Most accounts date the birth of American abolitionism to 1831, when
William Lloyd Garrison began publishing his radical antislavery
newspaper,
The Liberator. In fact, however, the abolition
movement had been born with the American Republic. In the decades
following the Revolution, abolitionists worked steadily to
eliminate slavery and racial injustice, and their tactics and
strategies constantly evolved. Tracing the development of the
abolitionist movement from the 1770s to the 1830s, Richard Newman
focuses particularly on its transformation from a conservative
lobbying effort into a fiery grassroots reform cause.
What began in late-eighteenth-century Pennsylvania as an elite
movement espousing gradual legal reform began to change in the
1820s as black activists, female reformers, and nonelite whites
pushed their way into the antislavery movement. Located primarily
in Massachusetts, these new reformers demanded immediate
emancipation, and they revolutionized abolitionist strategies and
tactics--lecturing extensively, publishing gripping accounts of
life in bondage, and organizing on a grassroots level. Their
attitudes and actions made the abolition movement the radical cause
we view it as today.