Achievement1838· politics
Charles Lenox Remond Becomes First Black Professional Anti-Slavery Lecturer
Charles Lenox Remond of Salem, Massachusetts, was hired as a full-time lecturer by the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society in 1838, becoming the first Black American employed as a professional abolitionist speaker. He toured New England and Ireland delivering hundreds of lectures for three years before Frederick Douglass emerged as a peer lecturer in 1841.