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・ J. Schmidt-Andersen
・ J. Schuyler Long
・ J. Scot Chadwick
・ J. Scott (Cambridgeshire cricketer)
・ J. Scott Armstrong
・ J. Scott Burhoe
・ J. Scott Campbell
・ J. Scott Jennings
・ J. Scott Smart
・ J. Scott Turner
・ J. Scott Wolff
・ J. Scott Yaruss
・ J. Searcy Bracewell, Jr.
・ J. Searle Dawley
・ J. Seelye Bixler
J. Sella Martin
・ J. Shackley (Yorkshire cricketer)
・ J. Shantha
・ J. Shimon & J. Lindemann
・ J. Shivashanmugam Pillai
・ J. Sidi Limehouse, III
・ J. Sidlow Baxter
・ J. Sidney Levine
・ J. Sinclair Armstrong
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・ J. Skelly Wright
・ J. Slater Lewis
・ J. Slauerhoff
・ J. Smalley
・ J. Smalley (Lancashire cricketer)


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J. Sella Martin : ウィキペディア英語版
J. Sella Martin

John Sella Martin (September 27, 1832 - August 11, 1876) was a noted abolitionist in Boston, Massachusetts and a pastor, who had escaped from slavery in Alabama. He was a leading African-American preacher and activist for equality before the American Civil War,〔(Brown, William Wells. "J. Sella Martin", ''The Black Man: His Antecedents, His Genius, and his achievements'' ), Boston: J. Redpath, 1863, pp. 241-245, edition online at ''Documenting the American South'', University of North Carolina〕 traveling to England to lecture against slavery. When he returned, he preached in Presbyterian churches in Washington, DC.
After the American Civil War, Martin returned to the South, working during the Reconstruction era in education in Alabama and Mississippi. He became a politician in Louisiana and in 1872 was elected to the state legislature from Caddo Parish. In that year, the gubernatorial election was fiercely disputed, and the state legislature was ultimately taken over by the Democrats, en route to regaining control of the state government. Martin had an appointed position with the US Post Office and also wrote for the ''Louisianian'' newspaper.
==Early years==
John Sella Martin was born into slavery in 1832 in Charlotte, North Carolina. His mother was a slave, and his father was her white master. Under the principle of ''partus sequitur ventrem'', adopted by Virginia in 1662 and later other colonies in slave law, children of slave mothers took her status and were born into slavery, regardless of who their father was and what proportion of European ancestry they had. this gave rise to many mixed-race slaves, some of majority-white ancestry. At the age of six Martin, his mother and his only sister were taken to Columbus, Georgia where they were sold. His mother and sister were purchased by one man and he by another.
His new owner was an old bachelor. Martin served him in the capacity of a ''valet de chambre'' until the age of eighteen. They resided together in one of the principal hotels in Columbus, and Martin was given the opportunity to learn how to read and write, as well as be exposed to a more worldly view (as opposed to being an agricultural worker). He met travelers from throughout the United States and Canada staying at the hotel, as well as their servants.

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