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Standard 3 abolition
reconstruction
| Abolitionist | Someone who's against slavery |
|---|---|
| Nonviolent | Abstaining from the use of violence |
| Slave Pen | Where they kept slaves to groom them before selling them. |
| Religion | The belief in and worship of a superhuman controlling power |
| Emancipation | Freeing someone from the control of another |
| petion | A formal written request, typically one signed by many people, appealing to authority with respect to a particular cause |
| gag rule | No one can talk against the government about slavery. |
| bleeding Kansas | was a series of violent events, involving anti-slavery Free-Staters and pro-slavery |
| Free v. slave state | |
| Personal lIberty Act | |
| Fugitive Slave Act | |
| Dred Scott Decision | |
| Angelina Grimke | |
| Frederick Douglass | |
| William Lloyd Garrison | |
| The Liberator | |
| John Brown | |
| Dred Scott | |
| “Put on the full armor of God” | |
| "give No Quarter" | |
| “His diploma is written on his back” | |
| "Caution. It is nothing but the word of cowardice.” | |
| "Africa" | |
| "let loose the dogs of war" | |
| SHAKESPEARE | |
| “Sic semper tyrannis” | |
| “Et tu, Brute” | |
| Reconstruction | |
| 13th Admendment | |
| 14th Admendment | |
| 15th Admendment | |
| freedmens bureau | |
| Compromise of 1850 | |
| Kansas Nebraska Act | |
| Black codes | |
| 1876 | |
| Compromise of 1877 | |
| carpetbaggers | |
| scalawags | |
| radical republicans | |
| ku klux klan | |
| Ulysses S Grant | |
| The Negro question |