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Martin Robinson Delany was born slave in Charleston, Virginia, on 6th May, 1812. Illegally taught to read by his mother, his father purchased the family's freedom in 1823.
When Martin was 19, he moved to Pittsburgh where he attended the Bethel Church School. A doctor in the town, Andrew McDowell, employed him as his assistant.
In 1843 Martin began publishing the anti-slavery newspaper, The Mystery. Four years later, he joined Frederick Douglass on the North Star.
He attended the Harvard Medical School from 1849-1852; afterwards establishing himself as a doctor in Pittsburgh.
Delany continued in the struggle against slavery and he traveled the country campaigning against the Fugitive Slave Act.
In 1852 Martin published the Destiny of the Colored People in the United States where he recommended emigration out of the United States. In 1859 he led an exploration party to West Africa to investigate the Niger Delta as a location for settlement.
During the Civil War Delany recruited soldiers for the Union Army. In 1865 he obtained the rank of major, therefore becoming the first Afro-American to receive a regular army commission. After the war he worked for the Freemen's Bureau.
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