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William Lloyd Garrison

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William Lloyd Garrison By: Arielle Budney Jamie Hofstetter Kim Alderman Early Life Born in Newburyport, Massachusetts (from the north) His family was part of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: William Lloyd Garrison


1
William Lloyd Garrison
  • By Arielle Budney
  • Jamie Hofstetter
  • Kim Alderman

2
Early Life
  • Born in Newburyport, Massachusetts (from the
    north)
  • His family was part of the middling ranks of
    their town
  • Williams father deserted the family, leaving
    them penniless, forcing William to work at a
    young age
  • In 1818, began working for the Newburyport Herald
    as a writer and editor

3
Early Life (continued)
  • He excelled at his job as editor, partly
    because of his love for it
  • He was apprenticed for a seven year term
  • Caleb Cushing was the man who brought slavery
    to Garrisons attention
  • Found slavery to be unchristian so began
    writing his beliefs about it.

4
The Abolitionist Movement
  • Early 1830s
  • By-product of religious revivalism popularly
    known as the Great Awakening
  • Attempted to achieve immediate liberation of all
    slaves and the ending of racial segregation and
    discrimination
  • Revivalist views led abolitionists to see
    slavery as a product of personal sin
  • At age 25, Lloyd joined the Abolitionist
    Movement

5
Contributions to the Movement
  • He became associated with the American
    Colonization society
  • -believed free blacks should emigrate to a
    territory on the west coast of Africa
  • -promoted the freedom and happiness of blacks
  • -Most members had no wish to free slaves, their
    goal was only to reduce the number of free blacks
    in the country and thus help preserve the
    institution of slavery
  • -He soon rejected this society

6
Contributions to the Movement (continued)
  • At this time worked as a co-editor of an
    anti-slavery paper, The Genius of Universal
    Emancipation
  • On January 1, 1831, he published the first
    issue of the antislavery newspaper, the
    Liberator
  • About 75 of the readers of the Liberator were
    free black slaves
  • Advocated the immediate emancipation of
    slaves believed they too, were Americans and are
    entitled to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
    happiness.

7
Contributions to the Movement (continued)
  • Because he was a radical
  • Gained the reputation of being the most
    radical of the abolitionists
  • Stressed nonviolence and passive resistance
  • His task show people how immoral slavery was
    and they would join in the campaign
  • In 1832 he helped organize the New England
    Anti-Slavery Society-one of the first
    organizations promoting the immediate
    emancipation of slaves

8
Contributions to the Movement (continued)
  • In 1832 he helped organize the New England
    Anti-Slavery Society-one of the first
    organizations promoting the immediate
    emancipation of slaves
  • -Believed the Anti-Slavery society should
    not align itself with a political
    party -Believed women should be allowed to
    participate -Believed the US Constitution was a
    pro- slavery document

9
Contributions to the Movement (continued)
  • In 1844 Garrison adopted the slogan "No union
    with slaveholders," arguing that since the
    Constitution was a proslavery document, the Union
    it held together should be dissolved by the
    separation of free from slave states.
  • Liberty for each, for all, and forever. William
    Lloyd Garrison
  • "I am in earnest I will not equivocate I will
    not excuse I will not retreat a single inch
    AND I WILL BE HEARD," William Lloyd Garrison

10
Effects of his Contributions
  • Worked hard for slavery to be banned in the
    United States
  • Supported Lincolns Emancipation Proclamation and
    the reelection of Lincoln in 1864
  • After the Civil War, he published his last issue
    of the Liberator in 1865
  • Impact on media
  • - Represented the freedom of speech and press
  • - Said many things the people did not want to
    hear
  • He died on May 24, 1879

11
Works Cited
  • Garrison, William Lloyd. 14 Apr. 1865. The
    Philanthropist. Web. 11 Apr. 2010.
    lthttps//www.msu.edu/?dykhous2/?Wm__Garrison/?wm_
    _garrison.htmlgt.
  • The Liberator. N.d. N.p., n.d. Web. 11 Apr. 2010.
    lthttp//www.olemiss.edu/?courses/?his105/?images/?
    liberator.jpggt.
  • "William Lloyd Garrison ." Africans in America.
    N.p., n.d. Web. 11 Apr 2010. lthttp//www.pbs.org/w
    gbh/aia/part4/4p1561.htmlgt.
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