antebellum abolitionists

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Antebellum Abolitionists. Antebellum. The time period before the Civil War. Abolitionist. Someone who is actively involved in abolishing slavery. Fugitive Slave Law. A law which forced people to return runaway slaves. Harriet Tubman. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Antebellum Abolitionists
Page 2: Antebellum Abolitionists

Antebellum

Abolitionists

Page 3: Antebellum Abolitionists

Antebellum The time

period before the Civil War

Page 4: Antebellum Abolitionists

Abolitionist Someone

who is actively involved in abolishing slavery

Page 5: Antebellum Abolitionists

Fugitive Slave Law A law which

forced people to return runaway slaves

Page 6: Antebellum Abolitionists

Harriet Tubman Escape slave

who guided over 300 slaves to freedom through the Underground Railroad; known as “the Moses of her people”

Page 7: Antebellum Abolitionists

William Lloyd Garrison White Boston

publisher who founded an abolitionist newspaper, the Liberator, in 1834, which supported abolitionism, demanded an immediate and no-compromise end to slavery; founded the American Antislavery Society in 1835.

Page 8: Antebellum Abolitionists

Frederick Douglass Former slave of

Maryland; lecturer; published the first of two autobiographies in 1845 and moved to England; returned to the U.S. in 1847 and founded the antislavery newspaper North Star in Rochester, NY; helped slaves escape.

Page 9: Antebellum Abolitionists

John Brown Northerner who led

deadly raid in Kansas in 1855 and a slave revolt at Harpers Ferry, Va. in July 1859 to capture a federal warehouse full of weapons; his plan failed and Brown was tried and hanged; he had no regrets and abolitionists thought he was a hero.

Page 10: Antebellum Abolitionists

Harriet Beecher Stowe Wrote Uncle Tom’s

Cabin in 1852 about the evil and horrors of slavery; she hated slavery and the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850; 300,000 copies of the book were sold in the first year; many Northerners hated Southerners even more and the South considered the book a lie.

Page 11: Antebellum Abolitionists

Sojourner Truth Famous abolitionist

activist, discarded her slave name Isabella Baumfree; her philosophy was that people best show love for God by love and concern for others; she helped hundreds of slaves escape and spread her ideas through the North.

Page 12: Antebellum Abolitionists

Nat Turner Slave from South

Hampton, Va.; literate and religious; led 70 men in a three day slave revolt killing 57 men, women, and children; he was caught; tried; and executed in 1831.

Page 13: Antebellum Abolitionists

David Walker Free black man from North Carolina who wrote a

pamphlet in 1830 titled Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World. His writings were so inspiring and controversial that the entire South banned anything written by him. Walker was found dead shortly after the publication was released.

This phrase "Am I Not a Man and a Brother?" was used excessively in David Walker's writings and speeches. It became a major anti-slavery symbol and was used on a lot of propaganda and merchandise to spread this idea around.

Page 14: Antebellum Abolitionists

Abolitionist Graphic Organizer

Similarities     

(beliefs, values, goals)

Differences     (beliefs, values, goals)

Strategies    Put a star (*) by the strategy you think was most effective and write a brief explanation why.

Influences

Page 15: Antebellum Abolitionists

Similarities Worked to abolish slavery Moral value system that is

opposed to one human owning another human

Brave Dedicated Determined Antebellum time period

Page 16: Antebellum Abolitionists

Differences Former slaves, free blacks,

slaves, whites Men/women Variety of strategies Education North/South/West Wealthy/poor

Page 17: Antebellum Abolitionists

Strategies newspapers novels speeches diplomacy violence underground railroad

Which strategy do you think was most effective? Why?

Page 18: Antebellum Abolitionists

Influences religion – Quakers Moral ethics experience – slavery, family

laws, Constitution, political actions, court cases

Page 19: Antebellum Abolitionists

How were the beliefs of the European settlers similar to the abolitionists? Which

European belief was a contradiction?

Freedom, equality for all people, religious

Contradiction = Europeans instituted slavery in the America’s

Page 20: Antebellum Abolitionists

What principles of the Declaration of Independence and Constitution of the United States contradicted slavery?

Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; all men are created equal; freedom; democracy

Page 21: Antebellum Abolitionists

How do you think the diversity of the abolitionists contributed to the success of the anti-slavery

movement? (clue: think of the Civil Rights Movement)

Society takes notice of human movements that involve a diverse aspect of humanity. Diversity in people, location, and strategies shows the strength of a movement. Without a non-violent approach, it probably would not have been successful.

Page 22: Antebellum Abolitionists

Why was the pro-slavery movement so strong?

MONEY! International competition, pride in region, importance of cotton

Page 23: Antebellum Abolitionists

Name four groups that profited from slavery.

(try for 6)

African traders European traders Auctioneers plantation owner (labor and property) railroads textile owner textile worker