American abolitionists

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    perpetually gazing on January first, 1863. Harriet Tubman, Harriet Tubman was an American abolitionist, supportive, and a prepared scout and spy for the Assembled States Armed power in the midst of the American Civil War Underground railroad, The Underground Railroad was a system of mystery courses and safe houses set up in the United States amid the right on time to-mid nineteenth century, and utilized by African-American slaves to get away. Alliance, was a self-broadcasted country of 11…

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    along with several others, created the American Anti-Slavery Society. These abolitionist demanded uncompensated emancipation of slaves during 1833. Lucretia Mott was a very influential Female leader and Mott not only helped in creating the AASS, but she also helped in the founding of the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society in 1833 and along with Elizabeth Cady Stanton, they would create The Women’s Rights Movement. This organization included African Americans and white female leaders…

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    influencing their choices every day. Events have occurred, laws have been passed, and wars have even been fought in order to secure safety for men, women, and their nations. However, it does not take away the freedoms of humans. Henry Louis Mencken, American essayist and social critic, believes that the average would sacrifice freedom for safety, which is false. Men and women need to take risks because no risk amounts to no reward. If people never took risks to ensure their freedom, humans…

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    1. Abraham Lincoln, born on February 12, 1809 in Hodgenville, Kentucky, is most known for being the sixteenth president of the United States. The time in which he was president was a hard time in American History, The Civil War. Before Lincoln had become president, he served as a legislator in Illinois; he also ran for U.S. Senate but he lost to Stephen Douglas. It was a memorable time in history because Lincoln went on to become the very first Republican president in the United States. Not only…

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    voting rights to poor whites but denied them to blacks. In Rhode Island, he began to recollect of old friends and worked at home and abroad to gain the support for Douglass’s battle against American slavery. In the spring of the year 1843, he accompanied with other abolitionist agents, who were in the American Anti-Slavery Society to travel on tours of New England and in some of the Middle…

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    extremely controversial in 1854 when Kansas and Nebraska, two extremely profitable states in the cotton industry, adopted the policy. The widespread approval of popular sovereignty also resulted in a dramatic rise in the acceptability of the northern abolitionist movement. Despite the temporary reprieve provided by the compromises, the tremendous economic opportunities of western expansion…

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    overturn and abolish it” (Helper)! Helper emphasizes the importance of patriotism to abolitionists as they love their country, freedom, and the American dream, but detests the concept of slavery. Helper states that the most important thing a Southerner can do is to “declare himself an unqualified and uncompromising abolitionist” (Helper). He encourages non-slaveholders of the South to join him with other abolitionists in patriotic undertakings to liberate the plentiful territory of the South,…

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    mutinous states were deemed legally free, but it excluded the slaves in the states that were cooperating with Lincoln. Until 1864. In 1864, Abraham Lincoln won the Presidential election with overwhelming numbers. The majority of Congress were abolitionists; therefore, in July of 1864 emancipation for all of the slaves became a constitutional right. During the 1864 presidential campaign slavery did not seem to be a centralized debate topic. But, when Lincoln got elected he,…

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    Annotated Bibliography Primary Sources: "1789: Constitution of the United States." Panchyk, Richard. Keys to American History: Understanding Our Most Important Historic Documents. Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2008. When I read through this, I found that Lincoln had used the Constitution, a pro-slavery document, to help his cause against slavery. This document helped me see what Lincoln was thinking instead of what people thought 70 years before then. I’m going to use this source in my…

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    time, the abolitionist movement was gaining momentum, especially in the North. As a young adult, Grimke left her luxurious life in the South and moved to the North to fight for civil rights. She quickly became one of the most revolutionary abolitionists of the time. Throughout her time in the public eye, she fought on the side of a multitude causes. Grimke was an advocate for civil rights, suffrage, and the women's rights movement. Nevertheless, her main work was in service to the abolitionist…

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