Comparing Uncle Tom's Cabin, And What To A Slave

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The Civil War remains the United States bloodiest and deadliest war. More than 600,000 men died in five years of fighting. The causes for the Civil War are as numerous and different and the men who died in it. Before the Civil War began, Northern and Southern writers and authors were publishing newspapers, novels, and books of all types. The mass sale and production of these products allowed them to be read by a larger audience. These writers such as Harriet Beecher Stowe, Fredrick Douglass, William Lloyd Garrison, George Fitzhugh, and David Walker, and their writings such as Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and What to a Slave… greatly influenced the decision and the commencement of the Civil War. In America before the Civil War, slavery was the issue on the front page of every newspaper and the topic of hundreds of books. The North had many anti slavery and pro abolition newspapers. One of the most well known was William Lloyd Garrison’s paper named The Liberator. The Liberator was a constant source for abolition news and remained so from the 1830s into the 1860s. It often dealt with other publications by abolitionists. William Garrison habitually spoke extremely critically of slavery. In one of his responses to an appeal written by David Walker, Garrison tries to “remind Americans that every time they…show more content…
This address was given to the President, fellow abolitionists and other national figures. He states how the celebration of July Fourth is not a celebration for Africans but that it is a reminder of their servitude and oppression. He talks about how atrocious and immoral slavery is and how it is against their constitution and the memory of their forefathers. The reaction to Garrisons speech was mixed; abolitionist and African Americans loved it and revered him for it. Where as southerners and slave owners disagreed with and hated

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