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The Abolitionist Movement. Section 4. Early Opposition to Slavery. By 1830s Americans began to call for an immediate end to slavery in the South Pitted the North against the South. Gradualism. Many Americans opposed slavery from very early days of the Republic
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The Abolitionist Movement Section 4
Early Opposition to Slavery • By 1830s Americans began to call for an immediate end to slavery in the South • Pitted the North against the South
Gradualism • Many Americans opposed slavery from very early days of the Republic • Many were confused on how a nation based on principles of liberty and equality would survive if it continued enslaving human beings • Quakers and Baptists called slavery a sin • Gradualism- belief that slavery had to be ended gradually
Cont. • Gradualism would first stop new slaves from being brought into U.S. • Then it would phase out slavery in the North and Upper South • Finally ending slavery all together in the South • Slaveholders would be compensated for their loss • Gradualism would give the South’s economy time to adjust to the loss of labor
Colonization • Antislavery societies didn’t feel that ending slavery would end racism • Their solution was to send African Americans back to their ancestral homelands in Africa • American Colonization Society (ACS)- formed to move African Americans to Africa • Had support from many, including • James Madison • James Monroe • Henry Clay • Daniel Webster • John Marshall
Cont. • 1821 ACS acquired land in West Africa • Next year they began boarding ships with free African Americans and sending them to Africa • They established a colony which became Liberia • Capital was named Monrovia, after President Monroe • Declared its independence in 1847 and adopted a Constitution designed after U.S. Constitution
Cont. • Cost of transportation was high • ACS had to depend on donation • Moving 1.5 African Americans was nearly impossible • Most considered the U.S. their home and weren’t ready to migrate to another country/continent • Estimated 12,000 were moved between 1821-1860
The New Abolitionists • Read this short section • Abolition
Garrison Stirs a new Movement • Abolitionism gained support for several reasons • Drew most strength from Second Great Awakening • Focused on sin and repentance • Abolitionists believed slavery was a huge evil that the country needed to repent from
Cont. • David Walker, published Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World, was first well-known advocate of abolition • Free African American from North Carolina • Believed that violence and rebellion was only way to end slavery, stated in pamphlet
Cont. • William Lloyd Garrison and a fellow abolitionist, Isaac Knapp, founded the Liberator • Boston’s antislavery newspaper • Called for an immediate end to slavery • Read quote on page 286 • Slavery was immoral and slaveholders were evil • Emancipation- freeing of all enslaved people
Other Abolitionists at Work • Read this section
African American Abolitionists • Like one would think, free African Americans took part in abolitionists movement • African Americans in the North endured much prejudice but they were free • Many African Americans joined with Garrison and his newspaper to help spread and sell the paper • Frederick Douglass was one of the most prominent African American figures in the movement
Cont. • Douglass had escaped slavery in Maryland • Douglass published his own antislavery newspaper, North Star, and wrote an autobiography
The Response to Abolitionism • Read this section
Reaction in the North • Southerners defend the institution of slavery • Key to region’s economy • Many Northerners disapproved of slavery, but even more with extreme abolitionism • Some even warned it would produce a war • Others said it would lead to an extreme influx of freed African Americans to the North • Overwhelming labor and housing markets • North didn’t want to see the South’s economy crumble • Northern banks might lose money that Southerners owed them in loans as well as cotton which fed Northern textile mills
Reaction in the South • To Southerners slavery was vital to the Southern way of life • South mainly agricultural unlike cities in the North • Thomas Dew claimed most slaves didn’t want freedom • Southerners believed papers like the Liberator sparked rebellions
Cont. • Nat Turner- an enslaved preacher, led an uprising killed over 50 Virginians • Southern postal workers refused to deliver abolitionist papers • Very few people believed slavery should come to an immediate end • Garrison and thousands of men and women struggled to keep the movement alive • Became a constant and powerful reminder of how much slavery was dividing the nation