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6 - Religious Freedom, Political Liberty, and Protestant Dissenter Civil Rights

from Part I - The American Revolution Ignites Social Movements

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 October 2021

Micah Alpaugh
Affiliation:
University of Central Missouri
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Summary

During the American Revolution, abolitionism became a social movement for the first time. Amid their appeals for liberty and equality, Americans increasingly realized the contradictions of owning slaves, and even prominent Founding Father slaveholders spoke of the need to find ways to reform or phase out the institution. The first explicit abolitions in the world occurred amid the War of Independence. By the early republic, antislavery societies became numerous – though the cause’s momentum was thwarted in the closed-door Constitutional Convention and the rise of cotton in the American South in the 1790s motivated a new spread of slavery.

Type
Chapter
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Friends of Freedom
The Rise of Social Movements in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions
, pp. 144 - 170
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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