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Wendell Phillips

Edmonia Lewis1871

Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery

Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery
Washington, D.C., United States

An eloquent and persuasive speaker, Wendell Phillips toured the country delivering powerful lectures against slavery. Phillips credited his wife, the fervent abolitionist and reformer Anne Terry Greene, with opening his eyes to injustice and inspiring his ac- tivism. Unlike President Abraham Lincoln and many others, Phillips considered emancipation a more urgent goal than preserving the Union. In March 1862, he traveled to Washington, D.C., to pressure Congress and the president to act more aggressively against slavery. He perturbed Smithsonian Secretary Joseph Henry (shown at right), by using the institu-tion’s lecture hall as his forum.

The pathbreaking sculptor Edmonia Lewis, who descended from a part-Ojibwe (Chippewa) mother and a Haitian father, made this medallion bust early in her career as part of a series of portraits of abolitionists. While living in Rome, she made the sculpture Forever Free (1867), depicting an African American couple rejoicing at the news of the Emancipation Proclamation.

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Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery

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