The Abolitionist Movement: US War On Slavery

Words: 684
Pages: 3

Bao-Khang Ngo
HIST 1301
T/Thu 8:00AM- 9:30AM
U.S Abolitionist Movement
U.S War on Slavery
The abolitionist movement had its roots in Great Britain during the American Revolution and gradually evolved into a more radical form of reform that drastically divided the nation as no other issue did before. The prime basis of the abolitionist movement started with no other than the Atlantic Slave Trade where slaves were tormented and brutally mistreated on the ships by the crews. Upon reaching the colonies, slaves were then forced to endure the hardships of labor by their white owners who deprived them of any rights as humans. Even though some whites knew their actions were unjust and immoral, not many opposed the concept of slavery itself due to the profit and benefits that came with slave labor in the plantations.
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Any forms of anti-slavery was either the Quakers and Christians who believed that “All men are created equal” or the African Colonization Society who sought to return African Americans back to Africa which they thought was the only way for blacks to obtain freedom. It was not until the 1830s when reforms took on a much more radical approach of immediate abolitionism. This abolition movement, along with all its activists, sparked a great change in the different political, social, and economic aspects of the nation itself. Through a thorough analysis of the initial failures of the events in the anti-slavery movement and how these failures in turn contributed to the abolishment of slavery, it is reasonable to conclude that the abolition movement was in fact a