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Growing Opposition To Slavery Dbq Essay

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Slavery was an awful thing that lasted in the United States from August 1619 and ended in 1865. The period from 1776 to 1852 was a very eventful time for the opposition of slavery in the United States. One of the main events of this time period was the growing opposition of slavery. The main reasons for the growing opposition of slavery was because the North didn’t need slaves to produce their exports effectively, Anti-Slave Societies, and Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The North in 1804 was very much ahead of their time when it came to emancipation. The North was more industrialized than the South. This meant that the North didn’t need near as many slaves. Document A shows this with a visual map of Early Emancipation in the North from 1777-1804. Vermont …show more content…

As it shows in Document J, Uncle Tom’s Cabin is an Anti-Slavery argument written by an American author by the name of Harriet Beecher Stowe. This book argued against the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. This book was first published in 1852. Uncle Tom’s Cabin sold more than 300,000 copies within a year of publication. It was significant to the opposition of slavery because it brought the message of the Abolitionist movement to a widespread audience. This relates to Document C in the way widespread awareness for the abolitionist movement. Document C relates to the topic of widespread awareness because Reverend Mr. Gloucester, an African American minister, would go town to town and preach God’s word to everyone that wanted to listen. All of the tips he got from his preaching would go to the purchase of his wife and children’s freedom from the slave trade. This raised awareness to the wrongness of the slave trade and made more people hop on board with the abolitionist movement. Also, Document G was written to show people the horrors of slavery. In this Document, Frederick Douglass writes about what slavery did to him physically and psychologically. He explains in vivid detail what the master did to him. “Mr. Covey (the white overseer) entered the stable with a long rope…”, wrote Douglass. This caused the growing opposition in slavery because the real horrors of slavery were exposed. Also, in

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