|
Find more facts and information on our topic page about
abolitionists
|
abolitionists
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
abolitionists in U.S. history, particularly in the three decades before the Civil War, members of the movement that agitated for the compulsory emancipation of the slaves. Abolitionists are distinguished from free-soilers, who opposed the further extension of slavery, but the groups came to act together politically and otherwise in the antislavery cause. The abolitionist movement was one of high moral purpose and courage; its uncompromising temper made the slavery question the prime concern of national politics and hastened the demise of slavery in the United States (see also slavery ).
Evangelical Influences
Although antislavery sentiment had existed during the American Revolution, and abolitionist Benjamin Lundy began his work early in the 19th cent., the abolition movement did not reach crusading proportions until the 1830s. One of its mainsprings was the growing influence of evangelical religion, with its religious fervor, its moral urgency to end sinful practices, and its vision of human perfection. The preaching of Lyman Beecher and Nathaniel Taylor in New England and the religious revivals that began in W New York state in 1824 under Charles G. Finney and swept much of the North, created a powerful impulse toward social reform—emancipation of the slaves as well as temperance, foreign missions, and women's rights. Outstanding among Charles Finney's converts were Theodore D. Weld and the brothers Arthur Tappan and Lewis Tappan .
The Antislavery Movement
The Tappan brothers and William Lloyd Garrison , who began publishing an abolitionist journal, The Liberator, in 1831, were the principal organizers in Dec., 1833, at Philadelphia, of the American Anti-Slavery Society. The primary concern of the society was the denunciation of slavery as a moral evil; its members called for immediate action to free the slaves. In 1835 the society launched a massive propaganda campaign. It flooded the slave states with abolitionist literature, sent agents throughout the North to organize state and local antislavery societies, and poured petitions into Congress demanding the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia.
The abolitionists were at first widely denounced and abused. Mobs attacked them in the North; Southerners burned antislavery pamphlets and in some areas excluded them from the mails; and Congress imposed the gag rule to avoid considering their petitions. These actions, and the murder of abolitionist editor Elijah P. Lovejoy in 1837, led many to fear for their constitutional rights. Abolitionists shrewdly exploited these fears and antislavery sentiment spread rapidly in the North. By 1838, more than 1,350 antislavery societies existed with almost 250,000 members, including many women.
Although abolitionists united in denouncing the African venture of the American Colonization Society , they disagreed among themselves as to how their goal might be best reached. Garrison believed in moral suasion as the only weapon; he and his followers also argued that women be allowed to participate fully in antislavery societies, thus disturbing more conservative members. When the Garrisonians passed such a resolution at the society's 1840 convention, a large group led by the Tappan brothers withdrew and formed the American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. The abolitionists were never again united as a single movement.
Advocates of direct political action founded (1840) the Liberty party; James G. Birney was its presidential candidate in 1840 and 1844. Writers such as John Greenleaf Whittier and orators such as Wendell Phillips gave their services to the cause, while Frederick Douglass and other freed or escaped slaves also took to the lecture platform.
An antislavery lobby was organized in 1842, and its influence grew under Weld's able direction. Abolitionists hoped to convert the South through the churches, until the withdrawal of Southern Methodists (1844) and Baptists (1845) from association with their Northern brethren. After the demise of the Liberty party, the political abolitionists supported the Free-Soil party in 1848 and 1852, and in 1856 they voted with the Republican party.
The passage of more stringent fugitive slave laws in 1850 increased abolitionist activity on the Underground Railroad . Uncle Tom's Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe , became an effective piece of abolitionist propaganda, and the Kansas question further aroused both North and South. The culminating act of extreme abolitionism occurred in the raid of John Brown on Harpers Ferry. After the opening of the Civil War insistent abolitionist demands for immediate freeing of the slaves, supported by radical Republicans in Congress, pushed President Lincoln in his decision to issue the Emancipation Proclamation .
Bibliography
See L. Filler, The Crusade against Slavery, 1830-1860 (1960); D. L. Dumond, Antislavery: The Crusade for Freedom in America (1961, repr. 1964); L. Lader, The Bold Brahmins: New England's War against Slavery (1961); M. Duberman, ed., The Antislavery Vanguard (1965); A. Lutz, Crusade for Freedom: Women in the Antislavery Movement (1968); A. S. Kraditor, Means and Ends in American Abolitionism (1969); B. Quarles, Black Abolitionists (1969); L. Perry and M. Fellman, ed., Antislavery Reconsidered (1979); R. J. Blackett, Building an Antislavery Wall (1983); H. Aptheker, Abolitionism: A Revolutionary Movement (1989); P. Goodman, Of One Blood (1998).
