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The Civil War "America" abolished black slavery The conflict between the bourgeoisie of the North and the South was that the abolition of black slavery was related to the southern plantation economy, on the question of labor.
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First the Southern planters, who eventually established the Confederate States of America (Confederate Army) to compete with the United States of America (Northern Army) in the North, leading to the outbreak of the Civil War. Then there was the "3 Klux Klan" formed by soldiers of the former Yugoslav Army after the defeat of the Yugoslav Army.
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Primarily in the Southern Agricultural State.
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After the independence of the United States, plantation owners in the southern states practiced slavery, and black slaves were the private property of plantation slave owners. The northern industrial and commercial bourgeoisie, the working people at large, and the Negro demanded the abolition of black slavery. The abolitionist movement was a progressive mass democratic movement in American history that struck a blow at slavery in the South.
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The American abolitionist movement was a mass movement that began to rise in the northern United States in the early thirties of the 19th century to demand the complete abolition of black slavery.
At the beginning of America's independence, there was already a debate about whether to abolish slavery. As the demand for cotton on the international market soared, slavery on the plantations in the South also expanded, in serious conflict with the development of industrial capitalism in the North and the bourgeois-democratic nature of the country.
On the eve of the Revolutionary War, there were about 500,000 slaves in the British North American colonies, accounting for 1.6 of the total population at that time. By 1860, the number of black slaves in the south had grown to 10,000. Beginning in the thirties of the 19th century, when slave traders braved the condemnation of the world to openly fly the American flag and smuggle boatloads of black slaves to the southern United States, the abolitionist movement also rose rapidly in the north.
As early as the colonial era and the Revolutionary War, Franklin, Jefferson, and others proposed the abolition of slavery. After the independence of the United States, black slavery was abolished in the northern states. But the rapid development of cotton plantation in the southern states and the expansion of plantation slavery threatened the democratic rights of the American people.
Around the twenties of the nineteenth century, organizations of the abolitionist movement began to emerge in the United States. 1826 In 1827, 143 abolitionist groups met in Baltimore to denounce the evils of slavery. In the early '30s, Garrison published the weekly magazine Liberator (1831-1865) in Boston, and in 1832 founded the New England Anti-Slavery Society with other abolitionists.
People have formed various abolitionist organizations, published many influential abolitionist publications, Mrs. Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin" is worthy of the world's sensational sobering work, as well as the black leader Douglas and other fugitive slave indictments, and the famous "underground railroad" in American history, the two main lines of its east and west are estimated to be 10,000 northerners, through which more than 100,000 black slaves escaped from the fire pit.
In April 1833, the National American Anti-Slavery Association was founded in Philadelphia, with its headquarters in New York. Anti-slavery associations were then established throughout the North, and by the 40s there were about 2,000 such organizations with more than 200,000 members.
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The abolitionist movement occupies an important place in the history of the struggle of the American people for democracy, which exposed the evils of slavery, promoted the outbreak of the Civil War, and freed the slaves for American capitalism.
Development has cleared the obstacles and has played a certain role in promoting the development of capitalist wheels and sedan chairs.