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This is a portrait of Jireh Platt (1798-1870), an active abolitionist in Mendon, Illinois, whose son, Jeremiah Platt came to the Kansas Territory to promote the anti-slavery cause. Jeremiah settled in Wabaunsee County, Kansas, where he was a member of Beecher, Bible and Rifle Colony and taught at Kansas State Agricultural College. Jireh's youngest son Luther came to Kansas in 1865 and taught at Lincoln College, Topeka, Kansas. He later became a Congregational minister and served several churches in southeast and western Kansas.
Date: Between 1860 and 1869
Item Number: 210916
Call Number: Museum 1980.302.4
KSHS Identifier: Museum 1980.302.4
Collections - Photograph
Date - 1854-1860
Date - 1861-1869
Government and Politics - Reform and Protest - Antislavery - Abolition
Objects and Artifacts - Communication Artifacts - Documentary Artifact - Photograph - Tintypes
Thematic Time Period - Bleeding Kansas, 1854 - 1861
Type of Material - Photographs - Format - Tintypes
http://www.kansasmemory.org/item/210916