Examples of abolitionism in the following topics:
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- Abolitionism, used as a single word, was a movement to end slavery, whether formal or informal.
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- American abolitionism was accused by many of threatening the harmony between northern and southern states in the Union.
- Northern teachers suspected of abolitionism were expelled from the South, and abolitionist literature was banned.
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- Throughout the first half of the nineteenth century, abolitionism—a movement to end slavery—intensified throughout the United States.
- While American abolitionism strengthened in the North, support for slavery held strong among white southerners, who profited so greatly from the system of enslaved labor that slavery itself became intertwined with the national economy.
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- No European countries formally acknowledged the Confederacy, preferring Northern grain imports and abolitionism to Southern cotton imports.
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- Many women in the nineteenth century were involved in reform movements, particularly abolitionism.
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- American abolitionism was accused of threatening the harmony of North and South in the Union.
- American abolitionism began well before the United States was founded as a nation.
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- African Americans, such as Du Bois and Wells-Barnett, continued the tradition of advocacy, organizing, and journalism which helped spur abolitionism, and also developed new tactics that helped to spur the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s.
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- Huckleberry Finn had a distinctly more serious tone than its predecessor, as its main premise is the young Finn's belief in abolitionism, even though most of the adult influences in Finn's life believed he was wrong.
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- However, Brown's vision of abolitionism was
radically distinct from the more dominant antislavery sentiments in the North
in that he believed that slavery was an unjustifiable state of war conducted by
one group of people against another.
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- The reform efforts of the antebellum years, including abolitionism, aimed to perfect the national destiny and redeem the souls of individual Americans.