We have a replica antislavery coin with "Am I Not a Woman and a Sister" on one side, and "Am I Not a Man and a Brother" on the other side.
In 1830, the American abolitionist newspaper Genius of Universal Emancipation carried an image of a slave woman asking "Am I Not a Woman and a Sister?". This image was widely republished in the 1830s, and struck into copper coins, but without the question mark, to give the question a positive answer.
It consciously echoed the motto, ‘Am I Not a Man and a Brother’, adopted in 1787 by the founders of the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade.