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- Newsgroups: soc.history
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!udel!princeton!phoenix.Princeton.EDU!glhewitt
- From: glhewitt@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Gary Livingston Hewitt)
- Subject: Re: Founding Fathers
- Message-ID: <1992Nov15.175448.19504@Princeton.EDU>
- Originator: news@nimaster
- Sender: news@Princeton.EDU (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: phoenix.princeton.edu
- Organization: Princeton University
- References: <1e4j4aINNquc@fido.asd.sgi.com> <1e4jnaINNquc@fido.asd.sgi.com> <1e4mfuINNsf2@gazette.bcm.tmc.edu>
- Date: Sun, 15 Nov 1992 17:54:48 GMT
- Lines: 38
-
- In article <1e4mfuINNsf2@gazette.bcm.tmc.edu> rick@crick.ssctr.bcm.tmc.edu (Richard H. Miller) writes:
- >In article <1e4jnaINNquc@fido.asd.sgi.com> livesey@solntze.wpd.sgi.com (Jon Livesey) writes:
- >>
- >>[Following up to myself] Actually, if one accepts "two hundred years"
- >>literally, it would not predate the Founding Fathers. However, I'm pretty
- >>sure that the anti-slavery movement goes back further than that. I'll look
- >>it up and post a reference.
- >
- >And to add, I would be interested in that reference. I was not being flip
- >when I replied. I believe that the 'moral' antislavery effort started a little
- >after the formation of the US. In any case it was a controversial and new
- >idea FOR THE TIME. We should use as a frame of reference the movment from
- >England since these were the ideas which would have influenced New England.
- >So, it is me feeling that the anti-slavery as a 'moral' cause was very new
- >at the time of the adoption of the constitution.
-
- Quaker anti-slavery, on moral grounds, existed by the 1750s, in the
- person of Anthony Benezet, followed by Benjamin Rush and others.
- Massachusetts abolished slavery (in fact, one of the few actual
- occurrences of abolition, rather than a gradual compensated emancipation)
- in 1780 (?) or so. (Of course, there were few slaves left).
- In addition, the moral rumblings of the Great Awakening (from 1740s
- through the Revolution) contained within them a great deal of (usually
- unrealized) anti-slavery sentiment, and laid the groundwork for the
- evangelical/perfectionist "moral" antislavery to which Mr. Miller
- refers.
-
- Also, one might point to Thomas Jefferson, a devoted anti-slavery
- thinker (on moral and other grounds: he said something along the lines
- of "I tremble when I think that God is just" referring to a potential
- judgment for the enslavers.
-
- Gary
- --
- ++====+========+==========+=======+===++
- || | Gary| L. Hewitt| | || HELP! I've been imprisoned
- || glh|ewitt@ph|oenix.prin|ceton.e|du || by my .signature! HELP!
- ++====+========+==========+=======+===++
-