Abolition Movement Who was the first to publicly oppose slavery in America?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
5th Grade Civil War Study Guide
Advertisements

What were the primary tensions over slavery?
Unit IV Part 2 Temperance, Women’s Rights, Abolition.
5.1: Sectionalism from  Follow along in the student packet: “Content students MUST KNOW to be successful on the GHSGT” (pg )
8.2.  Slavery became an explosive issue, as Southerners increasingly defended it, while Northerners increasingly attacked it.  In addition, the abolition.
Slavery; IB Themes / Questions
The Movement to End Slavery
Chapter 5 The Road to Secession and the Seeds of War
Abraham Lincoln 1. Mixed beliefs about slavery 2. Slavery was an injustice 3. Did not interfere with slavery in South 4. Against expansion of slavery in.
Fight Against slavery Chapter 12 section 2.
By: Reese Slone, Jacob Owens, Madison Linville, Nick Zimmerman, Anna Navarro.
A HOUSE DIVIDED. During the early 1800’s, America was socially split into two countries The main issue of division was Slavery As new states joined the.
8.4.  Society in the early 1800’s had a rigid gender hierarchy  Women were expected to stay out of politics and were given few opportunities for public.
Radical vs Moderate Abolitionists
The Civil War: Important People
Aim: Who were the leaders of the Abolition movement?
Importance of Individuals in American Reform Project- Frederick Douglass By: Leah Hoogerhyde.
Daniela Masiariková Oktáva 2010/2011. Slavery The American Civil War Abolitionism Antislavery societies Abolitionists Ku Klux Klan.
Westward Expansion: Abolition and Suffrage SOL USI.8d: The student will demonstrate knowledge of westward expansion and reform in America from 1801 to.
Unit 10 – The Civil Rights Movement
Abolitionism. First Great Awakening (c ) 1794 French Revolution abolishes slavery Second Great Awakening (c ) Napoleon reinstates slavery.
CH. 5-3: BIRTH OF THE AMERICAN REFORM MOVEMENT Women were not permitted to vote in federal elections until They were very active in reform movements.
The Abolitionist Movement
Lesson 16: Reforming American Society Synopsis: Slavery became an explosive issue, as more Americans joined reformers working to put an end to it. Women.
Abolitionist/Suffrage Movements. Abolitionist Those people that opposed and wanted to “abolish” slavery.
Successes and Failures of the Abolition Movement.
Leaders of the Abolition Movement, Part II Mr. Foster CCMS Social Sciences.
Life and Involvement in Social Reforms of the 19 th Century in the United States of America By Erin Sharkey, Olivia Nakamura, and Pablo Mendoza Mrs. Schartner.
Abolition Movement Frederick Douglass John Brown Harriet Tubman.
The Abolition Movement Fighting the Evil of Slavery.
Abolitionist/Suffrage Movements. Abolitionist Those people that opposed and wanted to “abolish” slavery.
Radical Reform: Abolitionist Movement Beginnings, Vision and Shifts in Strategies.

Take a it! 1.The time period before the Civil War was known as the _________________ period. 2.In the 1800s, more and more whites began to support.
South Carolina’s concern over the federal policy regarding tariffs is known as the what crisis? Nullification Crisis.
THE ABOLITIONISM: ANTE- BELLUM AMERICA
Unit 3 Resistance to Slavery Divides the Nation Abolitionists, both black and white, fight against the continuance of slavery. This struggle will ultimately.
Please Read. What are the events that led to the secession of the South?
Abolition. Second Great Awakening Christian renewal movement that spread across the United States in the early 1800s. Individuals responsible for his/her.
JOHN C. CALHOUN Pro - Slavery Southern political leader Strong supporter of slavery Argued states NOT Congress had the right to determine whether or not.
OPPOSITION TO SLAVERY By: Susan Gembic. SLAVERY ENDS IN THE NORTH In 1780, Pennsylvania became the first state to pass a law that gradually eliminated.
Abolitionist/Anti-Slavery. Antislavery Movement ; most preferred religious education, political action, boycotts of slave-harvested goods, or downright.
Reform Movements. Influence of the Second Great Awakening It was movement of Christian renewal that began in the 1790s and became widespread in the U.S.
The Abolition Movement. Early Abolitionism ‘Abolitionists’ advocated the end of slavery American Colonization Society (ACS) –Founded in Virginia in 1817.
Antebellum Abolitionists
do now: copy notes for abolitionists you didn’t get (add to 603)
5/17 Today’s Agenda DO NOW: take handouts and have hw out to be checked Homework: #36 due Friday Vocab/Test May 24th Aim: How did the abolitionists make.
The Crusade Against Slavery
AP United States History Unit 4 The Peculiar Institution of Slavery
SOL REVIEW African-American History
ABOLITIONIST MOVEMENT
The Crusade Against Slavery
Slavery in American History ( )
APUSH Review: Abolitionism
The Abolitionist Movement,
The following slides should be reviewed on your OWN TIME
Abolition.
Unit 3 Resistance to Slavery Divides the Nation
The South and the Slavery Controversy
The Civil War: Important People
Abolitionist Movement
Slavery.
The Fight Against Slavery Chapter 8 Section 2 page: 296
___________________________________
Essential Question (U.S. Standard 8)
Essential Question: How did the issue of slavery contribute to sectionalism in the late antebellum era? Warm-Up Question: Use the scale visual on the next.
Slavery; IB Themes / Questions
Early Abolitionism Quakers American Colonization Society
Abolition If the Union must be dissolved slavery is precisely the question upon which it ought to break John Quincy Adams.
Presentation transcript:

Abolition Movement Who was the first to publicly oppose slavery in America?

Start of the movement… William Lloyd Garrison is to many the personification of the American Abolitionist movement.

Initially a proponent of moderate abolitionism Garrison soon began more vehement [intense] attacks on slavery. He published the first issue of the Liberator (1831), declaring slavery an abomination in God's sight. demanding immediate emancipation, and vowing never to be silenced.

The Liberator draws an audience. The Liberator, in continuous weekly publication through 1865, widely regarded as an authoritative voice of radical Yankee social reform in general.

Garrisons Philosophy Always a believer in "moral persuasion," Garrison generally insisted that slavery would be abolished only when the mass of white Americans experienced a revolution in conscience. Therefore, he called for sustained programs of agitation that aimed to convert grass-roots public opinion in favor of black emancipation and race equality.

Garrison pushes forward alone. Until the late 1830s, Garrison cooperated easily with most other major abolitionists, but by 1840 important figures like James G. Birney and Elizur Wright, Jr., had broken with him. Others, however, such as Wendell Phillips and Lydia Maria Child, defended Garrison's radical doctrines and took over the society.

Garrison took the even more controversial position that Northerners should disavow all allegiance to the Union, since the Constitution protected slavery. This thought ultimately resulted in the Civil War.

During the 1850s, Garrison became less opposed to violence as a means for ending slavery. He condoned violent resistance to the 1850 Fugitive Slave Law. hailed John Brown's 1859 raid on Harper's Ferry announced his support for war against the seceding Southern states.

After Garrison Harriet Breecher-Stowe ( ) Ida B. Wells Barnett (1890s-20th) Frederick Douglass (1840s) W.E.B. DuBois (early 20th Century) Booker T. Washington (1890s)