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The Enduring Vision,
Fifth Edition
Paul S. Boyer, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Clifford E. Clark, Jr., Carleton College
et al.
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 |  | American Ethnic Identities: Online Activities
Unit 4: Challenging the Meaning of Freedom:
Black Abolitionists in Antebellum America
 From the Collections of the Library of Congress
Record locator: LCUSZC4-5321 PRINTS AND PHOTOGRAPHS
DIVISION
Learning Objectives:
- To realize that African American slaves and freedmen took active roles in
abolition of and rebellion against slavery.
- To introduce the ways that three black abolitionists—David Walker,
Henry Highland Garnet, and Frederick Douglass—contributed and shaped
the abolitionist movement in antebellum America.
- To examine the ways that these three abolitionists used the rhetoric and
implied promises of the Declaration of Independence as the basis
for their demands.
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