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The Woman’S Role In The Abolitionist Movement

The abolitionist movement was meant to help free black slaves. You hear about many men who participated in the movement but you probably haven’t heard about the contributions women, both black and white, made toward the abolitionist movement. Women, across racial and class lines, had participated in organized abolition since 1817, when Black women and men met in Philadelphia to lodge a formal, public protest against the white-led colonization movement, which proposed to send Blacks "back" to Africa. Black women abolitionists and black men shared the view that abolition meant more than simply eliminating the institution of slavery but required obtaining political, social, and economic equality as well. But men had more power than woman which made it difficult for them to help. But they still found their ways.
Abolitionist women formed both formal and informal networks that sometimes crossed gender, race, and class boundaries. The most well-known female abolitionist was Harriet......


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Approximate Word Count: 509
Approximate Pages: 3 (250 words per double-spaced page)

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