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Abolitionists

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Abolitionists Americans Who Worked to stop slavery in America * * Effectiveness Scale As you take notes, consider to yourself how effective each of these ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Abolitionists


1
Abolitionists
  • Americans Who Worked to stop slavery in America

2
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3
Effectiveness Scale
  • As you take notes, consider to yourself how
    effective each of these abolitionists were in
    fighting to end slavery. They all wanted it gone,
    but some were more effective than others. Use the
    scale below
  • _______________________________
  • 1-Great 2-Somewhat 3-OK
    4-Somewhat 5-Great
  • Harm Harmful Did some good
    Helpful Help

4
Cotton Gin Technology That Promotes Slavery
  • Eli Whitney created the cotton gin as a gift for
    his friend, Katy Greene. She was a widow, who
    could not harvest enough cotton to pay her bills
    it was too hard to get the seeds out of the
    cotton. The cotton gin pulled the cotton through
    brushes so that the seeds came out easily. As
    much cotton as could be grown, they could now
    harvest. Thus, an increase in slavery occurred.

5
Nat Turner
  • Nat Turner was a slave who was a preacher for the
    slave village. The story of Moses leading the
    Israelites out of slavery appealed to him. In
    1831,He led a revolt of slaves in Virginia,
    killing several people. He was caught before he
    could escape Virginia and was killed. This
    violence was a warning to the country that
    troubled times were ahead.

6
Sojourner Truth
  • Sojourner Truth (Isabella Baumfree) was born as a
    slave in New York. After she gained her freedom,
    she traveled around to speak the truth about the
    evils of slavery. She was a powerful speaker
    writer.

7
John Brown
  • John Brown led the Bloody Kansas revolt over
    popular sovereignty, as they voted on whether to
    allow slavery. Then, he led an attack on the army
    post at Harpers Ferry! He wanted to steal the
    armys guns, give them to slaves, and lead them
    in their fight out of Virginia up to the North.
    He was captured at Harpers Ferry by a young
    colonel (Robert E. Lee), tried, and hanged for
    his crimes.

8
Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe interviewed slaves who had
    escaped from the South. From these stories, she
    wrote Uncle Toms Cabin. It was a best-selling
    book, and shocked the world about some of the
    horror stories from plantations in the South.

9
Frederick Douglass
  • Frederick Douglass was a slave who had been
    taught to read and write. After he escaped, he
    used his great speaking ability to talk about the
    evils of slavery and he published a paper called
    the North Star. He later called for free black
    men to help fight for the North in the Civil War.

10
William Lloyd Garrison
  • William Lloyd Garrison published an abolitionist
    newspaper called the Liberator. It spoke out
    harshly against the plantation system, and an
    reward for his capture was placed by the Southern
    states.

11
Harriet Tubman
  • Harriet Tubman was a former slave who established
    the Underground RR. She led 19 trips that
    freed 300 people. She was never caught, though a
    40,000 reward was offered. She was known as the
    Black Moses.

12
Underground RR
13
Dred Scott
  • Dred Scott was a slave who sued for his freedom
    in the U.S. Supreme Court after his owner had
    taken him to a free state. The Court ruled that
    he was not a citizen but property under the
    law. This case couldve outlawed slavery, if the
    judges had chosen to do so. Instead, this
    decision indirectly led to the Civil War.

14
Henry Box Brown
  • In 1849, Henry got some abolitionists to put him
    in a box, and mail him to the abolitionist
    society in Philadelphia. With only a tool for air
    holes, a canteen, and some biscuits, he traveled
    in the box for 350 miles from Richmond to
    Philadelphia. The trip took 27 hours, and the box
    was 3 x 2 x 2 ½!

15
Abraham Lincoln
  • Though Lincoln was opposed to slavery, he felt
    that only Congress could abolish slavery. He did
    promise to keep it from spreading to new states.
    When the Civil War occurs, he gives the
    Emancipation Proclamation that frees all the
    slaves when the war is over.

16
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17
  • Central Abolitionist Project
  • Provide a chart of how each period rated each
    abolitionist.
  • Provide a Rating Scale of Your Classs Ratings
    (1-5)
  • Provide a Rating Scale of Your Teams Ratings
    (1-5)
  • Discuss the similarities differences between
    your class ratings and the Teams ratings.
  • Draw a political cartoon about the effectiveness
    of 1 or more of the abolitionists.
  • Write a paragraph on who you think was the
    unsung hero of the Abolitionist Movement.

18
  • Abolitionists
  • Abolitionists Per. 1 Per. 2 Per. 3 AVE
  • Nat Turner 2.1 1.8 1.8 1.9
  • Sojourner Truth 4.3 4.3 4.1 4.2
  • John Brown 2.6 2.0 1.5 2.0
  • Harriet B. Stowe 3.8 4.0 3.6 3.8
  • Frederick Douglass 4.4 4.5 4.8 4.6

19
  • Abolitionists
  • Abolitionists Per 1 Per 2 Per 3 AVE
  • William L. Garrison 3.7 3.6 3.6 3.6
  • Harriet Tubman 5.0 4.9 5.0 5.0
  • Dred Scott 3.0 3.5 3.1 3.2
  • Henry Box Brown 3.1 4.1 3.2 3.5
  • Abraham Lincoln 4.5 4.8 4.8 4.7

20
  • ABOLITIONISTS CENTRALS TOP 10
  • 1. Harriet Tubman (5.0) 6. William L. Garrison
    (3.6)
  • 2. Abraham Lincoln (4.7) 7. Henry Box Brown
    (3.5)
  • 3. Frederick Douglass (4.6) 8. Dred Scott (3.2)
  • 4. Sojourner Truth (4.2) 9. John Brown (2.0)
  • 5. Harriet B. Stowe (3.8) 10. Nat Turner (1.9)
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