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Anti-Abolition Backlash to Womens Rights

Anti-Abolition Backlash

  • “gag rule” blocks Congress from considering petitions

    • Congress received more than 130,000 petitions from citizens demanding the abolition of slavery in Washington D.C and other federally controlled territories

  • anti-abolitionist propaganda in the north and the south

  • violence, and it was sometimes even lethal

The Movement Splinters, c. 1839

  • disagreements arise over the best strategy

  • William Lloyd Garrison: a prominent American Christian, abolitionist, journalist, suffragist, and social reformer

    • continued moral suasion, but advocated a new constitution

  • others: moral suasion led to political action

    • moral suasion: act of persuading a group or person to act in a certain way through rhetorical appeals, persuasion, or implicit and explicit threats

      • The Liberty Party, 1839-48

  • others turn to direct resistance

    • aiding runaways

    • especially by the 1850s, some militarized

Women’s Rights

  • some abolitionists came to believe racial and gender inequality were connected

  • frustrated by sexism within the abolitionist movement

    • 1840s World Anti-Slavery Convention in London refused female delegates

  • 1848 Seneca Falls Convention

    • Seneca Falls is in New York

      • limited results, but laid the groundwork

AS

Anti-Abolition Backlash to Womens Rights

Anti-Abolition Backlash

  • “gag rule” blocks Congress from considering petitions

    • Congress received more than 130,000 petitions from citizens demanding the abolition of slavery in Washington D.C and other federally controlled territories

  • anti-abolitionist propaganda in the north and the south

  • violence, and it was sometimes even lethal

The Movement Splinters, c. 1839

  • disagreements arise over the best strategy

  • William Lloyd Garrison: a prominent American Christian, abolitionist, journalist, suffragist, and social reformer

    • continued moral suasion, but advocated a new constitution

  • others: moral suasion led to political action

    • moral suasion: act of persuading a group or person to act in a certain way through rhetorical appeals, persuasion, or implicit and explicit threats

      • The Liberty Party, 1839-48

  • others turn to direct resistance

    • aiding runaways

    • especially by the 1850s, some militarized

Women’s Rights

  • some abolitionists came to believe racial and gender inequality were connected

  • frustrated by sexism within the abolitionist movement

    • 1840s World Anti-Slavery Convention in London refused female delegates

  • 1848 Seneca Falls Convention

    • Seneca Falls is in New York

      • limited results, but laid the groundwork