ABOLITIONISTS

in U.S. history, particularly in the three decades before the Civil War, members of the movement that agitated for the compulsory emancipation of the slaves. Abolitionists are distinguished from free-soilers, who opposed the further extension of slavery, but the groups came to act together politically and otherwise in the antislavery cause. The abolitionist movement was one of high moral purpose and courage; its uncompromising temper made the slavery question the prime concern of national politics and hastened the demise of slavery in the United States (see also slavery).

Evangelical Influences

Although antislavery sentiment had existed during the American Revolution, and abolitionist Benjamin Lundy began his work early in the 19th cent., the abolition movement did not reach crusading proportions until the 1830s. One of its mainsprings was the growing influence of evangelical religion, with its religious fervor, its moral urgency to end sinful practices, and its vision of human perfection. The preaching of Lyman Beecher and Nathaniel Taylor in New England and the religious revivals that began in W New York state in 1824 under Charles G. Finney and swept much of the North, created a powerful impulse toward social reform—emancipation of the slaves as well as temperance, foreign missions, and women's rights. Outstanding among Charles Finney's converts were Theodore D. Weld and the brothers Arthur Tappan and Lewis Tappan.

The Antislavery Movement

The Tappan brothers and William Lloyd Garrison, who began publishing an abolitionist journal, The Liberator, in 1831, were the principal organizers in Dec., 1833, at Philadelphia, of the American Anti-Slavery Society. The primary concern of the society was the denunciation of slavery as a moral evil; its members called for immediate action to free the slaves. In 1835 the society launched a massive propaganda campaign. It flooded the slave states with abolitionist literature, sent agents throughout the North to organize state and local antislavery societies, and poured petitions into Congress demanding the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia.

The abolitionists were at first widely denounced and abused. Mobs attacked them in the North; Southerners burned antislavery pamphlets and in some areas excluded them from the mails; and Congress imposed the gag rule to avoid considering their petitions. These actions, and the murder of abolitionist editor Elijah P. Lovejoy in 1837, led many to fear for their constitutional rights. Abolitionists shrewdly exploited these fears and antislavery sentiment spread rapidly in the North. By 1838, more than 1,350 antislavery societies existed with almost 250,000 members, including many women.

Although abolitionists united in denouncing the African venture of the American Colonization Society, they disagreed among themselves as to how their goal might be best reached. Garrison believed in moral suasion as the only weapon; he and his followers also argued that women be allowed to participate fully in antislavery societies, thus disturbing more conservative members. When the Garrisonians passed such a resolution at the society's 1840 convention, a large group led by the Tappan brothers withdrew and formed the American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. The abolitionists were never again united as a single movement.

Advocates of direct political action founded (1840) the Liberty party; James G. Birney was its presidential candidate in 1840 and 1844. Writers such as John Greenleaf Whittier and orators such as Wendell Phillips gave their services to the cause, while Frederick Douglass and other freed or escaped slaves also took to the lecture platform.

An antislavery lobby was organized in 1842, and its influence grew under Weld's able direction. Abolitionists hoped to convert the South through the churches, until the withdrawal of Southern Methodists (1844) and Baptists (1845) from association with their Northern brethren. After the demise of the Liberty party, the political abolitionists supported the Free-Soil party in 1848 and 1852, and in 1856 they voted with the Republican party.

The passage of more stringent fugitive slave laws in 1850 increased abolitionist activity on the Underground Railroad. Uncle Tom's Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe, became an effective piece of abolitionist propaganda, and the Kansas question further aroused both North and South. The culminating act of extreme abolitionism occurred in the raid of John Brown on Harpers Ferry. After the opening of the Civil War insistent abolitionist demands for immediate freeing of the slaves, supported by radical Republicans in Congress, pushed President Lincoln in his decision to issue the Emancipation Proclamation.

