Civil War Dbq

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In the 1700’s, slavery was for the most part accepted by society, heads kept down, with few citizens of America feeling the need to fight against this wrongful act. But as the 1800’s came rolling in, the Second Great Awakening was born, and along with it, a newfound desire and realization stirred inside the Northerners; that slavery was cruel and needed to be ended. These anti-slavery people became known as abolitionists, and they greatly clashed with the Southerners, who heavily relied on slaves as their workforce. They reacted to the Northerners being against slavery with much anger, believing that their way of living and using slaves was justifiable and that any disruption to their lifestyle was offensive and disrespectful. With the Northerners …show more content…

However, neither party would back down from their cause of either fighting for the preservation of slavery, or abolishing it, and thus becoming one of the main reasons the Civil War came to be. The Major Abolitionists were mostly made up of Northerners, who felt extremely passionate towards helping the slaves get their deserved freedom. Against the will and demand of the South, these abolitionists took part in rebellions against slavery through means of literature, including Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe and The Impending Crisis of the South by Hinton Rowan Helper. Uncle Tom’s Cabin was stylistically written to appeal to the emotions of the people and make them realize the evils that Southern citizens were inflicting on the slaves, and persuading them to become abolitionists. “ To millions of people, it made slavery appear almost as evil as it really was” (Kennedy 396). The Impending Crisis of the South was more focused on logic and facts, instead of the emotional aspect, in attempt to open the Southern eyes to reasoning based on the statistics that, “whites were the ones who suffered the most from the millstone of slavery” (Kennedy 397). Northerners fought against slavery through action as well, such as the Underground Railroad,

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