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The Temperance Movement to Early Antislavery

The Temperance Movement

  • argued alcohol abuse caused social problems

    • women and children as main victims

  • The American Temperance Society, established 1826

    • 5,000 branches

    • over 1 million members

    • liquor prohibition in several states

  • consumption of alcohol fell 50% by the 1840s

Early Antislavery: The Colonization Movement

  • the idea:

  • resettle former slaves overseas

  • American Colonization Society was established 1817, popular through 1860s

  • moderate, mainstream anti-slavery

  • 1820s, established a west African colony

    • Liberia 1847

  • later critics argue Black Americans deserved freedom and citizenship

    • first, free Black activists like David Walker

    • later, growing numbers of white allies

“Moral Suasion”

  • 1831-37, print culture to win hearts and minds

    • sentimental storytelling and persuasive essays

    • newspapers, pamphlets, books…

    • sent out in millions of copies

  • established hundreds of local anti-slavery societies

  • 1835 mail campaign:

    • sent over 1 million copies of Abolitionist texts, including directly to southern slaveholders

    • thousands of petitions to Congress

AS

The Temperance Movement to Early Antislavery

The Temperance Movement

  • argued alcohol abuse caused social problems

    • women and children as main victims

  • The American Temperance Society, established 1826

    • 5,000 branches

    • over 1 million members

    • liquor prohibition in several states

  • consumption of alcohol fell 50% by the 1840s

Early Antislavery: The Colonization Movement

  • the idea:

  • resettle former slaves overseas

  • American Colonization Society was established 1817, popular through 1860s

  • moderate, mainstream anti-slavery

  • 1820s, established a west African colony

    • Liberia 1847

  • later critics argue Black Americans deserved freedom and citizenship

    • first, free Black activists like David Walker

    • later, growing numbers of white allies

“Moral Suasion”

  • 1831-37, print culture to win hearts and minds

    • sentimental storytelling and persuasive essays

    • newspapers, pamphlets, books…

    • sent out in millions of copies

  • established hundreds of local anti-slavery societies

  • 1835 mail campaign:

    • sent over 1 million copies of Abolitionist texts, including directly to southern slaveholders

    • thousands of petitions to Congress