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  1. Angelina Emily Grimké Weld (Charleston, 20 febbraio 1805 – Hyde Park, 26 ottobre 1879) è stata un'attivista statunitense difenditrice dei diritti delle donne e sostenitrice del movimento per il suffragio femminile.

  2. Angelina Emily Grimké Weld (February 20, 1805 – October 26, 1879) was an American abolitionist, political activist, women's rights advocate, and supporter of the women's suffrage movement. At one point she was the best known, or "most notorious," woman in the country.

  3. Angelina Weld Grimké (February 27, 1880 – June 10, 1958) was an African-American journalist, teacher, playwright, and poet. By ancestry, Grimké was three-quarters white — the child of a white mother and a half-white father — and considered a woman of color.

  4. Although raised on a slave-owning plantation in South Carolina, Angelina Emily Grimké Weld grew up to become an ardent abolitionist writer and speaker, as well as a women’s rights activist.

  5. The Grimké sisters, Sarah Moore Grimké (1792–1873) and Angelina Emily Grimké (1805–1879), were the first nationally-known white American female advocates of the abolition of slavery and women's rights.

  6. Angelina Grimké (21 febbraio 1805-26 ottobre 1879) era una donna del sud di una famiglia di schiavisti che, insieme a sua sorella Sarah, divenne una sostenitrice dell'abolizionismo.

  7. Angelina Weld Grimké was an African-American poet and playwright, an important forerunner of the Harlem Renaissance. Grimké was born into a prominent biracial family of abolitionists and civil-rights activists; the noted abolitionists Angelina and Sarah Grimké were her great-aunts, and her father.