Abolitionist Movement.
Publié le 03/05/2013
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The American Revolution (1775-1783) and the French Revolution (1789-1799), widely seen as revolutions by citizens against oppressive rulers, transformed thisEnlightenment assertion into a call for universal liberty and freedom.
The successful slave revolt that began in the French colony of Saint-Domingue in 1791 was part of this revolutionary age.
Led by François Dominique ToussaintLouverture, black rebels overthrew the colonial government, ended slavery in the colony, and in 1804 established the republic of Haiti, the first independent blackrepublic in the world ( see Haitian Slave Revolt).
The revolt frightened slaveholders everywhere, inspired other slaves and free blacks to action, and convinced religiously motivated whites that only peaceful emancipation could prevent more bloodshed.
IV ABOLITIONISM IN EUROPE AND THE EUROPEAN COLONIES
A Eighteenth Century
In Europe, Great Britain had the strongest abolitionist movement.
The major turning point in its development came in 1787 when Evangelical Christians ( see Evangelicalism) joined Quakers in establishing the Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade.
Led by William Wilberforce, an Evangelical member of the BritishParliament, and Thomas Clarkson, a Quaker skilled in mass organization, the society initiated petition drives, mass propaganda efforts, and lobbying in an attempt toend British involvement in slave trafficking.
Although opposed by English merchants, West Indian planters, and King George III—who equated abolitionism with politicalradicalism—the society nevertheless managed to achieve its goal.
In 1807 the British Parliament abolished the slave trade and the British, through diplomacy and thecreation of a naval squadron to patrol the West African coast, began forcing other European nations to give up the trade as well.
Abolitionism fared less well in continental Europe in the 18th century.
Antislavery societies in continental Europe were narrow, ineffective, elitist organizations.
In France,Jacques Pierre Brissot, a supporter of the French Revolution, established the Société des Amis des Noirs (Society of the Friends of Blacks) in 1788, but this group failed in its effort against the slave trade.
Despite its complete lack of success, the French antislavery effort was the strongest in continental Europe.
B Nineteenth Century
During the 19th century British abolitionism became more radical.
Wilberforce, Clarkson, and their associates had assumed that ending the slave trade would leaddirectly to general emancipation (freeing of all slaves).
When it became clear that this would not happen, Clarkson joined with Thomas Fowell Buxton in 1823 to form the British Anti-Slavery Society, which at first advocated a gradual abolition of slavery.
However, when West Indian planters refused to make concessions, theabolitionists hardened their stance, and by the late 1820s abolitionists were demanding immediate slave emancipation.
The great pressure they exerted, combined withcontinuing slave unrest, led Parliament to pass the Emancipation Act in 1833.
This enacted gradual, compensated emancipation, which meant that slaves were freed butwere forced to work for their former masters for a period to compensate them for monetary loss.
By 1838 all slaves in the British Empire were free.
Thereafter, Britishabolitionism fragmented into efforts against the illegal slave trade, slavery in Africa, and slavery in the United States.
During the 19th century abolitionist societies in other European countries were far less significant than abolitionist societies in Britain.
British abolitionists influenced TheNetherlands and especially France, where they inspired the creation of Société Française pour l'Abolition de l'Esclavage (French Society for the Abolition of Slavery) in 1834.
This tiny organization had some success in lobbying the French government.
However, it was the overthrow of the French monarchy and the establishment of arepublic in February 1848, followed three months later by a major slave revolt in the French colony of Martinique in the Caribbean, that led to the emancipation of allslaves within the French empire in 1848.
In a similar manner, a domestic revolution and colonial unrest led Spain to abolish slavery in its colonies of Puerto Rico and Cuba, in 1873 and 1886 respectively.
Earlier,negotiations between government officials and planters had produced emancipation in the Swedish (1847), Danish (1848), and Dutch (1863) colonies in the WestIndies.
V ABOLITIONISM IN THE UNITED STATES: EARLY MOVEMENTS
Abolitionism in the British colonies in North America developed within the broader Atlantic antislavery movement.
But, unlike the case in Europe, slavery was a domesticinstitution in the United States and was primarily under local (state) control.
In addition, slaveholders often dominated the country’s national government.
As elsewhere, black slaves in colonial America encouraged abolitionism by seeking to free themselves.
Although maroon settlements like those in the Caribbean existedin colonial America, they were much smaller and less widespread.
Slave rebellions, however, were frequent.
A major uprising took place in New York City in 1712, whenblack and Native American slaves killed nine whites and wounded seven more.
In 1739 a much larger rebellion took place near Charleston, South Carolina.
About onehundred slaves marched along the Stono River, destroying plantations and killing a few whites.
Slaveholders with the aid of Native Americans put down the rebellion,killing 44 of the rebels.
American Quakers, like their British counterparts, responded to these uprisings by advocating gradual abolition.
By the 1740s Quaker abolitionists John Woolman andAnthony Benezet were urging other Quakers to cease their involvement in the slave trade and to break all connections with slavery.
It was not until the AmericanRevolution began in 1775, however, that abolitionism spread beyond the Society of Friends.
A Revolutionary Abolitionism
The American Revolution invigorated the abolitionist movement.
It became difficult for white Americans, who had fought for independence from Britain in the name ofliberty and universal natural rights, to justify the continuation of slavery.
These ideas, black service in American armies during the revolution, black abolitionist petitionsfor emancipation, and the actions of white antislavery societies, motivated all of the Northern states by 1804 either to end slavery within their borders or to provide forits gradual abolition.
In 1787 Congress had banned slavery in the Northwest Territory (a region comprising the present states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan,Wisconsin, and the eastern part of Minnesota, ceded to the United States by the British after the American Revolution).
Also, during the 1780s and 1790s largenumbers of slaveholders in the Southern states of Maryland and Virginia freed their slaves.
Despite these early successes, by the mid-1780s the revolutionary abolitionist movement was in decline.
Beyond the freeing of slaves in Maryland and Virginia, themovement had a negative impact on the South, where the large majority of American slaves lived.
The Haitian Slave Revolt in 1791 and an aborted revolt conspiracyled by the slave Gabriel in Virginia in 1800 convinced Southern whites—who feared they could not control free blacks—that the slave system had to be strengthenedrather than abolished.
Meanwhile, the growth of the cotton industry, fueled by the invention of the cotton gin by Eli Whitney in 1793, made slavery a vital part of boththe Southern and the national economies.
At the same time, the development of scientific racism, the idea that blacks were biologically inferior to whites and wereintellectually and morally incapable of self-government, encouraged state and national legislation that limited the rights of free blacks.
B The Colonization Movement.
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