Background
Maria Weston Chapman, the daughter of Warren and Anne (Bates) Weston, was born on July 25, 1806 in Weymouth, Massachusetts, United States, of Pilgrim descent.
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Maria Weston Chapman, the daughter of Warren and Anne (Bates) Weston, was born on July 25, 1806 in Weymouth, Massachusetts, United States, of Pilgrim descent.
From 1828 to 1830 Maria Chapman was principal of the Young Ladies’ High School in Boston. In 1834 she went into the abolitionist movement. She became the soul of the Boston Female AntiSlavery Society, editing (1836 - 1840) its reports published annually under the title Right and Wrong in Boston. Her services to Garrison were said to have been inestimable, her cooperation with him perfect. She was present at the meeting in Boston in 1835 at which Garrison was mobbed, and it was to her house that the meeting adjourned. Of the Boston gathering she said that when the women left the hall a roar of rage and contempt went up which increased when it was evident that they meant to walk in a regular procession, “each with a colored friend. ” The next year she spoke for the first time in her life in a public meeting, the day before Pennsylvania Hall was destroyed.
She became one of the editors of the The Non-Resistant from 1839 to 1842, and, with Edmund Quincy, she edited the Liberator at various times during Garrison’s illness or absence. In 1840 she was made a member of the executive committee of the Anti-Slavery Society, with Lucretia Mott and Lydia Maria Child, and in the same year, the Massachusetts Society chose her as one of its delegates to the World’s Convention. In 1842 she was very busy with the Anti-Slavery Fair, in supporting the Latimer fugitive slave case agitation and with writing almost weekly for the Liberator.
She edited the Liberty Bell (1839 - 1846). She published Songs of the Free, and Hymns of Christian Freedom (1836) and How Can I Help to Abolish Slavery (1855), and in 1877 edited, with a memoir, the autobiography of Harriet Martineau, whom she had known for many years.
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Chapman was a member of Boston Female AntiSlavery Society, American Anti-Slavery Society and the New England Anti-Slavery Society.
Maria Weston was married in 1830 to Henry Grafton Chapman, a Boston merchant. In 1842 her husband died.