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That freedom is a human right.
Northern View Of Slavery- A vocal minority of northerners were abolitionists or people who wanted to end slavery. They believed that slavery was morally wrongs. Abolitionists favored a gradual end while others demanded that all slavery was outlawed at once. Not all northerners wanted to end slavery Southern Views Of Slavery Many southerns belied that god intend that black people should provide the labor for white "civilized" society
They tried to force their views on the South. This did not help because it made those from the South very indignant and less likely to compromise.
This question is hard to answer with just one viewpoint. In fact, in the early 1850's the idea of slavery was mixed among Northerners. For example, the clergy were sometimes in favor of slavery, as seen in "South Side view of Slavery" by Rev. Nehemiah Adams, but this was not always the case. When Harriet Beecher Stowe's book, "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was published in 1852, many northerners were outraged by the atrocities slave families had to go through. She is said to have described her book as actual events and occurrences that she had witnessed and put together in a "mosaic," as an artist would do. Her book opened the eyes of many northerners and westerners who had never experienced such things. With all this in mind, however, it cannot be said that all northerners and for that matter all southerners shared the same viewpoints. While the abolitionists, northerners who felt slavery was immoral, screamed louder than any other northerners, their ideas were not the only ones. Other northerners were afraid that such cheap labor would keep their prices uncompetitive in the market place. Therefore, it can be said that both economic and moral reasons dictated the views of the northerners in the 1850's. For the most part, however, the north did not find a need to have slaves because their population had increased over time and the labor force was extensive. While the north saw an increase in population, the south remained nearly stagnate.
Provides and effective way for differing views to be heard
That freedom is a human right.
The Northerners believed that it was unconstitutional and the Southerners believed that it was better for there way of life
William Wilberforce is the person who is known to have split the abolitionist movement with his radical views. The movement was mainly aimed at bringing an end to slavery.
group b
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Uncle Tom's Cabin
William Lloyd Garrision
Group B
An abolitionist was an individual who held strong antislavery views.
Like most Northerners, Lincoln had been willing to tolerate slavery in its traditional heartlands, but did not like the prospect of an extended slave-empire. When he issued his Emancipation Proclamation, it was for strictly tactical reasons, though no doubt it also caused some Northerners to re-define their views on the slave system.
They were a puppet of the US; and not nearly as disciplined as Northerners.
Gerrit Smith did not fully agree with the abolitionist views of the others mentioned. Smith supported the abolitionist cause but did not always see eye to eye with prominent figures like William Lloyd Garrison and Harriet Beecher Stowe.