Northern wage slavery and slavery In the 1980s, blacks in the south of the United States promised to migrate to the north and believed there were more opportunities and benefits for blacks in the north. Frederick Douglas and Booker T. Washington opposed the immigration to the north, but millions of blacks moved north. The industry in which the Negro moved north is concern of Douglas and Washington, and black Northern workers were in the same position before action.
The tension between the north and the south of the United States is intensifying through the 1940s and 1850s. This tension is mainly concentrated in slavery that exists in the state of the south. By 1850 most northern countries abolish slavery and the newly formed Republican campaign promised to completely terminate slavery. They want to start building up themselves within the industry so that the south will be like the northern part and use the concept of "free labor" to hire people for work, not to use them as slaves.
Due to the popularity of abolishmentism in the northern states, it has pressured the relationship between the north and south churches. Northern missionaries have increasingly opposed slavery in the 1930s. In the 1840's, slavery started dividing sects. This weakened the social relations between the North and the South, and in the 1950s made the country more divisive. After the end of the American Civil War, the problem of slavery in America was solved. Although the war began with a political struggle against state protection, the southern missionaries demanded to protect their homes, because of the fact that the abolishists in the north are preaching good news of slavery liberation It was religious. Greet Smith and William Lloyd Garrison gave up pacifism and Garrison changed the liberator's motto to Leviticus 25:10.