The Beginnings.... David Walker Spread ideas through mending Sailor’s pants Roots of Abolitionism Mennonites Quaker: Benjamin Lundy –Gradual Emancipation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Binghamton East Middle
Advertisements

Objectives Describe efforts in the North to end slavery.
The Antislavery Movement
The Movement to End Slavery
The Antislavery Movement Chapter 9:ii [Image source: America - Pathways to the Present, page 258.]
Fight Against slavery Chapter 12 section 2.
The Abolition Movement
APUSH Review: Famous Abolitionists
The Abolitionist Movement. Slavery all work or service which is exacted from any person under the menace of any penalty and for which the said person.
The Abolitionist Movement
The Abolitionists.  The spirit of reform that swept the United States in the early 1800s included the efforts of abolitionists, reformers who worked.
New Movements in America The Movement to End Slavery
ABOLITIONISM The fight to end slavery Chapter 15, Section 2 Opposing Slavery How did the antislavery movement begin and grow? How did the Underground.
Lesson 16: Reforming American Society Synopsis: Slavery became an explosive issue, as more Americans joined reformers working to put an end to it. Women.
Objective: To examine the mid-19th century abolitionist movement.
Opposing Slavery. Vocabulary American Colonization Society – organization in the early 1800s that proposed to end slavery by helping African Americans.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Abolitionism.
The Movement to End Slavery. I. Abolition A. Ending Slavery 1.In the 1830’s a movement formed seeking abolition – an end of slavery 2.Some wanted emancipation.
Class Notes. 1. The 3/5 compromise- that 3 out of 5 slaves would count toward representation- also each state would decide whether to allow slavery. 2.
Opposition to Slavery. Americans Oppose Slavery In the 1830’s there was an anti-slavery group known as the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition.
 What “unalienable rights” of people were expressed in the Declaration of Independence?  Were enslaved African Americans able to enjoy the rights of.
Section 2: The Antislavery Movement.  South banned antislavery publications & made it illegal to teach slaves how to read.
ABOLITION – the movement to end slavery 1 WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON – abolitionist who publishes a newspaper called The Liberator 2 William Lloyd Garrison.
Abolitionism. Slave Experience Physical Conditions  brutality, degradation, and inhumanity  whippings, executions, and rapes were common.
The Abolition Movement Fighting the Evil of Slavery.
The Movement to End Slavery Section 4 The Movement to End Slavery The Big Idea In the mid-1800s, debate over slavery increased as abolitionists organized.
Opener: Define the following terms in your notebook:
Abolition. Second Great Awakening Christian renewal movement that spread across the United States in the early 1800s.
The Movement to End Slavery The Big Idea In the mid-1800s, debate over slavery increased as abolitionists organized to challenge slavery in the United.
THE ABOLITIONISM: ANTE- BELLUM AMERICA
The Abolitionist Movement. Slavery all work or service which is exacted from any person under the menace of any penalty and for which the said person.
Reform Movements. Impact of the Second Great Awakening Christian renewal movement.
Chapter 14 Section 4: The Movement to End Slavery.
Chapter 12 Section 2 The Fight Against Slavery Describe efforts in the North to end slavery. Discuss the contributions of William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick.
Abolition. Second Great Awakening Christian renewal movement that spread across the United States in the early 1800s. Individuals responsible for his/her.
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.
 The idea that slavery was wrong had two separate elements 1. Political 2. Religious.
Sami Palacz 3/29/16 OPPOSITION TO SLAVERY. The American Colonization Society proposed to end slavery by setting up an independent colony in Africa for.
Chapter 16 section 2  In the 1800’s there was an increasing call for emancipation.  Emancipation-freeing of slaves  One idea was to settle free slaves.
The Abolitionist Movement
The Antislavery Movement
Reformers & Abolitionists
The Movement to End Slavery
Objectives Describe efforts in the North to end slavery.
The Abolition Movement
Chapter 9 – Religion and Reform
Explain the sectionalism that emerged in the first half of the 19th century Benchmark
Fight Against Slavery.
Abolitionism.
Chapter 12 – Section 2 Fight Against Slavery.
CHAPTER 3 LESSON 2.
The Abolitionists Section Two.
Abolitionist Movement
Abolition Movement.
The Movement to End Slavery
Abolitionist Movement
Abolition.
Abolitionist Movement
Abolitionism.
13-4 The Movement to End Slavery
Fight Against Slavery.
The Fight Against Slavery Chapter 8 Section 2 page: 296
The Movement to End Slavery
15.4 The Antislavery Movement pp
Chapter 14, section 2 Abolition of Slavery.
The Abolitionists Section Two.
Social Studies Chapter 12
Early Abolitionism Quakers American Colonization Society
15.4 The Antislavery Movement pp
Presentation transcript:

The Beginnings.... David Walker Spread ideas through mending Sailor’s pants Roots of Abolitionism Mennonites Quaker: Benjamin Lundy –Gradual Emancipation (1821)

The Colonization Liberia ( ) Who? Freed blacks and emancipated slaves Why? Some Abolitionists believed the blacks would never receive equal treatment in America African American reaction? Most were offended, they considered themselves American

Radical Abolitionism William Lloyd Garrison The Liberator (antislavery newspaper) Founded the American Anti-Slavery Society “I do not wish to think, or speak, or write, with moderation.... I am in earnest—I will not equivocate—I will not excuse—I will not retreat a single inch—AND I WILL BE HEARD!

Frederick Douglass Intelligent former slave and great orator –Taught to read by his master’s wife –Escaped at age 21 –Spent his life devoted to the Abolition Movement North Star “They who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters.”

Divisions Among Abolitionists Women’s Participation –Sarah and Angelina Grimké –Sojourner Truth (freed slave) –Believed mission was to spread the “Truth” Race –Blacks felt that White abolitionists looked down on them –Split Garrison and Douglass Tactics –Was slavery Constitutional?

The Underground Railroad

A Network of escape to transport slaves to freedom in the North and Canada Harriet Tubman –“Black Moses” –Led over 300 slaves to safety

Routes to the North The River: –Risky trip up the Mississippi to Illinois –Often patrolled by slave hunters Swamps –Safe from pursuit, but natural dangers to face –Led to routes into Canada Mountains –Forest and caves offered shelter –Served as a pathway to the North

Resistance to Abolitionism North: –Sour relations with the South (harming trade) –Feared competition for jobs –“White Only” communities South –Defend way of life –Prohibited abolitionist mail/ideas “GAG RULE”-prohibited anti-slavery petitions from being read in the house (8 years)