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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page review of the book Black Abolitionists by Benjamin Quarles. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAbaqu.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a very objective and honest manner, how most of the abolitionists were black and how through their effort changes were ultimately made. The following paper examines this work and the
author himself. Black Abolitionists by Benjamin Quarles As mentioned, this work points out the truth of how most of the abolitionists were actually black and that it was
not really the white abolitionists who made a difference in the society but the efforts and sacrifices of the African American people. It is a very objective look at the
abolitionist movement as Quarles presents documents, slave narratives, and simply offers facts with adequate support that truly illustrates the involvement of the African American people, not the whites, in relationship
to making a difference. For example, he speaks of how many African Americans were literate and intelligent in their struggles, being free black individuals a great deal of the
time. He illustrates how many of them traveled overseas in an effort to further gain support for the cause, hoping that the United States would heed such pressure.
The author presents the reader with a great deal about history, concerning abolition, which is never adequately covered in history. For example, he discusses
many different organizations, all the while also illustrating and supporting the truth that so many of the African Americans supported one another, worked for a common cause, and selflessly and
peacefully pursued their goal as a group. This is not to say that their efforts, or the manner in which they went about organizing was always successful but it illustrates
much of what is not really studied or known by most Americans. For example, the author notes how, "Reform organizations that were national in their reach always faced the
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