Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Liberia
what two requests did the emancipation proclamation make of the newly freed slaves
You have to tell us which two countries you mean so we can answer this.
Those would be pilgrims coming from New Zealand and Slaves.
Junetheenth is when all the slaves in Texas learned that they were free. For two years the slave in the east had been freed but the slave owners in Texas still had the slaves working for them.
The Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves in all of the rebel states, but it failed to set the slaves free in the 4 "border states." (Deleware, Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri)
Liberia, on the west coast of Africa,was settled by freed slaves.
The Republic of Liberia is the only country in West Africa that was founded for freed slaves. Sierra Leone began offering shelter to former slaves in 1792, but the country was not founded for freed slaves.
two years.
Well, Harriet Tubman was a woman who freed over 700 slaves.
what two requests did the emancipation proclamation make of the newly freed slaves
slaves were freed and establishing the sovereignty of the federal government
The Republic of Liberia is the only country founded for freed slaves. Sierra Leone began offering former slaves shelter in 1792, but the country was not founded for freed slaves.
You have to tell us which two countries you mean so we can answer this.
The Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves in the slave owning Southern states. It also ordered that those among the freed slaves who were capable of serving in the Union Army were eligible to enroll and be paid for that military service.
Those would be pilgrims coming from New Zealand and Slaves.
The two abolitionists, Douglas and Stowe had a disagreement about the colonization of freed slaves. Stowe believed that a return to Africa offered former slaves the best way for them to reach their full potential, and there, not be impeded by white people. Douglas believed that freed slaves were now in the United States and that this was their home. Africa was too far removed in the middle of the 19th Century, to be considered as a haven for freed slaves.
I know of one, Liberia.