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1. What are the rungs on the social ladder of the South? - ANSWER At the
top were the wealthy planters who owned 100 or more slaves, the the slave
owners, next the landless whites, and at the bottom were the slaves and
free blacks.
2. Where did the slaves live in the South? - ANSWER Slaves mainly lived in
the Black Belt (lower South) in one room cabins. They generally worked
from dawn to dusk and had no rights; they lived in the constant fear of
being sold.
3. What did slaves do to resist the "peculiar institution"? - ANSWER Slaves
would sabotage equipment, pilfer goods from the "Big House", runaway
and occasionally poisoned the master's food.
4. Who were prominent abolitionists and what distinguished on from
another? - ANSWER Frederick Douglass, Garrison, David Walker,
Lovejoy, Sojourner Truth, and Harriet Beecher Stowe are a few of the more
prominent abolitionists. Each abolitionist had their own method of
spreading the truth of slavery; each had their own standpoint on the issue.
, 5. How did the South react to the growing agitation of abolitionists? - ANSWER
The South burned all abolitionist's pamphlets, forbid abolition of any
kind, and became very defensive of slavery.
6. CHARACTER SKETCH
Theodore Dwight Weld - ANSWER Weld was one of the first American
abolitionists to preach against the sin of slavery. He wrote potent pamphlets
and gave speeches all across the Old Northwest.
7. CHARACTER SKETCH
William Lloyd Garrison - ANSWER William Lloyd Garrison was a radical
abolitionist who, on New Years of 1831, published his newspaper "The
Liberator"
8. CHARACTER SKETCH
Frederick Douglass - ANSWER Frederick Douglass was a fugitive slave who
entered the abolition scene in 1841 and continued to give powerful speeches
over slavery since then. In 1845, he published his autobiography "The Narrative
of the Life of Frederick Douglass"
9. CHARACTER SKETCH
Martin Delany - ANSWER Martin Delany was one of the few black
abolitionists who took colonization seriously. In 1859, he left America to look
for a suitable colonization sight in Africa.