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Fishbowl Discussions Abolition Movement – How would you end slavery? Goals: Talk about history in an informed & analytical way Listen & Talk to each other.

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Presentation on theme: "Fishbowl Discussions Abolition Movement – How would you end slavery? Goals: Talk about history in an informed & analytical way Listen & Talk to each other."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fishbowl Discussions Abolition Movement – How would you end slavery? Goals: Talk about history in an informed & analytical way Listen & Talk to each other Question obvious conclusions, press each other to learn more and understand ideas in new ways

2 American Anti-Slavery Society Questions to consider: 1.Will the AASS contribute funds for colonization and allow its name to be used in this effort? 2.Should the AASS spend time and money opposing racial discrimination in the North in addition to slavery in the South? 3.Should the AASS publicly endorse Seneca Falls and the betterment of women? 4.Should the AASS support armed attempts to stop the Fugitive Slave Act? 5.Should the AASS support John Brown with money and/or guns?

3 Slavery’s Global Context The Case of West Africa Squadron & William Wilberforce

4 West Af Squad & Will Wilberforce Britain outlawed the slave trade in 1807 – West Africa Squadron was a group of British Royal Navy vessels that patrolled the African coast capturing slave ships and freeing African slaves Britain outlawed slavery in 1833 – William Wilberforce was an evangelical Christian & member of British parliament who led call to abolish slavery in the British empire on moral grounds What does the existence of the West Africa Squadron say about 19 th c. slavery in the U.S.?

5 Views of Slavery in South

6 Southern Slave Owning Families What does the distribution of slave ownership in the South say about 19 th c. slavery in the U.S.? 75% of Southern families owned NO slaves Of the remaining 25%, 2/3 owned fewer than 10 slaves

7 Southern Slavery Planter aristocracy Small farm slave owners Subsistence farmers w/o slaves – Often stoutest defenders of slavery: American dream of upward mobility Wanted to maintain racial superiority Mountain whites of Appalachians – Resented planter aristocracy, blacks, & problems that came with slavery – Felt greater loyalty to North

8 American Abolition Movement

9 Abolition Fuelled by 2 nd Great Awakening, emphasized the harshness of Southern planters – Breakers = harsh physical punishers assigned to whip & break black resistance Vs. – Slaves as a commodity and investment = most dangerous work often assigned to Irish day laborers – Likely a compromised position Often said that “The South hated the race but loved the individual, while the North loved the race but hated the individual.”

10 Abolition Early, gradual approaches – American Colonization Society: which advocated gradually freeing slaves, compensating planters, & sending African Americans back to colonize Africa

11 Richard (Bishop) Allen – Started African American ministry & convention of free black – pushed for move to Canada

12 Abolition Later, radical approaches – William Lloyd Garrison Uncompromising, white reformer inspired by 2 nd Great Awakening to write incendiary newspaper, The Liberator

13 William Lloyd Garrison Discussed slavery as moral issue rather than economic Believed it undermined republican values

14 Abolition Later, radical approaches – William Lloyd Garrison Uncompromising, white reformer inspired by 2 nd Great Awakening to write incendiary newspaper, The Liberator – David Walker Free black who called for slaves to fight to end enslavement & those who didn’t deserved to be enslaved

15 Abolition Later, radical approaches – William Lloyd Garrison Uncompromising, white reformer inspired by 2 nd Great Awakening to write incendiary newspaper, The Liberator – David Walker Free black who called for slaves to end enslavement & those who didn’t deserved to be enslaved – Sojourner Truth Free black woman who spoke of the sin of slavery & religious justification for ending oppression of African Americans & women

16 Sojourner Truth

17 Abolition Later, radical approaches – William Lloyd Garrison Uncompromising, white reformer inspired by 2 nd Great Awakening to write incendiary newspaper, The Liberator – David Walker Free black who called for slaves to end enslavement & those who didn’t deserved to be enslaved – Sojourner Truth Free black woman who spoke of the sin of slavery & religious justification for ending oppression of African Americans & women – Frederick Douglass Free black whose literary & lecture skills made him a popular voice of the struggles of being enslaved

18 Frederick Douglass

19 Fear The Case of Haiti, Nat Turner, & the Amistad

20 Haiti, Nat Turner, & the Amistad Haiti’s successful slave revolution & overthrow of French rule served as a warning to American planters Nat Turner’s violent rebellion in Virginia furthered these fears as an American example Amistad was Spanish slave ship in which slaves successfully rebelled off coast of Cuba and were driven ashore in Long Island before U.S. declared the slaves free & returned them to Africa

21 Impact of Abolition Movement

22 Abolition movement & supporters were wildly unpopular in both North & South, and among politicians & citizens But, movement helped Northerners cast South as un-free and want to prevent slavery’s spread to new territory


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