"To a Southern Slaveholder" was a 1848 anti-slavery essay written by the Unitarian minister Theodore Parker, as the abolition movement was developing in the United States.
[1] The essay's tone was akin to someone correcting someone else about a fact they got wrong.
Parker points out flaws in proslavery thought regarding Biblical endorsement of slavery.
[2] Parker argued that African Americans were not descendants of Noah's son Ham, cursed by his father to be enslaved.
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