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  1. Oct 16, 2021 · Role of Quaker Groups . At the same time, Quaker groups in America began working in earnest to abolish slavery in the United States. The first organized group formed to end enslavement in America began in Philadelphia in 1775, and the city was a hotbed of abolitionist sentiment in the 1790s, when it was the capital of the United States.

  2. Oct 27, 2009 · John Brown was a militant abolitionist whose violent raid on the U.S. military armory at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, was a flashpoint in the pre-Civil War era.

  3. Feb 25, 2022 · David Blight's Pulitzer Prize-winning biography traced Douglass' path from slavery to abolitionist and inspired HBO's documentary, Frederick Douglass: In Five Speeches. Originally broadcast in 2018.

  4. Jul 1, 2023 · 4. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) was a prominent American suffragette, abolitionist, and women’s rights pioneer. She co-organized the historic Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, where the famous Declaration of Sentiments was drafted, calling for women’s rights including suffrage.

  5. The radicalization of the movement against slavery is typically dated to 1831 when William Lloyd Garrison, a white abolitionist, commenced publication of his antislavery newspaper, the Liberator. Garrison had supported colonization, but black arguments against colonization had ultimately convinced him to repudiate the movement.

  6. Dec 4, 2017 · Harriet Beecher Stowe, born in 1811 in Litchfield, Connecticut, wrote one of the most famous antislavery novels in American history. Unknown, Portrait of Harriet Beecher Stowe. Antislavery sentiments spread in the later 18 th century and continued to grow into the early 1800’s. Wealthy merchants in the North began drifting away from slavery ...

  7. Inquizitive Chapter 11. Identify the statements that describe the Underground Railroad. a) The Underground Railroad was not a single, centralized system, but rather a series of interlocking local networks involving black and white abolitionists helping slaves reach safety. b) Harriet Tubman was the most famous "conductor" on the Underground ...

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