Walker, David

Walker, David
born Sept. 28, 1785, Wilmington, N.C., U.S.
died June 28, 1830, Boston, Mass.

U.S. abolitionist.

The son of a slave father and a free mother, he was educated and traveled widely before settling in Boston, where he became an abolitionist lecturer and wrote for the antislavery Freedom's Journal. In his pamphlet Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World (1829), he called for armed revolt. He smuggled the pamphlet into the South by hiding copies in clothing that he sold to sailors from his used-clothes store in Boston. Warned to flee for his life to Canada, he refused, and his body was found soon after; many believed he was poisoned. His son, Edwin G. Walker, was elected to the Massachusetts legislature in 1866.

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▪ American abolitionist
born September 28, 1785, Wilmington, North Carolina, U.S.
died June 28, 1830, Boston, Massachusetts

      African American abolitionist whose pamphlet Appeal…to the Colored Citizens of the World… (1829), urging slaves to fight for their freedom, was one of the most radical documents of the antislavery movement.

      Born of a slave father and a free mother, Walker grew up free, obtained an education, and traveled throughout the country, settling in Boston. There he became involved in the abolition movement (abolitionism) and was a frequent contributor to Freedom's Journal, an antislavery weekly. Sometime in the 1820s he opened a secondhand clothing store on the Boston waterfront. Through this business he could purchase clothes taken from sailors in barter for drink and then resell them to seamen about to embark. In the copious pockets of these garments, he concealed copies of his Appeal, which he reasoned would reach Southern ports and pass through the hands of other used-clothes dealers who would know what to do with them. He also used sympathetic black seamen to distribute pamphlets directly.

      When the smuggled pamphlets began to appear in the South, the states reacted with legislation prohibiting circulation of abolitionist literature and forbidding slaves to learn to read and write. Warned that his life was in danger, Walker refused to flee to Canada. His body was found soon afterward near his shop, and many believed he had been poisoned.

      Walker's Appeal for a slave revolt, widely reprinted after his death, was accepted by a small minority of abolitionists, but most antislavery leaders and free blacks rejected his call for violence at the time.

      Walker's only son, Edwin G. Walker, was elected to the Massachusetts legislature in 1866.

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