From Anti-slavery Sentiment to Eradication;.
            
Reasons for the Abolition of Enslavement.
            
From the Missouri Compromise to the Emancipation Declaration .
            
SUMMARY.
            
The drive to end slavery gradually became the dominant American reform movement from 1820-1863.  The new antislavery crusade had a strong sectional character, and the activists criticized human bondage as contrary to the principles of republicanism and liberty, which was accepted as a "necessary evil."  Beginning in the 1830's, a number of outspoken abolitionists condemned slavery as a sin and saw it as their moral duty to end this violation of God's law.  .
            
SOURCES.
            
Blaustein, Albert P.  Civil Rights and the American Negro:  Washington Square Press, 1968.
            
Brinkley, Alan.  The Unfinished Nation:  Third Edition. McGraw-Hill Companies, 2000.
            
Bedford/St. Martin's.  America's History:  Fourth Edition.  RR Donnelley & Sons Company, 2000.
            
Davis, Kenneth C.  Don't Know Much About History:  New York, New York, HarperCollins Publishers Inc., 1990.  .
            
United States History Index.  http://www.ukans.edu/~usa/index.html:  Maintained by a history professor and arranged by subject: labor history and agricultural history.
            
Internet Resources for Students of Afro-American History. http://www.libraries.rutgers.edu/rulib/socsci/hist/afrores.html:  This site is indexed and linked to a wide variety of sources, including primary documents, text collections, and archival sources on African American history.  Individual documents such as slave narratives and petitions:  the Fugitive Slave Act.  .
            
Harriet Beecher Stowe:  The most powerful of all abolitionists propoganda was Hariiet Beecher Stowe's novel "Uncle Tom's Cabin," published as a book in 1852.  It sold more than 300,000 copies within a year and became one of the most remarkable best sellers in American history.  The book succeeded in bringing the message of abolitionism to an enormous new audience.
            
John Brown:  He was a huge abolitionist who led uprising in Kansas and Virginia.