Find more facts and information related to the .
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)
|
Sister Societies: Women's Antislavery Organizations in Antebellum America.(Slavery and the Peculiar Solution: A History of the American Colonization Society)(Book review)
; ...organizations, antislavery societies, or similar institutions...Women's Anti-Slavery Organizations...the debate over slavery's future in America...emergence of female antislavery societies in the northern...speaking out against slavery, critics contended...members of female ...
Read more
|
|
Racial slavery in the New World was not accidental BOOKS & IDEAS
; ...05-13-2006 Inhuman BondageThe Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New WorldBy David Brion Davis440...so long ago that few Americans spoke of slavery, least of all historians. Except at a...discussion of the Civil War, but even then slavery made only a brief appearance since everyone...
Read more
|
|
Slavery's stain still with us
; Slavery's stain still with us As the real deal, the idea of reparations for America's chattel slavery that ended morethan a century ago promises more problems...hustle -- and for some, it is just that -- argues that slavery was so far back in the long ago that no living victims...
Read more
|
|
John Leland: evolving views of slavery, 1789-1839: in 1789, the General Committee of Virginia Baptists turned to Massachusetts native John Leland to craft a statement concerning slavery.(Biography)
; ...Baptists, Leland produced a stirring statement against slavery. (1) Slavery is the violent deprivation of the rights of nature...state of Massachusetts, called the institution of slavery humane, just and benevolent, and argued for the rights...
Read more
|
|
The Metaphor of Slavery in the Writings of the Early Church: From the New Testament to the Beginning of the Fifth Century
; The Metaphor of Slavery in the Writings of the Early Church...Christ have received not a spirit of slavery but rather a spirit of adoption as sons...Paul understands marriage as a form of slavery, and that Rom 1:1 is evidence that when...
Read more
|
|
Teaching Slavery: Overcoming Artificial Barriers to Past, Present.(Brief Article)
; ...discussions of reparations to African Americans for slavery prompted me to reflect on the ways I have been taught about slavery in graduate school. My educational experiences with the study of slavery have varied according to the professor s chosen...
Read more
|
|
Slavery in the Development of the Americas.(Book review)
; Slavery in the Development of the Americas. Edited by David Eltis...leading figure in the historiography of the economics of slavery in the Americas. In 1974, Engerman, with Robert W. Fogel...the Cross, a model of quantitative analysis applied to slavery in the United States. The authors argued that ...
Read more
|
|
Emancipation perturbation: the mass media wrestle with slavery.(Brief Article)
; Slavery is stepping into the spotlight. This Friday marks the release...mark a bold new approach in popular-culture depictions of slavery. Instead of showing what happened, they seek to show what...their owners--were feeling. The 1998 wave of mass media slavery projects has been a long time coming, ...
Read more
|
|
REMOVING BLINDERS ABOUT SLAVERY WILL HELP US SEE BRIGHTER FUTURE.(Editorial)(Column)
; ...for Oprah Winfrey to do a movie about slavery. She felt she needed to live it, too...other African Americans of my generation, slavery always has been an intriguing mystery...that my great-grandparents were born in slavery, that they worked cotton fields in Alabama...
Read more
|
|
Slavery and the Content of History
; SLAVERY AND THE CONTENT OF HISTORY As we move rapidly into the...celebration of the 150th anniversary of the abolition of slavery. Several conferences and festivals on the subject have...demands for an apology from those countries that took part in slavery and for financial and/or material compensation as ...
Read more
|
For more facts and information,
see all related premium articles
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
abolitionists
abolitionists Militant opponents of slavery in 19th-century USA. In the first two decades of the 19th century, there was only a handful of individual abolitionists, but thereafter, fired by religious revivalism, the abolition movement became a strong political force. Prominent...
Read more
|
|
abolitionists
abolitionists Person who sought to end slavery . In the UK, William Wilberforce headed the Clapham Sect that led to the cessation...abolitionist novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) sold more than 300,000 copies in its first year. The militant actions of abolitionists culminated in the raid on the US arsenal at Harper's ...
Read more
|
|
Abolitionists
Abolitionists in the 19th century, supporters of the abolition of the slave-trade; the term is recorded from the early 19th century.
Read more
|
|
abolitionist
abolitionist n. a person who favors the abolition of a practice or institution, especially capital punishment or (formerly) slavery. abolitionism n.
Read more
|
|
Abolitionist
Abolitionist, name applied to one who aimed at or advocated the abolition of slavery. The term may be found at least as early as 1790, during the period when Thomas Clarkson, William Wilberforce, and the younger Pitt attacked the slave trade. In 1807 the British Parliament abolished slave traffic
Read more
|