Tonight you can see part two of PBS American Experience's miniseries The Abolitionists. Below is the official write-up of all three parts. This may be a nice piece to accompany the award-winning movie Lincoln.
Radicals. Agitators. Troublemakers. Liberators. Called by many names,
the abolitionists tore the nation apart in order to make a more perfect
union. Men and women, black and white, Northerners and Southerners,
poor and wealthy, these passionate antislavery activists fought body and
soul in the most important civil rights crusade in American history.
What began as a pacifist movement fueled by persuasion and prayer became
a fiery and furious struggle that forever changed the nation.
Bringing to life the intertwined stories of Frederick Douglass,
William Lloyd Garrison, Angelina Grimké, Harriet Beecher Stowe and John
Brown, The Abolitionists takes place during some of the most
violent and contentious decades in American history, amid white-hot
religious passions that set souls on fire, and bitter debates over the
meaning of the Constitution and the nature of race. The documentary
reveals how the movement shaped history by exposing the fatal flaw of a
republic founded on liberty for some and bondage for others, setting the
nation on a collision course. In the face of personal risks --
beatings, imprisonment, even death -- abolitionists held fast to their
cause, laying the civil rights groundwork for the future and raising
weighty constitutional and moral questions that are with us still.
Part One
The opening hour of The Abolitionists
features the documentary's five principal characters, whose intertwined
lives and shared beliefs came together to form a powerful movement that
forever changed the nation.
In the 1820s and 30s, Frederick Douglass was a young slave growing up
in Maryland who became hopeful when he heard about abolitionists and
their push to end slavery.
William Lloyd Garrison found his life's purpose in the crusade against slavery, founding the newspaper The Liberator in 1831. The paper would become a powerful voice for the movement.
Angelina Grimké, the outspoken daughter of a wealthy Charleston,
South Carolina plantation family, abandoned her life of privilege and
moved to the North in 1829, where she would become a persuasive and
authentic public speaker against slavery.
In 1833, Harriet Beecher Stowe witnessed the brutality of slavery in
her first trip to the South. The searing memory of what she saw changed
her forever and impacted her greatest work, Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Multiple business failures coupled with the murder of an antislavery
activist in 1837 galvanized John Brown, and he devoted the rest of his
life to the cause.
By 1840, the growing abolitionist movement these activists helped
create had fragmented; increasing violence had raised doubts as to the
efficacy of its pacifist tactics.
Part Two
In 1838, Frederick Douglass escaped
slavery, eventually joining William Lloyd Garrison in the antislavery
movement. In the North, Douglass became a powerful orator, and reached
tens of thousands more with the 1845 publication of his autobiography.
When threatened with capture by his former owner, Douglass fled to
England, where he experienced life as a free man for the first time.
Returning to the U.S. in 1847, he launched his own antislavery paper, The North Star,
out of Rochester, New York, causing a rift with his mentor Garrison.
Later that year, John Brown met with Douglass in Springfield,
Massachusetts, and revealed his radical plan to raise an army, supply
them with arms, and free the slaves. Douglass did not share Brown's
enthusiasm for such violent tactics.
In 1852, following the tragic death of her own young son and moved by
the plight of slave families being torn apart by the Fugitive Slave
Law, Harriet Beecher Stowe published Uncle Tom’s Cabin. An
instant best seller that became wildly successful as a play, this
influential fictional story helped change the hearts and minds of
millions of Americans by depicting slavery through the eyes of its
victims.
In the spring of 1854, fugitive slave Anthony Burns was held in
Boston's city jail, where he became a focal point for both pro- and
antislavery advocates. Angry Bostonians attempted to free him, but
President Franklin Pierce, an ardent Southern sympathizer, sent in the
military to escort him to a ship in the harbor and eventually back to
enslavement.
All the attempts at compromise and resolution had only deepened the
divide between North and South, touching off a crisis that was about to
careen out of control.
Part Three
By 1854, the battle over admitting new
territories to the Union had reached a fever pitch. Kansas was the
front line of a bloody battle between pro-slavery and free-soil
contingents. In 1859, John Brown summoned Frederick Douglass to a secret
meeting in Chambersburg, PA, and revealed his plan to capture the
federal armory at Harpers Ferry, VA, and start a revolution; Douglass
refused to join him. Brown went ahead with the raid, and was injured and
captured. Before being executed, he managed to turn himself into a
public figure and a martyr for the cause.
In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected president. As Southern states
seceded from the Union, the country continued its descent into chaos,
and by the following spring, the Civil War had begun. What was almost
universally expected to be a quick and bloodless conflict dragged on. On
the 22nd of September 1862, news broke that Lincoln would sign the
Emancipation Proclamation. For Lincoln, the carnage was unendurable
unless it could be given over to a higher purpose.
On New Years Day 1863, Bostonians gathered at two celebrations:
William Lloyd Garrison and Harriet Beecher Stowe attended a concert at
the Music Hall; Frederick Douglass was at Tremont Temple. Near midnight,
the crowds erupted with joy when the announcement came that Lincoln has
emancipated the slaves in rebel territory. Not only were slaves free,
but African American men could now enlist in the Union forces. Two of
Douglass' sons went to war; and even William Lloyd Garrison, the "ultra
peace man," allowed his first born to sign up.
In December 1865, the Thirteenth Amendment was ratified, banning
slavery in all the states -- forever. For almost four decades, the
abolitionists had dedicated their lives to this moment. It is a triumph
of perseverance, of steadfastness, and in the logic and moral power of a
movement that had never wavered.