Since the establishment of colonies throughout North and South America, the reliance of slaves for manual labor was necessary for profit and success. As the establishment of the United States progressed, many Northerners called for the end of slavery while those in the South demanded its existence. By 1804, all of the Northern states had voted to have slavery abolished in the near future but slavery continued to flourish in Southern states. Studying the sources, The Narrative of Sojourner Truth and Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom, the perspective of slavery in both the North and the South, as well as racism in the blatant racism throughout the nation, shows the nationwide responsibility for the actions of the whites. Thus contradicting the statement, “By the 1820s, the institution of slavery had practically ceased to exist in northern states, and many Americans, both at the time and since, concluded that slavery was, therefore, a southern problem.” During the 1820s, slavery as an institution was still a necessary component for prosperity in the South -but slowly ending in the …show more content…
Many of them were stuck to working jobs they had done as slaves for very little money. This resulted in many living in poverty and tragically getting along worse than they did as a slave. This reason was why many Southern masters did not want to release their slaves, “It is the worst thing you can do for them…It always seems to me such a cruel thing to turn niggers loose to shift for themselves, when there is so many good masters to take care of them.” (Craft 33-34). This caused many issues up North with so many run-away slaves not being able to provide for themselves. Many abolitionists tried to help by educating them in reading and writing, but there was only so much one could do to help. The Southerners who saw this in the North saw this as another justification for keeping their