Lucy Colman Advocated for Abolition, Suffrage, and Freethought
by Laura Nichols
(Reprinted from the Democrat and Chronicle, January 18, 2026)
https://www.pressreader.com/usa/democrat-chronicle/20260118/282699053525297
The website freethoughtrail.org says she was born in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, in 1817, and worked as a schoolteacher. At age 18, she married John Maubry Davis, and they moved to Boston. He died of consumption in 1841. According to womenhistoryblog.com, “In 1843, Lucy married Luther Coleman (she later changed the spelling of her married name to Colman).” They moved to Rochester, and their daughter, Gertrude, was born about 1845. “Motherhood brought Colman’s attention to the issue of women’s rights,” the blog says. “She began to ask why married women and mothers had so few rights, and why women were dependent on the goodwill of their husbands for what freedoms they had.” She also befriended Rochester abolitionist Amy Post and advocated for emancipation of the slaves. By 1852 she had renounced Christianity because of churches’ complicity with slavery.
Coleman’s husband was killed in 1854 while working at the New York Central Railroad, which she blamed on the company’s unwillingness to spend money on repairs. She was hired afterward as a teacher in a segregated “colored school,” where Colman met Susan B. Anthony. According to the blog, at the state teachers convention, she spoke out against corporal punishment in schools, and she and Anthony decried the unequal salaries of male and female teachers. Disgusted with segregation, Colman “lobbied parents to withdraw their children, causing the school to close and losing her job in the process. By 1856, Rochester was providing education for both white and black children.”
Between 1856 and 1860, she became an abolitionist lecturer in Ohio, Iowa and Michigan and occasionally wrote for the antislavery newspaper The Liberator. She participated in an 1858 protest against capital punishment led by Anthony and Frederick Douglass and in an 1859 petition drive for New York women’s right to vote. In May 1863, Colman was one of the secretaries at the Women’s National Loyal League, which conducted the largest petition drive in U.S. history at that point, with 400,000 signatures, to promote a constitutional amendment to abolish slavery. In 1864 and 1865, Colman worked at a Black orphan asylum in Washington, D.C., and taught and served as a superintendent in schools in Washington and Arlington, Virginia, to help former slaves. Colman arranged a meeting between Sojourner Truth and President Abraham Lincoln on Oct. 29, 1864, and accompanied Truth.
About 1870, Colman joined her sister in Syracuse. “During this time, Colman wholeheartedly embraced freethought, a philosophical viewpoint that opinions or beliefs should be based on science, logic and reason, and should not be derived from religion, authority, government or dogma,” the blog says. She spoke often at conventions and wrote columns for a freethought journal as well as writing her memoir.
