio|New Lisbon]] and [[Salem, Ohio|Salem]], [[Columbiana County, Ohio]], and distributed locally and across the mid-west, primarily to [[Quakers]]. * ''[[The National Era]]'' (1847β60): a weekly newspaper which featured the works of [[John Greenleaf Whittier]], who served as associate editor, and first published, as a serial, [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]'s ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]'' (1851). * [[North Star (anti-slavery newspaper)|''North Star'']] (1847β51): an anti-slavery American newspaper published by the escaped slave, author, and abolitionist [[Frederick Douglass]].
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