Bibliography

See L. Filler, The Crusade against Slavery, 1830–1860 (1960); D. L. Dumond, Antislavery: The Crusade for Freedom in America (1961, repr. 1964); L. Lader, The Bold Brahmins: New England's War against Slavery (1961); M. Duberman, ed., The Antislavery Vanguard (1965); A. Lutz, Crusade for Freedom: Women in the Antislavery Movement (1968); A. S. Kraditor, Means and Ends in American Abolitionism (1969); B. Quarles, Black Abolitionists (1969); L. Perry and M. Fellman, ed., Antislavery Reconsidered (1979); R. J. Blackett, Building an Antislavery Wall (1983); H. Aptheker, Abolitionism: A Revolutionary Movement (1989); P. Goodman, Of One Blood (1998).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...clergymans wife on the divisions among abolitionists in the state of Massachusetts. "Do...New Organization has all the pious abolitionists in the state belonging to it? Really...the ministers of this state who are abolitionists are with them." 84 Pillsbury, a...
...blacks, it is clear that these abolitionists were able to cross geographic...shoulders with the black American abolitionists or the need for a black speaker...antislavery gathering. Black abolitionists avoided the snares set by British...
cation that the abolitionists were joined in a shadowy transatlantic...While there were certainly other abolitionists capable of crafting a response...directing false charges against the abolitionists, Jay aban- doned his former policy...
...Sarah Moore Grimke, Abolitionist and Feminist of the...of Sex: Feminist-Abolitionists in America Urbana...Hoganson, Garrison Abolitionists and the Rhetoric of...Horne, eds., The Abolitionist Sisterhood: Womens...on the Philadelphia abolitionists is adapted from Margret...
...Commercial Advertiser asserted, that the Abolitionists had " sought to degrade" the identity...white men to select black wives; and Abolitionists have given every proof the nature of...circles; and can it be believed, that Abolitionists are willing to extend to negroes...
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...developing the abolitionist movement...and men. Abolitionists became increasingly...few white abolitionists believed, as did black abolitionist Frederick...within the abolitionist movement...divided the abolitionists. The relative...
...reappraisal of radical abolitionists, Foster was...as the non-abolitionist public. Indeed...evangelical abolitionists had made against the anti-abolitionist ministry...spoke for many abolitionists frustrated by...
...3208-0.) In Abolitionists Remember: Antislavery...Jeffrey follows the abolitionist movement into the...more cartoonish; and abolitionists were depicted as incendiary...but the most famous abolitionist authors. The authors...shrinking public voice of abolitionists in the books three...
...would support an abolitionist press financially...course of the Abolitionists, I regard all...him closer to abolitionist leaders. Although...actions of the abolitionists, he regarded...to call him an abolitionist, he would not...differing with many abolitionists over the best...
...images in the abolitionist cause "so that...resolution reveals, abolitionists were clearly aware...black body in abolitionist literature...white and black abolitionists, the scar was...that of other abolitionist publications discussed...perpetuated the white abolitionists focus on the marked...
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...from the abolitionist example...That the abolitionists disliked...language to the abolitionist movement. Although many abolitionists (such as...from the abolitionists once some...specifics of abolitionist religion...
...attending abolitionist events. As in England, abolitionists in Ireland...backbone of the abolitionist movement. Irish abolitionists saw no inconsistency...given by black abolitionists, including...first black abolitionist to address...
...Slandered by Craven Abolitionists as Unhinged, John...Hitchens JOHN BROWN ABOLITIONIST: The Man Who Killed...first arose among abolitionists confronted with this...distinguished him from most abolitionists, who preferred to...the murder of the abolitionist editor Elijah Lovejoy...
...supremacy. His faith-based abolitionist approach had a catalytic...a recently established abolitionist newspaper. Garrison, impressed...and broadly advertised in abolitionist circles nationwide. "Within...edge than did most white abolitionists of the time. Oye great...
...Trader, Became a Christian Minister and Abolitionist. His Testimony of That Transformation...leave the slave trade and become an abolitionist whose influence helped lead Great Britain...the 18th century slave trade. Avowed Abolitionist In 1780 Newton accepted an offer to...
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No Room for the Ten Commandments; Faith Abolitionists Sue to Scrub Decalogue from Schools, Courts. Byline...to practice any religion or none at all. The religion abolitionists waste no time bolstering their case with Thomas Jeffersons...
...strident and prominent abolitionist editor, William Lloyd...extreme view even among abolitionists, most of whom favored...successful of all abolitionist newspapers was the...while most other abolitionist newspapers had only...subscribers. While abolitionists attracted attention...
...Virginia Legislation Targets Abolitionists, Too. Byline: Paul N...It was at a time when abolitionists were gaining ground and...several violent days of an abolitionist riot in July 1834. In 1831...Lloyd Garrison started his abolitionist newspaper, the Liberator...
The Abolitionist with Potent Pen. Byline: Peter Cliffe, SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON...carelessly written." Whatever its flaws, it became the bible of the abolitionists. In 1853, the Stowes visited Scotland and England, being warmly...
Abolitionists name rejected for new...public school after the abolitionist who founded Loudoun Countys...died in 1846, was an abolitionist, a school teacher and...accepted the brand of abolitionist, and eventually her...
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...of the slaves. Abolitionists are distinguished...antislavery cause. The abolitionist movement was one...slave states with abolitionist literature, sent...Columbia. The abolitionists were at first...the murder of abolitionist editor Elijah...constitutional rights. Abolitionists shrewdly exploited...
BROWN, JOHN , American abolitionist 1800 1859, American abolitionist, b. Torrington, Conn. He spent his boyhood in...Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New York. An ardent abolitionist (he once kept a station on the Underground Railroad...
...was run by local groups of Northern abolitionists , both white and free blacks. The...spontaneously offered and came not only from abolitionists or self-styled members of the Underground...although for different reasons. The abolitionists used the Underground Railroad as a...
...principles led to the appearance of the abolitionists . They knew little of the actual conditions...but for idealistic principles. The abolitionists in general tended to regard slavery...the system against the efforts of the abolitionists. The chief question concerned the...
...opponent of slavery who could win both the abolitionists and the conservative free-staters...the democratic idea. He was not an abolitionist, but he regarded slavery as an injustice...internal jealousies and hatred; radical abolitionists condemned him as too mild; conservatives...
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