Lesson 14.4a: The Abolition Movement - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lesson 14.4a: The Abolition Movement

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Title: Lesson 14.4a: The Abolition Movement


1
Lesson 14.4a The Abolition Movement
Today we will identify major leaders of the
abolition movement and their viewpoints.
2
14.4 Essential Question
  • In what ways did the spread of democracy lead to
    calls for freedom for slaves, and more rights for
    women?

3
Todays Vocabulary
  • identify point out or describe
  • major big or important
  • abolition movement organized effort to end
    slavery
  • viewpoint how someone sees or thinks about
    something

4
Before the early 1830s, slavery was discussed
calmly.
Since slavery was banned in the North, most of
the early abolitionists were southerners.
5
The first abolitionists were Quakers, who
believed that all people had the same spark of
divinity,' making slavery immoral.
Quakers were among the first to free their
slaves. Some Quakers traveled the countryside
urging slave-owners to free their slaves.
6
But because of the increasing profitability of
cotton production, Quakers were not able to
influence many slave-owners.
7
In the 1820s, a large anti-slavery movement
emerged, supported by southerners and represented
by organizations such as the American
Colonization Society.
8
While those who believed in colonization opposed
slavery, they also believed that blacks and
whites could not live together in harmony.
Therefore, while they urged slave-owners to free
their slaves, they also raised money to pay for
the transportation of free blacks to West Africa.
9
President James Monroe, Chief Justice John
Marshall and House Speaker Henry Clay were
supporters of the colonization movement.
10
For a time, even Southern slave-owners who
rejected abolition often supported colonization
of free blacks.
11
By 1860, nearly 11,000 blacks had gone to Liberia
in West Africa, and helped found and build that
country.
But most blacks refused colonization, insisting
that the U. S. was their home.
12
How did those who supported colonization work
against slavery?
  1. Helped runaway slaves escape to freedom.
  2. Tried to demonstrate how blacks and whites could
    live side by side
  3. Tried to find highly intelligent African
    Americans to show that blacks were not inferior
    to whites
  4. Raised money to send freed slaves back to Africa

13
William Lloyd Garrison was one of the most
uncompromising abolitionists of his day.
  • He said slave-owners were evil and should not
    receive reimburse-ment for slaves freed by
    legislation.
  • Abolition must be complete, immediate, and
    without compensation.

14
  • Garrison didn't care what other social or
    economic problems might be caused by immediate
    emancipation.
  • His words were so extreme and so harsh that he
    alienated many people who might otherwise have
    supported his cause.

15
In the South, Garrison was despised as one who
encouraged slaves to revolt.
Copies of his antislavery newspaper The
Liberator were banned, and a 5,000 reward was
offered to anyone who would capture Garrison and
bring him to Georgia to stand trial.
16
I am aware that many object to the severity of
my language but is there not cause for severity?
I will be as harsh as truth, and as
uncompromising as justice. On this subject I do
not wish to think, or speak, or write, with
moderation. . . I will not equivocate I will
not excuse I will not retreat a single inch
and I WILL BE HEARD! -- William Lloyd Garrison
17
1. How did William Lloyd Garrison work to end
slavery?
  1. Published an antislavery newspaper
  2. Introduced an Constitutional amendment to abolish
    slavery
  3. Supported the colonization movement
  4. Published a collection of newspaper articles
    detailing the horrors of slavery
  5. Wrote Washington and Jefferson to urge their
    support for abolition

18
Former President John Quincy Adams fought the
gag rule and supported Welds work.
  • As a member of the House of Representatives, he
    read Welds antislavery petitions in Congress.
  • He introduced a consti-tutional amendment to ban
    slavery throughout the United States.

19
Adams also took part in the Amistad case.
  • African prisoners aboard the slave ship Amistad
    had rebelled, and seized the ship.
  • Adams successfully argued their case in the U.S.
    Supreme Court.
  • The Africans were granted their freedom and were
    allowed to return to Africa.

20
2. How did John Quincy Adams work against slavery
in Congress?
  1. Introduced the gag rule
  2. Introduced an amendment to abolish slavery
  3. Defended the Amistad defendants
  4. Published a collection of newspaper articles
    detailing the horrors of slavery
  5. Read antislavery petitions in Congress

Write down the letter of every true response to
this question!
21
In the North, free blacks could become involved
in the abolition movement.
  • Some black abolitionists had once been slaves
    themselves, and could tell of slavery's horrors
    based on personal experience.

