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- Q16065681 description "American abolitionist".
- Q16065681 description "American abolitionist".
- Q16065681 subject Q6238612.
- Q16065681 subject Q6932486.
- Q16065681 subject Q6935044.
- Q16065681 subject Q7932477.
- Q16065681 subject Q8244137.
- Q16065681 abstract "Julia Williams was born in Charleston, South Carolina on July 1, 1811. Her family moved to Boston, Massachusetts when she was a child, and was 21 years old when she traveled to Canterbury, Connecticut to be a student at Prudence Crandall's Academy. After the Academy closed, Williams went to study at the Noyes Academy in New Canaan, New Hampshire, which in 1835 met the same fate as the Canterbury Female Boarding School. She completed her education at the Oneida Institute in New York.She was an outspoken advocate of abolition and African-American rights. Williams was a member of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society (BFASS) during the 1830s. She was one of four delegates from the BFASS who attended the Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women in New York in 1837.Williams married Henry Highland Garnett, a teacher, minister, and prominent leader of the abolitionist movement. In 1852, Julia and Henry traveled to Jamaica as missionaries, where Julia headed a Female Industrial School. After the Civil War, Julia worked with freedmen in Washington, DC. She died on Template:MONTHNAME 7, 1870(1870-Template:MONTHNUMBER-07) (aged Template:Age).In 2014 the Prudence Crandall Museum was preparing an exhibit interpreting the life of Williams.".
- Q16065681 birthDate "1811-07-01".
- Q16065681 birthYear "1811".
- Q16065681 deathDate "1870-01-07".
- Q16065681 deathYear "1870".
- Q16065681 wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q=Julia%20Williams%20Anti%20slavery&f=false.
- Q16065681 wikiPageExternalLink African-American_Students0001.pdf.
- Q16065681 wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q&f=false.
- Q16065681 wikiPageExternalLink lettertomydearde00west28.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q17053489.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q2853205.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q3132833.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q4774270.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q4947904.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q512490.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q590026.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q6238612.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q6932486.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q6935044.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q7932477.
- Q16065681 wikiPageWikiLink Q8244137.
- Q16065681 dateOfBirth "1811-07-01".
- Q16065681 dateOfDeath "1870-01-07".
- Q16065681 name "Williams, Julia".
- Q16065681 shortDescription "American abolitionist".
- Q16065681 type Person.
- Q16065681 type Agent.
- Q16065681 type Person.
- Q16065681 type Agent.
- Q16065681 type NaturalPerson.
- Q16065681 type Thing.
- Q16065681 type Q215627.
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- Q16065681 type Person.
- Q16065681 comment "Julia Williams was born in Charleston, South Carolina on July 1, 1811. Her family moved to Boston, Massachusetts when she was a child, and was 21 years old when she traveled to Canterbury, Connecticut to be a student at Prudence Crandall's Academy. After the Academy closed, Williams went to study at the Noyes Academy in New Canaan, New Hampshire, which in 1835 met the same fate as the Canterbury Female Boarding School.".
- Q16065681 label "Julia Williams (abolitionist)".
- Q16065681 givenName "Julia".
- Q16065681 name "Julia Williams".
- Q16065681 name "Williams, Julia".
- Q16065681 surname "Williams".