Ch. 16 + Documents
During this time they were talking about the abolition of slavery and how it played an important roll in the ideas and practices of the Atlantic revolutions. I found it interesting that they said the newly freed people didn't achieve anything close to political equality except in Haiti. This was also a time for the nations and nationalism as well as the feminist beginnings. In the documents it was talking about the French Revolution and the "rights of man" which was basically viewed as the philosophical core of the French Revolution. There was similarities between this and the US Declaration of Independence. They also had the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen of 1789 had 14 rules that they were trying to abide by. I believe that Frederick Douglas was an important part of this because he was a born slave that escaped and became one of the leading abolitionist, newspaper publisher, writer, and a spokesperson for African Americans. In 1852 he went to New York. The last document was about the Rights of Women and was talking about how it was spreading news all around the world. Elizabeth Stanton addressed the US congressional committee in 1892. She was the main advocate for women and the right to vote, in which we all know was the 1920s.
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