22
Henry Highland Garnett and Frederick Douglass
were rivals for black abolitionist leadership,
and they demonstrated the divisions within
the movement.
23
Henry Highland Garnett was the more militant of
the two, and as early as 1843 was calling for
slaves to rise up against their owners and make
themselves free.
24
Garnett believed that any violence done by slaves
in the act of freeing themselves was justified on
the grounds of self defense.
His stated belief was that it was better to die
free than live as slaves.
25
Frederick Douglass was the best orator, black or
white, in the movement. He had escaped slavery as
a youth, taught himself to read and write, and
published his Autobiography in 1845.
26
  • Like William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass
    published an antislavery newspaper, The North
    Star.
  • He disagreed with Garnett on the role of violence
    in abolition, but not on the degrad-ations of
    slavery.

27
He worked tirelessly with White politicians and
social leaders throughout the 1840s and 50s, and
beyond the Civil War.
Until his death in 1895, Douglass spoke out on
behalf of Black equality, the rights of working
people, and for the right of women to vote.
28
3. What were Frederick Douglass contributions to
the abolitionist movement?
  1. Published an autobiography about his life as a
    slave
  2. Encouraged slaves to rise up violently against
    their masters
  3. Made many public speeches against slavery
  4. Sponsored an antislavery amendment in Congress
  5. Published an antislavery newspaper

Write down the letter of every true response to
this question!
29
Black women such as Sojourner Truth and Harriet
Tubman also played major roles in the antislavery
movement.
30
Sojourner Truth had been born a slave, and
although she was illiterate, Truth was a powerful
speaker who sometimes used songs she had composed
in her speeches.
31
Harriet Tubman was a runaway slave from Maryland.
She aided the movement by working as a
conductor on the Underground Railroad.
32
Some abolitionists helped slaves escape to
freedom along the Underground Railroad.
  • Nether a railroad nor underground
  • Informal network of abolitionists who hid runaway
    slaves fleeing to Canada
  • Traveled secretly from house to house
  • Aided by conductors (sympathetic whites and
    free blacks) along the way

33
At the risk of her own freedom and safety, Tubman
returned to slave states nineteen time to guide
other blacks to freedom.
34
4. How did Sojourner Truth fight for abolition?
  1. Published an autobiography about her life as a
    slave
  2. Worked on the Underground Railroad to help
    runaway slaves escape to freedom
  3. Encouraged slaves to rise up violently against
    their masters
  4. Made many public speeches against slavery
  5. Published an antislavery newspaper

35
5. How did runaway slaves escape to freedom on
the Underground Railroad?
  1. Worked as laborers on trains until they could
    escape to a free state
  2. Dug tunnels for the railway as they waited for
    the right moment to escape
  3. Moved from house to house at night, working their
    way north
  4. Sneaked onto trains at night as their masters
    slept and fled to freedom

36
6. How did Harriet Tubman fight against slavery?
  1. Read antislavery petitions in Congress
  2. Published an autobiography about her life as a
    slave
  3. Made many public speeches against slavery
  4. Worked on the Underground Railroad to help
    runaway slaves escape to freedom
  5. Published an antislavery newspaper

37
Lesson 14.4b The Womens Suffrage Movement
  • Today we will identify major leaders of the
    womens suffrage movement.

38
Vocabulary
  • suffrage the right to vote
  • womens suffrage movement organized efforts to
    bring the right to vote to women
  • grievance a complaint or a wrong to be righted

39
What We Already Know
  • Women had been very active in the abolition
    movement for years.

40
What We Already Know
  • Many people in that time considered those actions
    inappropriate for women.

41
Underground Railroad
  • Created to help runaway slaves
  • Above ground series of escape routes from the
    South to the North
  • Runaways traveled by night and hid by day in
    places called stations (stables, attics,
    cellars)

42
Harriet Tubman
  • was a conductor who risked her life
  • leading people to freedom on the
  • Underground Railroad
  • she escaped slavery in 1849
  • made 19 dangerous journeys to free
  • enslaved people
  • 40,000 bounty on her head
  • I never lost a passenger.

43
  • Sojourner Truth and the Grimke sisters had given
    public speeches against slavery.

44
Grimke Sisters
  • Grew up on Southern plantation
  • Believed slavery morally wrong
  • Moved to North lectured in public against
    slavery even though women werent suppose to
    lecture in public
  • Helped send petitions to Congress

45
Skilled speakers, writers, and organizers began
to emerge.
  • Sojourner Truth, famous for her abolitionist
    speeches, also spoke powerfully on behalf of
    womens rights.
  • Maria Mitchell was a famous astronomer whose
    Quaker upbringing taught that men and women were
    intellectually equal. She helped found the
    Association for the Advancement of Women in 1873.

