By the early 1830s, David Ruggles became involved in the growing anti-slavery movement in New York. White radicals, disenchanted by reform measures, now joined blacks demanding the immediate end of slavery.
Opened, 1834
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Ruggle’s grocery shop at One Cortlandt Street was also a circulating library and reading room for African Americans who were denied access to New York’s public libraries. Ruggles also sold anti-slavery publications here. The first African American bookstore and printshop which became a temporary haven for people like Frederick Douglas and a stop on the Underground Railroad by anti-slavery activists.
Burned, 1835
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David Ruggles store at 1 Cortlandt Street was the nation`s first black bookstore until it was destroyed by a mob.
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David Ruggles,Ruggles opened the first African-American bookstore in 1834.