John Brown, Harriet Tubman and Fredrick Douglass were all pre-Civil War abolitionists
An abolitionist was important in the civil war because abolitionists wanted to abolish or get rid of slavery. And for a lot of people the war was about slavery.
Abolitionist
Federick Douglas
The Supreme Court decision for Scott vs. Sandford set the stage for the Civil War by mobilizing he abolitionist movement. They made the decision on the case in 1857.
President Abraham Lincoln
An abolitionist was important in the civil war because abolitionists wanted to abolish or get rid of slavery. And for a lot of people the war was about slavery.
she was a abolitionist
The union- He was an abolitionist.
John Brown
Yes. Charles Sumner was a Radical Republican and abolitionist who served as a U.S. Senator during the Civil War.
No. It did not start as an Abolitionist war. It was the refusal to allow new slave-states that caused the rift, not actual abolition. However, the Abolitionist lobby included some powerful figures, and their reactions to 'Bleeding Kansas' and the Dred Scott verdict helped to raise the tension and bring war closer.
abolitionist's
Among northern abolitionist.
Frederick Douglas
Before the Civil War people who were against Slavery were called abolitionists. An abolitionist is someone who believes slavery should be abolished.
It was a highly influential abolitionist newspaper.
Abolitionist