Anti-slavery in America from the Introduction of African Slaves to the Prohibition of the Slave Trade (1619-1808)
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189
1901
English
- Preface
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: The Religious and Moral Movement, 1637 - 1808, section 1
- Chapter 1: The Religious and Moral Movement, 1637 - 1808, section 2
- Chapter 1: The Religious and Moral Movement, 1637 - 1808, section 3
- Chapter 2: The Philosophical Movement of the Revolutionary Period, 1761 - 1783, section 1
- Chapter 2: The Philosophical Movement of the Revolutionary Period, 1761 - 1783, section 2
- Chapter 3: The Political Movement in the Revolutionary Period, 1761 - 1783, section 1
- Chapter 3: The Political Movement in the Revolutionary Period, 1761 - 1783, section 2
- Chapter 4: Abolitionists and Abolition Societies, 1783 - 1808, section 1
- Chapter 4: Abolitionists and Abolition Societies, 1783 - 1808, section 2
- Chapter 5: Gradual Emancipation in the States, 1783 - 1808, section 1
- Chapter 5: Gradual Emancipation in the States, 1783 - 1808, section 2
- Chapter 6: The Victory over the Slave-Trade, 1783 - 1808, section 1
- Chapter 6: The Victory over the Slave-Trade, 1783 - 1808, section 2
- Chapter 7: Check to Anti-Slavery on the Territorial Question, 1783 - 1808
- Chapter 8: Anti-Slavery Literature after the Revolution, 1783 - 1808, section 1
- Chapter 8: Anti-Slavery Literature after the Revolution, 1783 - 1808, section 2
Traces the origins of the abolitionist movement in the North American colonies of the British Empire through the American Revolution, to the abolitionists' successful campaign to end the slave trade. - Summary by progressingamerica
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