Back before blogs, opinion-based news programs, talk radio, and even amplified sound, the American public gathered by the thousands to listen to professional orators calling out their opinions from train platforms, outdoor stages, and the steps of city hall. Oratory was wildly popular in the 1800s, and there was no lecturer more popular than Robert Green Ingersoll, a.k.a., "The Great Agnostic."





Ingersoll continually brought science, reason, and secular values into the public square. He was an early popularizer of Charles Darwin and a tireless advocate for women's rights, racial equality, and birth control decades before others would pick up the cause. He often poked fun at religious belief, and he defied the religious conservatives of his day by championing secular humanist values.

Ingersoll's work and his words are highly relevant to our day, too, so the Center for Inquiry and its sister organization, the Council for Secular Humanism, work to bring his wisdom and insights to a broader audience.

[NOTE: Posters are 11" x 17" and include information about Ingersoll on the back. Bulk quantities are available at cost + shipping. Send inquiries to outreach@centerforinquiry.net. Please allow 2–4 weeks for delivery.]



Learn more about Robert Green Ingersoll:



