424 Pages
by
Routledge
This volume presents key published articles on the history of the American abolitionist movement's attempt to convert the nation's religious institutions into allies in the battle for emancipation. As this volume's essays describe, many abolitionists persisted in attempting to induce the churches to take a higher antislavery stand. Their activities helped foment the sectional schism of a number of the nation's leading denominations in the decades prior to the Civil War.
Hamm, Thomas D., et.al. Moral choices: Two Indiana Quaker Communities and the Abolitionist Movement. Indiana Magazine of History 87 (1991); Hammond, John L. Revival Religion and Antislavery Politics. American Sociological Review 39 (1974); Johnson, Clifton H. Abolitionist Missionary Activities in North Carolina. North Carolina Historical Review 40 (1963); Loveland, Anne C. Evangelicalism and Immediate Emancipation in American Antislavery Thought. Journal of Southern History 32 (1966); Padgett, Chris. Hearing the Antislavery Rank-and-File: The Wesleyan Methodist Schism of 1943. Journal of the Early Republic 12 (1992).
Biography
John R. McKivigan