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Chapter 13 The Movement to End Slavery

Chapter 13 The Movement to End Slavery

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History

7th Grade

Practice Problem

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Created by

RICHARD HAINES

Used 13+ times

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8 Slides • 8 Questions

1

Module 15 Lesson #3 The Movement to End Slavery

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2

Multiple Choice

Where was Frederick Douglass born?

1

Virginia

2

Pennsylvania

3

Georgia

4

Maryland

3

Americans Oppose Slavery

  • Ben Franklin was the president of the first antislavery society in America

  • Quakers published the first abolition newspaper The Emancipator and they were against slavery based on religious grounds that all people are created equal in the eyes of God

  • Some abolitionists wanted African-Americans to have full equality and some wanted them to be free, but not have the same rights as free people

  • Liberia was created by abolitionist who wanted to take freed slaves and give them an African country to live in and the capital was named Monrovia after then president Monroe

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4

Multiple Choice

What African nation was created for freed African-American slaves?

1

Gambia

2

Lesotho

3

Congo

4

Liberia

5

Spreading the Abolitionist Message

  • Many abolitionists went on speaking tours and others wrote pamphlets and articles in their local newspapers

  • William Lloyd Garrison published The Liberator in 1831 and founded the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1833

  • The abolition movement was gaining followers every day because they spent every day talking about the evils of slavery

  • Angelina and Sarah Grimke came from a slave owning family in South Carolina and spent their lives trying to get other Southern slave owners to give up their slaves

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6

Multiple Choice

All abolitionists wanted freed African-Americans to have full rights

1

True

2

False

7

African American Abolitionists

  • Frederick Douglass was a former slave, a gifted public speaker, and major contributor to the anti-slavery movement

  • Douglass had an abolitionist newspaper called the North Star

  • Sojourner Truth preached the truth about slavery, was inspired to do so by God, and was a gifted speaker who had a quick wit

  • Truth was also a member of the Women's Rights movement and was invited to the White House by President Lincoln

  • Truth sued a White man to free her son and won and was the only African-American at that time to win such a case

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8

Multiple Choice

What was the name of Frederick Douglass' newspaper?

1

The Emancipator

2

The North Star

3

The Abolitionist Times

9

10

Multiple Select

Which of the following was true of Sojourner Truth? (Pick 3)

1

Born in New York in 1797

2

Traveled all over the North to preach for the Abolition movement

3

Was a conductor in the Underground Railroad

4

There is a statue of her in Washington D.C.

11

The Underground Railroad

  • The Underground Railroad was an organization of abolitionists who created a network of hiding places and freedom trails for slaves to escape

  • Conductors would lead the escaped slaves at night sometimes using the stars for navigation.

  • During the day they would stop at stations in the form of barns and attics to hide from the slave catchers

  • Harriet Tubman was an escaped slave herself and led over 300 people to freedom and was a spy for the Union army during the Civil War

  • The South offered a $40,000 reward for her capture and she still went back into the South 19 times

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12

Multiple Choice

What was Harriet Tubman's role to free the slaves?

1

Conductor

2

Operated a safe house or station

3

Cleared paths or freedom trails

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14

Multiple Select

Which of these is true of Harriet Tubman? (Pick 3)

1

Her father was a slave owner and overseer of a plantation

2

Rescued over 300 people from slavery via the Underground Railroad

3

Escaped in 1849 to Philadelphia

4

She worked for the Union Army during the Civil War

15

Opposition to Ending Slavery

  • Many white northerners did not want slaves freed and did not want them taking their jobs if they moved into northern cities and towns

  • The House of Representatives put a gag rule on talking about ending slavery and John Q. Adams led the fight to end that gag rule

  • Southern slave owners argued that they needed slaves to keep their farms and plantations working and did not want Northerners telling them how to handle their business

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16

Multiple Choice

A gag rule was used in the House of Representatives to keep representatives from talking about abolishing slavery.

1

True

2

False

Module 15 Lesson #3 The Movement to End Slavery

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