Gerrit Smith, yet another Abolitionist Co-Founder of the Republican Party
Grand Old Partisan celebrates more than seventeen decades of Republican heroes and heroics. Today, I honor Gerrit Smith, born in upstate New York, March 6th 1797. His parents had become wealthy via the fur trade and real estate. While managing the family fortune, he devoted his life to philanthropy. Smith participated in the American Anti-Slavery Society, donating three thousand homesteads to freedmen. In 1848, the Liberty Party nominated him for President. Women’s suffrage was part of his platform. Four years later, with the Free Soil Party, he won a term in the U.S. House of Representatives. This civil rights activist paid legal expenses for those accused of violating the Fugitive Slave Law. Frederick Douglass dedicated his second autobiography to him. Smith funded the early Republican Party. He supported the Lincoln administration during the Civil War and was delegate for the GOP’s 1872 national convention. Back to Basics for the Repu...