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abolitionism
[ ab-uh-lish-uh-niz-uhm ]
noun
- the principle or policy of abolition, especially ending slavery as an institution in the U.S. and emancipating African Americans.
abolitionism
- The belief that slavery should be abolished. In the early nineteenth century, increasing numbers of people in the northern United States held that the nation's slaves should be freed immediately, without compensation to slave owners. John Brown , Frederick W. Douglass , William Lloyd Garrison , Sojourner Truth , and Harriet Tubman were well-known abolitionists.
Notes
Word History and Origins
Origin of abolitionism1
Example Sentences
Kenneth, who is the great-great-great-grandson of Frederick Douglass, added "We taught the students today that Frederick wasn't much older than they are now when he started his career in abolitionism and activism."
It’s the same impulse that supported 19th century abolitionism and reconstruction after the Civil War.
As Dorothy Roberts writes in her book “Torn Apart,” you eventually come around to abolitionism because this system can’t be fixed.
It persuaded her to devote herself to abolitionism.
For their part, pro-slavery Southerners had long rehearsed their own conspiracy against what they viewed as the religious zealots in the vanguard of abolitionism, whom they called the “Black Republicans.”
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