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Chapter 9: Working for Reform

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Title: Chapter 9: Working for Reform


1
Chapter 9 Working for Reform
Section 3 The Crusade for Abolition
Pages 297-302
2
The Crusade for Abolition
  • EARLY OPPONENTS OF SLAVERY
  • Many Americans who were involved in reform
    efforts such as the Second Great Awakening and
    temperance movement believed that the institution
    of slavery should be abolished in the United
    States
  • During the colonial period, the Quakers were
    among the first Americans to speak out against
    slavery as a violation of religious principles
  • Many abolitionists argued that slavery
    contradicted the fundamental argument of the
    Declaration of Independence that all men are
    created equal

3
The Crusade for Abolition
  • EARLY OPPONENTS OF SLAVERY
  • Colonization (297-298)
  • Most northern states had abolished slavery by the
    early 1800s.
  • Some northerners supported a plan by the,
    American Colonization Society to send freed
    African Americans to Africa to found new
    settlements. In 1822 the society established
    Monrovia, the capital city of a settlement later
    called Liberia, on the west coast of Africa
  • Some white southerners supported colonization as
    a way to rid the South of free African Americans,
    whom they feared would incite slave rebellions

4
The Crusade for Abolition
  • EARLY OPPONENTS OF SLAVERY
  • Colonization (297-298)
  • Most northern supporters of colonization
    genuinely wanted to end slaver. Most people in
    both groups, however, shared the prejudice that
    African Americans were inferior to whites and
    would never fit into American society

5
The Crusade for Abolition
  • EARLY OPPONENTS OF SLAVERY
  • African American Reaction (298)
  • Many northern free African Americans opposed the
    American Colonization Societys plan to banish
    them for America
  • At first, only free African Americans chose to
    resettle in Liberia.
  • Despite the discrimination that free African
    Americans faced, few wanted to leave the United
    States.
  • By 1830 just some 1,400 African Americans had
    settled in Liberia
  • Since it was clear that colonization was not
    popular, many abolitionists who had once
    supported the colonization plan began to turn
    against it

6
The Crusade for Abolition
  • EARLY OPPONENTS OF SLAVERY
  • African American Reaction (298)
  • It was clear that colonization was not popular,
    many abolitionists who had once supported
    colonization now were against it
  • African Americans began organizing among
    themselves to end slavery
  • By 1826 they ad formed more than 143 antislavery
    societies with the mission of freeing their
    brothers in chains.
  • In 1827 Samuel Cornish and John Russwurm started
    the first African American newspaper, Freedoms
    Journal, to proclaim opposition to slavery

7
The Crusade for Abolition
  • ABOLITIONISTS CALL FOR ACTION (298-299)
  • Over time, activists began shifting their focus
    from colonization to abolition, working to
    immediately end slavery.
  • Two important publications, the Appeal and the
    Liberator, marked the start of a bold, energetic,
    and more organized attack on the institution of
    slavery
  • In 1829 David Walker, a free African American
    businessman for Boston published the Appeal to
    the Colored Citizens of the World,
  • He demanded immediate, universal abolition and
    called on free African Americans and slaves to
    take action violent action if necessary to
    gain freedom and equality
  • William Lloyd Garrison, a white New England
    journalist to action against slavery
  • William Lloyd Garrison, with financial backing
    from wealthy African Americans and white
    abolitionists, launched the Liberator, an
    abolitionist newspaper
  • William Lloyd Garrison insisted that slavery was
    a sin and a crime because it contradicted both
    the Bible and the Declaration of Independence

8
The Crusade for Abolition
  • VOICES OF THE AMERICAN ANIT-SLAVERY SOCIETY
    (300-301)
  • In 1833 prominent black and white abolitionists
    formed the American Anti-Slavery Society the
    first national antislavery organization to be
    devoted to immediate abolition and racial
    equality
  • Although the society excluded women from formal
    membership, many women assumed important roles in
    the societys efforts to abolish slavery

9
The Crusade for Abolition
  • VOICES OF THE AMERICAN ANIT-SLAVERY SOCIETY
    (300-301)
  • Frederick Douglass a fugitive slave from
    Maryland
  • He became the most prominent escaped slave to
    speak out publicly against slavery.
  • Douglass used his considerable skills as a writer
    to fight slavery. His auto-biography, Narrative
    of the Life of Frederick Douglass (1845), became
    a classic critique of the institution of slavery.
  • Douglass published and anti-slavery newspaper,
    the North Star
  • Douglasss wife, Anna Murray Douglass, also
    actively supported the abolitionist cause.
  • The Douglasss used their home in Rochester, New
    York, as a depot for the Underground Railroad,
    she helped runaway slaves flee to Canada and
    freedom

10
The Crusade for Abolition
  • VOICES OF THE AMERICAN ANIT-SLAVERY SOCIETY
    (300-301)
  • The Grimke Sisters
  • Angelina and Sarah Grimke were two of the most
    effective antislavery activists they were from
    South Carolina
  • After becoming Quakers, they decided they could
    no longer live in a society that endorsed slavery
  • In her 1836 pamphlet, Appeal to the Christian
    Women of the South, Angelina Grimke, tried to
    convince other southern women to join her cause
  • As a result of this essays popularity, the
    Grimkes were among the first women to speak on
    behalf of the American Antislavery Society

11
The Crusade for Abolition
  • PROBLEMS FOR ABOLITIONISTS (301-302)
  • VIOLENT RESISTENCE
  • As the antislavery movement gained strength in
    the 1830s, violence against abolitionists
    increased.
  • An angry mob attacked and nearly killed William
    Lloyd Garrison in Boston in 1835
  • Elijah Lovejoy, an abolitionist editor in Alton,
    Illinois, was murdered in 1837 as he tried to
    prevent a mob from destroying his printing press
  • NORTHERN opposition to abolition arose from fear
    and prejudice against African Americans. Many
    Northern wage earners feared competing with free
    African Americans for jobs.
  • In addition, northern merchants and mill owners
    were afraid that abolition would disrupt cotton
    production

12
The Crusade for Abolition
  • PROBLEMS FOR ABOLITIONISTS (301-302)
  • The Movement Splinters (301-302)
  • Abolitionists also faced divisions within their
    movement
  • William Lloyd Garrison, who frequently attacked
    churches and the government for accepting
    slavery, drew some criticism as his condemnations
    became more fierce
  • Garrisons stubborn refusal to use less-offensive
    tactics angered moderate abolitionists, who
    supported slower change through the ballot box

13
THE END
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