How are the abolitionist movement and the womens rights movement connected?

Women were always an important part of the abolitionist movement in and beyond the United States. Though they were not formally admitted to the earliest abolitionist societies in America, both black and white women shaped antislavery discourses by aiding fugitive slaves and circulating antislavery literature. But women’s involvement in the abolitionist movement changed drastically during the 1820s and 1830s, reorienting both antislavery activism and reform culture.  British and American women began writing abolitionist essays in the 1820s, making women’s roles much more visible in the antislavery struggle. By the next decade, American women led an array of abolitionist petition drives to state and federal governments, turning the antislavery cause itself into a hotly contested social matter. Lydia Maria Child, a popular writer, alienated many of her former fans with her 1833 Appeal in Favor of the Class of Americans Called Africans. After escaping to freedom in 1826, Sojourner Truth dedicated herself to the abolitionist cause. Truth said that she “used to be sold for other people’s benefit, but now she sold herself for her own.”

By the 1840s, black and white women served as antislavery lecturers, editors, fundraisers and organizers.  Slaveholders fumed at women’s activism. The Southern Literary Messenger referred to abolitionist women as “politicians in petticoats” who needlessly stirred up trouble on the slavery issue. Yet even some male abolitionists were chagrined by women’s activism before the Civil War. In 1840, the American Anti-Slavery Society divided over women’s role in the movement, with some conservative reformers refusing to support female lecturers or leaders. Nevertheless, women’s activism grew more intense over the next two decades, making the abolitionist movement a much stronger and more ramifying entity on the eve of the Civil War.

Videos

Angelina Grimké | Southerner Aristocrat Turned Abolitionist

 The first four and a half minutes of this clip explores how Angelina Grimké, a former member of the slave-holding class of South Carolina, Angelina turns against her upper class background and becomes an outspoken abolitionist. She became the first female speaker to lecture in front of both men and women breaking all conventional rules of the time.

Harriet Beecher Stowe

A brief introduction to the author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, the most widely read book in the nineteenth century and an essential weapon for abolitionists.

 

Lesson Plans

Women Abolitionists – (free account required) Women always played a significant role in the fight against slavery and racial injustice. Through research and analysis in the classroom, students will learn about the diversity of women who participated in antislavery activities, the variety of activities and goals they pursued, and the barriers they faced as women.

In the years between the Seneca Falls Convention and the Civil War, powerful links existed between antislavery and women’s rights advocates. Virtually all women’s rights advocates supported abolition. Not all abolitionists supported women’s rights, however; since some believed that it was inappropriate for women to be engaged in public, political action. Still, these differences among abolitionists did little to deter the common work of those who embraced emancipation for both slaves and women.

From 1848 through the Civil War, those who argued for wider roles for women generally called themselves women’s rights advocates rather than suffragists. The right to vote was included among their goals, but their agenda was much broader than any single issue. In addition, most women’s rights supporters had been introduced to reform efforts through the antislavery movement and specifically through the American Anti-Slavery Society (AASS) led by William Lloyd Garrison. Members of the AASS argued that abolition could only be achieved by persuading Americans—slaveholders and non-slaveholders alike—that human bondage was against God’s law. Many Garrisonians, including a large number of Quakers, refused to participate in electoral politics due to the government’s support of slavery and the U.S. war against Mexico. Garrisonian women did not necessarily oppose woman suffrage, but they emphasized instead the right of women to gain equal access to education and employment; equality within marriage, the family, and religion; and a married woman’s right to property, wages, control over her own body, and custody of her children. They advocated similar rights for African Americans and focused particularly on the sexual abuse of slave women as one of the strongest arguments for eradicating slavery.

The AASS provided women with opportunities to speak, organize, and write on behalf of slaves; and to hold office, raise funds, and edit newspapers for the cause. Lucretia Mott, co-organizer of the Seneca Falls Woman’s Rights Convention, was a Garrisonian abolitionist and a charter member of the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society founded in 1833, which included both African-American and white women in its ranks. Many Garrisonian societies were interracial and mixed-sex organizations, and all argued on principle for both racial equality and a woman’s right to a public role. Other antislavery groups, such as the Liberty and Free Soil parties, focused on political action as the best means of achieving abolition. However, they attracted fewer women to their ranks and relegated them to secondary roles, such as raising funds to support men’s activities and agendas.

It was only in the aftermath of the Civil War, when Republican politicians introduced the 14th and 15th amendments to the U.S. Constitution extending citizenship and suffrage to former slave men, that suffrage gained the central place in the battle for women’s rights. Then former abolitionist allies, including those who had long advocated women’s rights, divided over the movement’s priorities. Many abolitionists initially advocated universal suffrage, for both African Americans and women. When that was made impossible by the insertion of the word male in the 14th and 15th amendments, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, with support from African Americans like Sojourner Truth, campaigned against any amendment that would deny voting rights to women. Among their opponents were former allies like Lucy Stone, Antoinette Brown Blackwell, Wendell Phillips, and Frederick Douglass, who argued that it was “the Negro’s hour” and that women’s suffrage would have to wait.

As a result of this division, Stanton and Anthony founded the National Woman Suffrage Association, a women-only organization, in 1869 to promote a federal amendment guaranteeing woman suffrage. Stone and Blackwell formed a rival organization—the American Woman Suffrage Association—that included men as well as women and advocated a state-by-state campaign for female enfranchisement. Not until 1890 would the divisions created by the battle over black men’s enfranchisement heal, allowing suffragists and former abolitionist allies to work together again in the National American Women’s Suffrage Association. Nonetheless, even though the abolitionist-women’s rights alliance fractured in the late 1860s, suffragists owed a substantial debt to the antislavery movement, which had served as the most important training ground for its leaders and the most important repository for ideas of sexual as well as racial emancipation in the decades before the Civil War.

How did the women's movement influence the abolitionist movement?

Women were always an important part of the abolitionist movement in and beyond the United States. Though they were not formally admitted to the earliest abolitionist societies in America, both black and white women shaped antislavery discourses by aiding fugitive slaves and circulating antislavery literature.

How are the abolitionist movement and women's rights movement similar?

The Abolition and the Women's Rights movements both consisted of a common goal: to grant the members of their particular groups a free and ultimately better life.

What was the relationship between the suffragette movement and abolitionism?

The women's rights movement was the offspring of abolition. Many people actively supported both reforms. Several participants in the 1848 First Women's Rights Convention in Seneca Falls had already labored in the anti-slavery movement.

What was the relationship between abolitionism and the women's rights movement quizlet?

How did the fight to end slavery help spark the women's movement? "Women who fought to end slavery began to recognize their own bondage." The abolitionist movement helped women see the discrimination they encountered in their own lives, and they organized to end this discrimination.