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The Missouri Compromise

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Tracie Lamb Due 12/3/16 Strategies Delmendo ID While the Missouri Compromise in 1820 was at least a step in the right direction, it became clear that slavery would still not be accepted by the North. Working with the abolitionists were many former slaves and those of mixed race, who may have not personally been slaves, but still noticed the strong sense of racial inequalities in the United States. A great number of abolitionists took to writing, fueled by the eruption of the printing press into popularity with the Industrial Revolution. Included from a list of many is Rochester reporter Frederick Douglass; the creator of the first Native American newspaper, Elias Boudinot; and William Apess, a mixed-race Pequot Methodist minister. Of these, Frederick Douglass is most well-known, but Apess was most effective of these in his time. Beginning chronologically with Elias Boudinot, a Cherokee convert to Christianity, Boudinot’s speech “Address to the Whites” requests American financial aid to his tribe to purchase printing equipment and begin a school. He remarks that these funds are necessary as the Cherokee can become civilized, with financial and spiritual assistance. While the “Address to the Whites” was apparently successful in generating the funds requested (Pulley), his argument unfortunately

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