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Douglass's Response To The Abolitionist Movement

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Douglass's Response To The Abolitionist Movement
Beginning in the 1600s, African slaves were shipped to America in order to contribute their labor to the production of lucrative commodities. Originally, slave labor was utilized on tobacco plantations; however, the depletion of this land, the invention of the cotton gin, and the mechanization of the textile industry led to a demand for cotton. In the south, slaves were exploited on these cotton fields, as they were a cheap and plentiful worksource. Plantation owners completely relied on slave labor and felt that it was essential to their economic success. As this shift to the cotton plantations occurred in the South, a very different change was occurring in the North. Abundant natural resources led to the industrialization and the growth of …show more content…
Although there were various groups who had different beliefs in regards to when and how slavery should end, they were closely related in their end goal. The abolitionist movement was a social and political push for the emancipation of all slaves. It was advocated by both former slaves and white Americans. Frederick Douglass, a former slave, was an extremely influential spokesperson for abolition, as he related his experiences to the urgent need for slavery to end. In his “What, To The Slave, Is The Fourth Of July” speech, Douglas describes how asking African Americans to celebrate the white man’s freedom on the Fourth of July is ironic because they are denied freedom and equal rights. By relating the revolutionaries’ fight for freedom against the British to the abolitionists’ fight for equality, he pushes forward his stance on equal rights of black individuals and equal treatment under the law. Sojourner Truth advocated for women’s rights as well as African American rights. In her “Ain't I A Woman?” speech, Truth explains “that man over there says that women need to be helped into carriages” yet “nobody ever helps [her] into carriages”. Her speech denounced racism and motivated others to join the fight against slavery. Even more, it highlighted the different treatment of white women and slave

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