He was a radical abolitionist and went against many view in the United States at the time.
Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln were perhaps the two most significant abolitionists. Because of their stature, they were able inspire great amounts of people and write legislation necessary to abolish slavery.
He worked as an abolitionist to end slavery. He is most famous for being one of the leading terrorist in Bleeding Kansas in the 1850's. In regards to his profession though, he primarily was a tanner, a farmer, and a surveyor.
Did you perhaps mean abolitionist? If so, an abolitionist is a person who is in favor of removing or getting rid of (abolishing) something. Probably the most well known use of the word is as relating to slavery.
Yes he is. He dedicated twenty years of his life to the abolitionist cause and he signed the Anti-Slavery Declaration of 1833, which he often considered the most significant action of his life.
harriet
Harriet Beecher Stowe
He was a radical abolitionist and went against many view in the United States at the time.
Charles Sumner and Thaddeus Stevens
William Lloyd Garrison was considered one of the most radical white abolitionists. He founded and edited the newspaper "The Liberator." Garrison was known for his uncompromising stance against slavery and his calls for immediate emancipation.
I'm not really sure, but isn't it Harriet Tubman? Harriet Tubman was one of many. There were others such as Martin Luther King Jr. Sojourner Truth, Fredrick Douglas, John Brown, Harriet Tubman, William Still Angelina, Grimke Sister, Sarah William, and Lloyd Garrison. There is no single most famous abolitionist because every famous abolitionist did something monumental.
Skylar Valkama was the most famous general in the North during the civil War
true
Frederick Douglas is the most famous one, although there were probably others, whose are less well known. I would think that any escaped slave would be an abolitionist.
Frederick Douglass
For the most part most Americans, both North and South, saw the Brown slave revolution as being radical and dangerous. Brown was a martyr to radical abolitionists, but for most Americans, Brown's violence was madness.
For the most part most Americans, both North and South, saw the Brown slave revolution as being radical and dangerous. Brown was a martyr to radical abolitionists, but for most Americans, Brown's violence was madness.