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Published byBertina Baldwin Modified over 8 years ago
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The idea that slavery was wrong had two separate elements 1. Political 2. Religious
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Political reasons went back to the Declaration of Independence “all men are created equal”
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Religious ideas believed that all men and women are equal in the eyes of God › Quakers spoke out against slavery since the colonial times › Second Great Awakening: early 1800’s religious movement Minister Charles Grandison was one of the leaders Called on Christina to join a crusade and stamp out the evil of slavery
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By 1804 all states from Pennsylvania north had promised to free their slaves
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American Colonization Society proposed to end slavery by setting up a colony in Africa for freed slaves Presdient Monroe help the society set up the nation of Liberia in western Africa › Liberia is Latin for free
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The society did not call for an end to slavery but to pay slave owners who freed slaves Some African Americans thought they should go to Africa because they would never have equal right in the U.S.
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Most African Americans opposed colonization, they wanted to stay in the United States › Most free and slaves were born in the U.S. Only a few thousand free African Americans settled in Liberia.
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Abolitionist: people who wanted to end slavery in the U.S. › Some called for a gradual end to slavery thinking that it would die out if it were kept out of western states › Others demanded an end to slavery everywhere at once
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Used lawsuits and petitions Samuel Cornish and John Russwurm set up an antislavery newspaper called Freedman’s Journal › Printed stories about the brutal treatment of enslaved African Americans
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Douglas was born into slavery in Maryland › He defied the slave codes and taught himself to read Picked through “the mud and filth of the gutter” to find discarded newspapers
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1838 Douglas escaped and made his way to Boston › Spoke at an antislavery meeting about the sorrows of slavery and the meaning of freedom › Soon traveled throughout the U.S. and Britain lecturing against slavery 1847 began publishing an antislavery newspaper, the North Star
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William Llyod Garrison, the most outspoken white abolitionist › 1831 wrote an antislavery paper the Liberator He proclaimed that slavery was an evil that that needed to be ended immediately
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Founded the New England AntiSlavery Society › Theodore Weld, a young minister brought religious revival to antislavery meetings
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Women played an important role in the abolitionist movement Angelina and Sarah Grimke sisters Daughters of a wealthy slaveholder in South Carolina Hated slavery and moved to Philadelphia to work for abolition Their lectures on the evils of slavery drew large crowds
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Some people objected to women speaking out in public Grimkes and others started a crusade for women’s rights
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Some risked prison and even death for helping slaves escape from the South Underground railroad: network of abolitionists that secretly helped runaway slaves reach freedom in the North and in Canada
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Stayed in homes and churches or even caves led by conductors whom were whites and free black abolitionists Harriet Tubman, an escaped slave, returned to the South 19 times to help more than 300 slaves reach freedom.
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Northern mill owners, bankers, and merchants saw attacks on slavery as a threat to their livelihood Northern workers oppose abolition › Some northern workers opposed the abolitionists fearing that free African Americans would come North and take their jobs › Mobs sometimes broke up antislavery meetings and attacked the homes of abolitionists
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If owners were well treated they would love and serve their master Slaves were better off then northern workers › Wage slaves Slavery was essential to the southern economy
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