E449 .M12 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS DDDD173fl720 W5- '^ LETTER FROM T. M'CLINTOCK THE ASSOCIATION OF FRIENDS FOR PROMOTING THE ABOLITION OF SLAVERY, &c. PHILADELPHIA: PRINTED BY MERRIHEW AND THOMPSON, No, 7 Carter's Alky. 1840. • 5^ At a meeting of the Association of Friends for Promoting the bolition of Slavery, and Improving the Condition of the Free eople of Color, held at Green street Meeting House, Fifth mo. 3th, 1840, the following letter being read, was directed to be ublished. : Caleb Clothier, Iri] ^1^0 Anne Churchman, 5 ^ h ^^The Association of Friends for Advocating the Cause of the Slave, and Improving the Condition of the free People of Color. ''^* Beloved Friends, — In recurring to the opportunity vhen it was my privilege to mingle with you at the meet- ng of your Association held last year, in the week of Phila- ielphia Yearly Meeting, and in recollecting that the period 3 at hand when you will be likely again to be convened jn a similar occasion, my mind is clothed with affectionate lesires for your encouragement in the work of benevolence md humanity in which you are engaged. And what is hat work? The name by which you have designated /ourselves is, " The Association of Friends for Advocating he cause of the Slave, and Improving the Condition of he free People of Color." And what is a slave ? A )eing made in the image of God, bearing a conscious, in- elligent, and free nature — stamped with the lineaments of mmortality — possessed of the inalienable right to exercise he faculties conferred on him, in the acquirement of (vnowledge and virtue, in the promotion of his own happi- ness and the happiness of the beings around him, agreeably '0 the relations which the Creator has established. A * The title of the Association has been changed, as above, since last year. slave is such a being, with such a nature, with such rights, subjected invokintarily to the control of a fellow man. Unable to call any thing he has his own, except his un- uttered thoughts. Denied the use of the faculties of mind or body, only in accordance to the will of another. De- nied the privilege of using them in acquiring knowledge, in acquiring virtue, in acquiring happiness for himself or those most nearly related to him. Forbidden the exercise of the sympathies and affections of his nature. Forbidden to pour out these sympathies and affections in acts of kind- ness to his fellows in their afflictions, in cherishing and sustaining through life, with conjugal endearments, the partner of his choice, and in the extension of parental cares and solicitudes for his children. The child denied the exercise of filial affection, in aiding, in its turn, the parent, and in soothing, by a heaven-born tenderness, his declining years. In short, a slave is one, the high aspirations of! whose soul are crushed — the image of the Creator in himi effaced, and his whole nature degraded and brutalized, as far as can be done, by closing the avenues to knowledge, prostrating the pillars of virtue, repressing and rupturing all the sympathies and finer feelings, and paralyzing the moral faculties by cruelty and crime. To lift your brother man from this degradation — to re-le move from him the influences which sink him in ignorance, ipei in vice, in suffering, is one, and I trust, a main object of fe your Association. For, to use your best efforts to do alliriii this, is to "advocate the cause of the slave." And whediy you have broken the cruel fetters which bind down hisllfi humanity, your next object is to hold out to him the lights! ool of knowledge and the attractions of goodness, that he majiits walk in all the dignity of his manhood and in all the glorjfeil of his Godlike nature. Or, by doing this, you wish tc (i " improve the condition" of the People of Color, who are'ire, already free. i lieu Your Association embraces two great objects, two imnooci portant duties. With regard to the first — to the humaneiijen the benevolent, the Christian mind, a consideration of th