He worked to gain support in publishing an anti-slavery newspaper.
Before being elected, he was a local judge, and published an outspoken anti-slavery newspaper called the American Union.
From there, she sent in her publications to anti-slavery newspapers.
Nonetheless, anti-slavery newspapers were still published in Louisville and Newport.
True American anti-slavery newspaper begins publication.
In 1845, he began publishing an anti-slavery newspaper called the True American in Lexington, Kentucky.
They fixed on Gamaliel Bailey, the publisher of the anti-slavery newspaper The New Era.
Lovejoy was a Presbyterian minister editing anti-slavery newspapers in Missouri until his presses were destroyed by mobs.
In 1835, the family moved to Cincinnati, where the father published an anti-slavery newspaper.
Uncle Tom's Cabin began in a series in an anti-slavery newspaper, The National Era.