Life as a Slave
Living as a slave in the south had many harsh factors. They were needed for daily jobs such as farming, blacksmithing, carpentry and many other difficult ways of labor which made the process of buying and selling throughout the country “easier”. Slavery denied the rights of all genders and ages. Most were torn from their families, and all were taken from their homeland through ships from many different countries. …show more content…
The north was against laws of slavery and many northern citizens owned safe houses for slaves who managed to escape their plantations on their journeys to freedom. By 1810, 75% of all Africans living in the north were free, but this percentage wasn’t good enough for many abolitionists in the northern states. Southerners argued that black people, like children, were incapable of caring for themselves and that slavery was an institution that kept them fed, clothed, and occupied which is what most disagreed with. The voices of Northern abolitionists, such as Boston editor and publisher William Lloyd Garrison, became increasingly violent. Educated blacks such as escaped-slave Frederick Douglass wrote serious heartfelt attacks on the situation. Abolitionism seemed to have been fueled by the religious movement known as the Second Great Awakening. A large amount of Union members advocated for immediate emancipation. Later on during the late times of slavery, the Confederate states attempted to secede from the Union due to heated disagreements between the split country.
Many asked this question: “To keep slaves or not?” The Civil War lasted from April 12th, 1861- April 9th, 1865. The process of banning slavery was a long and hard fight, but eventually, slavery was banned through the hands of our 5th president, Abraham Lincoln. Slaves were finally set free by the power of belief and