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The Abolition Movement

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Slavery in the early United States was widespread and a cheap means of labor for the owners of plantations and it was also a major influence in the shaping of the United States. The United States in the three decades before the Civil War was covered down with various reform movements. (Berlet, Ira Lee. 2015). Inspired by the religious revivals of the Second Great Awakening, these reform movements sought to improve or perfect human society by eliminating any evil the reformers believed was an affront to the moral and spiritual health of the nation. (Berlet, Ira Lee. 2015). One of the key issues reformers attacked was the abolition of slavery. As late as the mid-1700s, most organized Western religions or denominations had failed to discourage …show more content…

The abolition movement came about in an attempt to end slavery in the United States. However, abolitionism failed to change society's fundamental inequalities and injustices faced by Black Americans. The movement that William Lloyd Garrison and others launched, and that thousands of activists kept alive for over 30 years, was instrumental in the fight to end slavery and in the eventual passage of the Thirteenth Amendment. (Berlet, Ira Lee. 2015). The first large-scale, organized emancipation movement appeared in 1817 with the creation of the American Colonization Society (ACS). Supporters of the American Colonization Society included Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, John Marshall, and James Monroe. In 1820, the ACS helped in establishing the country of Liberia which it saw as a means of providing a foundation for American free blacks to colonize. (Berlet, Ira Lee. 2015). Though it may have been a good idea, many blacks viewed it as a means to rid the United States of its free black population and most African Americans rejected the notion because they were, in their own right, American …show more content…

More than any other event, the American Civil War went far in defining a United States that had been imperfectly and incompletely shaped by its first 70 years. (Heidler, David S. and Jeanne T. Heidler. 2015). For seven decades, the presence of slavery in a republic founded on principles of human freedom increasingly confused the political system and unraveled the social fabric. (Heidler, David S. and Jeanne T. Heidler. 2015). Although slavery in the South had given rise to antislavery movements in the North as early as the American Revolution, a fresh vigor characterized the abolition movement in the 1830s. Arguments over the western territories clouded the country into a series of disruptive crises. Each was settled with an unsatisfying compromise that left most Southerners feeling materially cheated and many Northerners morally embarrassed. (Heidler, David S. and Jeanne T. Heidler. 2015). Efforts to organize the Midwest region called the Nebraska Territory in 1854, led to the ill-conceived Kansas-Nebraska Act. It was yet another attempt designed to secure Southern support for the organization of what by prior agreement would have been a free territory. Kansas and Nebraska were created from the region under the principal of popular sovereignty, which was to say that each territory would decide for itself whether to admit or prohibit slavery. (Heidler, David S.

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