Sixty-five Philadelphia women signed and presented this petition to Congress in 1844, urging the abolition of slavery. At that time, women in the United States were unable to vote. To make their voices heard on important social issues of their day—slavery and drunkenness—women organized themselves and used petitions to influence Congress. Collectively, the signatures of approximately 3 million women abolitionists, including these petitioners from Pennsylvania, sent a powerful antislavery statement to Congress.
Survey of St. John River and British Settlements of New Brunswick
Expansion and Reform (1801-1861)
