some important people in the abolition movement are Harriet Stowe, Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, Benjamin Rush, Thomas Paine, Charles Finney and many many more people...
because some people didn't believe in slavery but some people did. So they came up with abolitionists
The South opposed Abolition because slavery was the mainstay of the cotton industry, the only big export of the South, representing half the exports of the USA. For this reason, most people inthe North alsoopposed Abolition because the cotton revenues were so important. The Abolitionists were not very numerous, although they included some highly influential people. (Lincoln was not one of them.) After 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' was published, many more people became Abolitionists, but they still remained quitea minority.
William Floyde Garrison, he influenced the movement in a more peaceful mannor by using his skills in poetry to write poems to sway people viewpoints on abolition. dont copy that word for word or else your teacher will find out
Puritans refused to hold enslaved people; Quakers and Mennonites condemned slavery
Plantation slavery expanded a lot in the British colonies of North America in the 18th century. Some people also called for the abolition of slavery.
The problem with the aboltion movement is slavery.
Numerous important events happened in England during the 1800s. Some of the most important of these events was the abolition of slavery in 1833, Charles Darwin coming out with his findings on evolution in 1859, and the abolition of executions for criminal offenses in 1870.
because some people didn't believe in slavery but some people did. So they came up with abolitionists
There were many reform movements that have happened in America. Some of these include suffrage, equality, socialism, populism, and abolition.
The South opposed Abolition because slavery was the mainstay of the cotton industry, the only big export of the South, representing half the exports of the USA. For this reason, most people inthe North alsoopposed Abolition because the cotton revenues were so important. The Abolitionists were not very numerous, although they included some highly influential people. (Lincoln was not one of them.) After 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' was published, many more people became Abolitionists, but they still remained quitea minority.
Three of the most important social reforms that followed the industrial revolution were the abolition of slavery, women's rights , and capitalism.
William Floyde Garrison, he influenced the movement in a more peaceful mannor by using his skills in poetry to write poems to sway people viewpoints on abolition. dont copy that word for word or else your teacher will find out
bloody sunday
Puritans refused to hold enslaved people; Quakers and Mennonites condemned slavery
to some people it is important to some it is not
to some people it is important to some it is not
They didnt like them