However, their roles as female leaders within the abolitionist movement were considered highly controversial and ultimately “obscured the remarkable accomplishments of their mission.” Additionally, the Grimké sisters’ outspoken critiques of racial and gender inequality alienated them from various religious organizations and conservative abolitionist groups, and deprived them of crucial support in the North. Furthermore, there were numerous abolitionists who blamed Sarah and Angelina Grimké for the eventual split in the abolitionist movement because “their actions heightened conflict over leadership” within the movement, and “brought ideological disagreements into open controversy.” Nevertheless, the Grimké sisters’ revolutionary beliefs regarding racial and gender equality directly challenged America’s prevailing social system, and ignited a nationwide debate regarding the religious, political, economic, and social rights of African Americans and women. Consequently, the Grimké sisters are irrefutably deserving of acknowledgement and adulation as early forerunners of the African American Civil Rights…