No, they were not. Free-Soilers wanted to stop the spread of slavery, while abolitionists wanted to abolish it alltogether.
They favored no slavery. They wished to "abolish" slavery. Hence the term abolitionists.
One key difference between African American abolitionists and white abolitionists was their personal stakes in the fight against slavery. African American abolitionists often faced direct discrimination and oppression, which fueled their passion and urgency for change, while many white abolitionists approached the issue from a moral or philosophical standpoint. Additionally, African American abolitionists emphasized the importance of self-representation and leadership in the movement, advocating for their own rights and the rights of their communities, whereas some white abolitionists sometimes held paternalistic views. This dynamic highlighted the intersection of race and activism within the broader abolitionist movement.
Because abolitionists are fighting for abolitionism which is the movement to end slavery. Reformers such as Dorothea Dix were fighting for the insane who were being mistreated. So in a way abolitionists are reformers but they are fighting to end slavery.
Slavery.
End slavery
no the couldn't be or else they wouldn't be abolitionists no the couldn't be or else they wouldn't be abolitionists
Abolitionists
abolitionists
Most of the abolitionists supported the Underground Railroad because most of the abolitionists wanted to end slavery.
The opposite of abolitionists would be slaveholders, or those who were pro-slavery.
There names were abolitionists.
yes she was an American abolitionists and womans right activists.
Abolitionists
Union - though most Unionists were never Abolitionists
The outbreak in Kansas of violent turmoils called "Bleeding Kansas" and the rise of the Republican Party in which converged the ex-Whigs and democrats freesoilers.
Northern abolitionists.
Abolitionists wanted to end Slavery