Dylan Matthews

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They were not opposed to equality in certain areas—in 1843, Boston had rescinded the law prohibiting interracial marriage, and “colored cars” on railroads had disappeared; blacks in Boston could vote, hold office, and testify in court. But just as a line of demarcation between blacks and whites existed in residential neighborhoods, so too had the city’s power brokers insisted on separate facilities when it came to educating Boston’s children.
The Great Abolitionist: Charles Sumner and the Fight for a More Perfect Union
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