James William Charles Pennington (1807-1870)
An Address Delivered at Newark, N.J. at the First Anniversary of West India Emancipation (1839)
A Text Book of the Origin and History of the Colored People (1841)
Instructions of the Executive Committee to Mr. and Mrs. Wilson (1842)
God is No Respecter of Persons (1842)
Covenants Involving Moral Wrong Are Not Obligatory Upon Man: A Sermon (1842)
Speech Regarding African Colonization (1843)
Speech in England Regarding Suffrage (1843)
Speech Protesting British Idea For Africans to Immigrate to the West Indies (1843)
Speech Given Before the Leeds Anti-Slavery Society in England (1843)
Speech Celebrating the Anniversary of British West Indies Emancipation (1843)
Speech Contrasting the Doctrines of Christianity and the Doctrines of War (1843)
Speech Regarding Prejudice Among Christian Churches (1843)
Speech Regarding the Impact of Slavery on Universal Peace (1844)
A Two Years’ Absence, or, A Farewell Sermon, Preached in the Fifth Congregational Church (1845)
Letter to Amos Augustus Phelps dated Feb. 26, 1846 (sent from Jamaica) (1846)
Colored Preachers For Africa (1847)
Address to the Friends of Liberty (1848)
January 1849 Letter to Frederick Douglass (1849)
Speech Regarding the Intent of the African Colonization Society (1849)
Brief Speech Regarding Peace (1849)
Speech in Edinburgh Regarding the Injustice of American Slavery (1850)
A Lecture Delivered Before the Glasgow Young Men’s Christian Association (1850)
Speech Regarding Contentment Among Slaves (1850)
Speech in England Encouraging Consumption of Free-Labour Products (1850)
Speech Regarding the Fugitive Slave Law (1851)
An Account of James W.C. Pennington’s Escape (1851)
Speech Opposing the African Colonization Society (1852)
November 30, 1852 Letter to Harriet Beecher Stowe (1852, 1853)
Call For a Colored National Convention (1853)
February 23, 1855 Letter From Rev. Dr. Pennington (1855)
Look Out For the Slave-Catchers (1855)
April 6, 1855 Letter From Rev. Dr. Pennington (1855)
May 4, 1855 Letter From Rev. Dr. Pennington (1855)
May 11, 1855 Letter and Notice (1855)
The Case of Rev. Dr. Pennington (1855)
October 15, 1855 Letter to the Colored National Convention (1855)
Sermon Denouncing ‘Free Love’ Without Marriage (1855)
The Government of God: A Sermon (1856)
A Review of Slavery and the Slave Trade (1859)
The First Colored Convention (1859)
The Self-Redeeming Power of the Colored Races of the World (1859)
New England Compared with Old England on the Question of Human Rights (1859)
The Great Conflict Requires Great Faith (1859)
Speech Given in Montreal Refuting the Claim that Slaves Were Content in Bondage (1862)