Monday, May 20, 2019

Growing Opposition to Slavery

During the late 1700s to mid 1800s, a growing opposition to hard workerholding was taking step to the fore in the United States. This growing opposition was visible in the ways multitude were solution to chatter out against knuckle downry through abolitionist movements, along with some aspects of the Wilmot provision. Peoples consciences were also turned on(p) by the novel, Uncle Toms Cabin. Many sight during this time span were slowly beginning to spot to the understanding that thraldom was morally wrong.Abolitionists such as Frederick Douglass, a former slave himself, and William Lloyd Garrison were beginning to speak out against slavery during this time period. The abolitionists of this time period, white and black, were slowly but steadily gaining support, by and large in the Northern region. In his Declaration of Sentiments of the American Anti- hard workerry Society, Garrison stated that, We shall organize Anti-Slavery Societies, if possible, in every city, town, an d vill geezerhood of our land.Other abolitionists gained attention to their cause by publishing newspapers and holding anti slavery conventions. Yet another abolitionist, Theodore Parker, published a poster one year after the Fugitive Slave Act was established, an act that declared all runaway slaves were, upon capture, to be returned to their master, that warned runaway slaves of the dangers of watchmen and police looking for them.These refined acts done by the abolitionists of that time period slowly began to influence other white peoples views on slavery. In 1846, David Wilmot, a Democratic representative from Pennsylvania, proposed that Congress ban slavery from all lands acquired in the war with Mexico. This proffer came to be known as the Wilmot Proviso. The Wilmot Proviso, also known as the White Mans Proviso, gained support by those who were anti slavery along with other Northerners who wanted to preserve the West for drop by the wayside labor. However, the support from t he Southern slave states defeated the Wilmot proviso, leaving the decision as to whether the West should be slave territory or free land up for discussion.Eventually the doctrine of popular sovereignty was established, which decided that the people of the given territory should resolve the issue of slavery in the territory themselves by popular vote.These serial of events shows not only the growing sympathy of the North towards slavery but also the unsureness of Congress whether to subvert slavery or stabilize free territory because ofthe growing realization that slavery was wrong. The novel, Uncle Toms Cabin, or Life among the Lowly, also brought much attention to the anti slavery movement. The novel, written by Harriet Beecher Stowe, a Northerner who had never set foot on a plantation, told about the trials and terrors in the life of a slave on a Southern plantation.The novel sparked much support in the abolitionist movement and was reliable as truth among the Northerners. Acco rding to an advertisement from 1859 for Uncle Toms Cabin, it was even considered the greatest book of the age seven years after its publication in 1852. This tear jerking novel caused many people to come to the realization that slavery was morally wrong.Thanks to the publications, conventions, and lectures done by the abolitionists of the time, more attention was brought to the anti slavery movement, influencing many peoples views. The controversy over the territory gained from the American-Mexican war also showed a growing realization that slavery was wrong. The novel, Uncle Toms Cabin, also showed opposition to slavery because it was accepted as truth among the North. Although slavery was still accepted and often times welcomed during the late 1700s to mid 1800s, more people were beginning to see the nefariousness behind the cruel treatment of slaves.

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