Difference between revisions of "Archibald Henry Grimke (Q490837)"
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(Removed claim: hasDescription (P66): Born enslaved. The second African American to earn a LL.B., Grimke was a woman's rights activist, newspaper editor, consul to the Dominican Republic from 1894-1898, and the leader of the American Negro Academy (a literary society in D.C.) from 1903-1919, and founding member of the NAACP chapter in Boston, #quickstatements; batch #627 by User:Seila Gonzalez) Tags: qs2 lod.enslaved [1.0] Manual revert |
(Created claim: hasDescription (P66): Born Enslaved. The second African American to earn a LL.B., Grimke was a woman's rights activist, newspaper editor, consul to the Dominican Republic from 1894-1898, and the leader of the American Negro Academy (a literary society in D.C.) from 1903-1919, and founding member of the NAACP chapter in Boston., #quickstatements; batch #628 by User:Seila Gonzalez) |
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Property / hasDescription | |||
Born Enslaved. The second African American to earn a LL.B., Grimke was a woman's rights activist, newspaper editor, consul to the Dominican Republic from 1894-1898, and the leader of the American Negro Academy (a literary society in D.C.) from 1903-1919, and founding member of the NAACP chapter in Boston. | |||
Property / hasDescription: Born Enslaved. The second African American to earn a LL.B., Grimke was a woman's rights activist, newspaper editor, consul to the Dominican Republic from 1894-1898, and the leader of the American Negro Academy (a literary society in D.C.) from 1903-1919, and founding member of the NAACP chapter in Boston. / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Revision as of 07:50, 18 May 2021
HC-PER-34424
- HC-PER-34424
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English |
Archibald Henry Grimke
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HC-PER-34424
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Statements
Slave
Diplomat
Civil Rights Activist
Archibald Henry Grimké
Born Enslaved. The second African American to earn a LL.B., Grimke was a woman's rights activist, newspaper editor, consul to the Dominican Republic from 1894-1898, and the leader of the American Negro Academy (a literary society in D.C.) from 1903-1919, and founding member of the NAACP chapter in Boston.
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