American abolitionists

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    These routes went through 14 Northern states and two Canadian provinces, and some led to Mexico or overseas. Canada was a desired destination because Canada's long border allowed many points of access. The railroad was a success due to the help of abolitionists, and other allies/supporters. Many people who helped were “Quakers,” or “Methodists.” Approximately, 100,000 slaves were able to escape through the railroad by 1850. 1850-1860 were the years that the railroad had reached its peak,…

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    degree. To help further the discourse I have gathered an assortment of different sources ranging from a personal letter from a famous historical figure to articles from prominent abolitionist newspapers. Not surprisingly, a great deal of the newspaper sources drew comparisons of Cherokee slavery to that of Euro-Americans. I found that most sources available to me tended to stem from articles written about Cherokee slavery on secondhand accounts and or of recounts of missionaries to the…

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    north of that line (except Missouri) would be Free states. As slavery was beginning to consume the nation, Nat Turner led the bloodiest slave rebellion in American history. William Lloyd Garrison, in an attempt to stamp out slavery, published his antislavery newspaper The Liberator; and Frederick Douglass, a former slave and an abolitionist, helped William Lloyd Garrison publish this newspaper. A key figure in hiding runaway slaves was Harriet Tubman; she worked with the Underground Railroad.…

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    the world, change is constantly happening. Often, it usually takes the voices of many before things can progress onwards. In 19th century America, the still-new country was battling through many issues of its own. A few of these, specifically the Abolitionist and Women’s Rights movements, were a result of the contradiction of the promised rights secured in the Constitution, where “all men are created equal.” While the movement is usually accredited to those more known such as Susan B. Anthony,…

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    during his time. He was a pioneer in the abolitionist movement, even serving as an advisor to the president of the United States. Without his efforts, the United States of America would likely be a very different place than it is today. Douglass faced many struggles throughout his life when standing up for his beliefs. Even when facing these hindrances, he did not lose faith and continued to fight for what he knew was right. Frederick Douglass was a true American hero. Douglass lived quite…

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    in 2003. This book has 317 pages including the List of Abbreviations, Notes, and Index and 261 pages excluding these items. The purpose of this book is to inform the reader of the life of Elizabeth Van Lew while trying to fix how she is viewed in American History. Elizabeth Van Lew was an elite, southern woman born in 1818 in Richmond, Virginia. Her parents were of northern descent, which influenced her political views before, during, and after the Civil War. When Virginia seceded from the…

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    The five most revolutionary changes that took place between 1865 and 1920 are: The women’s suffrage, African-Americans gaining civil liberties, mass immigration, progressivism, and World War I. The most revolutionary of these being African-Americans gaining civil liberties. Others may disagree, by saying that women’s suffrage or World War I was more important and/or revolutionary, but separating an entire ethnic group and treating as anything less than human beings is despicable, and…

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    John Brown’s Raid In October 1859 the abolitionist Brown resurfaced in the East. Since the Pottawatomie Massacre held a furtive existence by earning money and weapons from New England sympathizers. His commitment to abolish the wicked sin and promote racial equality created a fever within the abolitionists. Brown was one of the rare Whites that committed their lives to the black people and lived among them. He believed that he was a powerful tool of God. In carrying out his mission, on October…

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    Power of Knowledge Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) was an influential African-American writer, news paper editor, orator, civil rights activists, and diplomat. He was born into slavery and had a deprived and tragic childhood, which he has described in his Narrative of Frederick Douglass. Once he escaped the suffocating chains of slavery he proved himself an intelligent and powerful figure, and become the symbol of the abolitionist movement, which was blooming in the North during the 19th century.…

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    Frederick Douglass Abuse

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    all African Americans. Though he endured a harsh reality of both abuse and discrimination, Douglass was able to escape and live onto be a prominent man in history. Douglass uses his intellect in order to debunk the mythology of slavery by writing the harsh truth of what African Americans endured. Frederick Douglass makes it a point in his Narrative to show the true side of slavery and rebuke its romantic image. Throughout the Narrative, Douglass shows the true pain African American slaves were…

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