Joseph Cammett Lovejoy (1805–1871) was a clergyman, activist, and author.[1] He was an abolitionist, and was also involved in the debate over liquor laws.[2] His siblings included Elijah Parish Lovejoy and Owen Lovejoy (1811–1864).[3][4] He wrote Memoir of Charles T. Torrey about Charles T. Torrey.[5] who died in a Maryland penitentiary after being sentenced for aiding African Americans trying to escape slavery on the Underground Railroad and co-wrote with his brother Owen the memoir of their murdered brother Elijah.
He wrote for The Emancipator. He and his brother Owen wrote a memoir of Elijah Lovejoy after his murder by a white mob for publishing am anti-slavery newspaper. In March, 1853 he gave a speech before the Legislative Temperance Committee.[6] He also spoke about liquor legislation before the Massachusetts Legislature.[7]