46
Sojourner Truth
  • was born a slave
  • Fled in 1827 and lived with Quakers who set her
    free
  • Devout Christian who spoke openly for abolition
    of slavery
  • Drew huge crowds in the North when she spoke

47
Women abolitionists were not always welcome.
  • Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were
    not allowed to speak at the World Anti-Slavery
    Convention in London in 1840, and even had to
    remain seated behind a curtain.

48
Some men were sympathetic, but most men
agreed women should stay out
of public life.
49
Anti-Slavery Newspapers
  • The North Star

Frederick Douglass
50
William Lloyd Garrison
The Liberator
51
Women had few rights in the 1800s.
  • Women couldnt vote, hold public office, or sit
    on juries.
  • In most states, a womans property became her
    husbands when they married.
  • Men who physically abused their wives were rarely
    prosecuted.

52
The Seneca Falls Convention
  • Inspired by their experience at the World
    Anti-Slavery Convention, Lucretia Mott and
    Elizabeth Cady Stanton organized a convention to
    discuss womens rights in 1848.
  • The women wrote out their complaints in a
    document modeled after the Declaration of
    Independence.

53
The Declaration of Sentiments
  • All men and women are created equal.
  • It compared the treatment of women by men to the
    way the British king had treated the colonists.
  • It contained a list of grievances and resolutions
    for change

54
The Declaration of Sentiments
  • The women demanded to be given . . . all the
    rights and privileges which belong to them as
    citizens of the United States.
  • The Declaration of Sentiments ended with a
    call for womens suffrage.

55
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57
7. At the Seneca Falls Convention, what did the
women demand?
  1. A new law outlawing alcohol
  2. Equal pay with men for the same jobs
  3. All the rights and privileges which belong to
    them as U.S. citizens
  4. An end to slavery

58
8. What did the Seneca Falls Conventions
Declaration of Sentiments declare to be true?
  1. It was Gods manifest destiny that women should
    have the right to vote.
  2. Men and women were created equal by God.
  3. It is Gods will that women be given the right to
    vote.
  4. Slavery is a sin in the eyes of God.

59
The resolution on suffrage was
controversial.
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Frederick Douglass
    both argued that voting rights would give women
    the political power they needed to win other
    rights.
  • After much debate and discussion, the suffrage
    resolution narrowly passed.

60
The public was not ready to accept voting rights
for women.
  • Many men and some women believed that women
    were not suited to vote because women could not
    think clearly and independently.

61
The public was not ready to accept voting rights
for women.
  • Church leaders taught that women by nature were
    believed to be dependent on men and subordinate
    to them.

62
The public was not ready to accept voting rights
for women.
  • Many thought that women's place was in the home,
    caring for husband and children.
  • Entry of women into political life might lead to
    disruption of the family.

63
Susan B. Anthony worked in the temperance,
abolition and womens rights movements.
  • Anthony was a skilled organizer who built the
    womens movement into a national organization.
  • In the 1830s, she began fighting for womens
    property rights, as well as equal pay for women.
  • In 1849 she began working against the use of
    alcohol.

64
In 1851, Anthony met Stanton and they began
working together.
  • Because Stanton wanted a more radical women's
    rights platform than just voting rights, the two
    sometimes disagreed.
  • For many years, the two women crossed the nation
    giving speeches and trying to persuade the
    government that society should treat men and
    women equally.

65
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66
Anthony would give 64 of her 86 years of life to
various social movements.
  • She participated in the founding of several
    womens rights organizations until 1900, when she
    retired.
  • Her work led to her commemoration on a 1 coin
    from 1979 to 1999.

67
  • Womens suffrage would stay out of reach until
    August 18, 1920 when the 19th
    Amendment was approved...

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72
9. What were Elizabeth Cady Stantons
contributions to the womens rights movement?
  1. She spoke out in favor of womens rights at the
    World Anti-Slavery Convention.
  2. She helped the American public come to accept
    voting rights for women.
  3. She helped organize the Seneca Falls Convention
    on womens rights.
  4. She helped win passage of the resolution on
    womens suffrage in the Declaration of Sentiments.
  • Write down the letter of every true response to
    this question!

73
10. How did Susan B. Anthony work for womens
rights?
  1. She spoke out in favor of womens rights at the
    World Anti-Slavery Convention.
  2. She built the womens movement into a national
    organization.
  3. She helped organize the Seneca Falls Convention
    on womens rights.
  4. She fought for womens property rights, as well
    as equal pay for women.
  • Write down the letter of every true response to
    this question!
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