Garrison is a man who thinks about the so-called freedom country, but that does not mean him. The United States is regarded as a land of equal freedom and equal opportunity, but it is far from how to make an African-American slave a movable slave. In my article I will reveal how this free African-Americans can change the slave's life, fight for freedom and free the rights of African Americans. I will talk about how Garrison sees the abolition movement, gradual release, colonialization, violence.
Diligent members of the colonial movement are William Lloyd Garrison, born in a working class family in Massachusetts State. Garrison plans to strengthen the campaign in 1830 by forming an American anti - slave association for a gradual abolition. Through his publication "The Liberator", he called for immediate and universal liberation. This view shocked nationwide because both northern and southern regions are afraid of wholesale slaves. The Yankees worried about the collapse of competitive labor, the southern economy they race mixed or worried, "merge." That violence escalated and began to oppose the abolitionist. In 1835, the Garrison was almost lynched because the Boston mob ran after him in the opposition rally. Two years later, a group of people dragged Ioljovov Joey of Illinois from his press.
William Lloyd Garrison has been involved in the cause of reform in Massachusetts since childhood. In the 1920s he advocated the gradual abolition of African black colonization and slavery. The work of a black northern person like David Walker changed his mind. In 1831, he created a newspaper called The Liberator. The following is an opening article of Garrison to explain the purpose of his thesis. Americans took home a white woman of the middle class back home before the war and was in charge of educating children and maintaining the virtues of the family. However, the use of these ideas by women has become more active in public places than ever, and has played a significant role in major reforms of this age. Participation in women's anti-slavery movement most directly affected certain women's rights movement. In this document, Sarah Moore Grimké is seeking equality between men and women