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ELA 11 5.2: William Lloyd Garrison 108 Views
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Description:
Oh, William Lloyd Garrison and his radical ideas... like... you know... freedom and equality. Weird, right?
Transcript
- 00:00
We speak student! You'd think that Americans of the earliest 19th century would have
- 00:06
finally figured out that slavery was wrong but nope somehow the chains and [woman closing a curtain to hide a slave]
- 00:11
whips weren't a dead giveaway there were a lot of people in this country even in
- 00:15
the North who we're still cool with owning other people an exception to this
- 00:20
rule was William Lloyd Garrison Garrison was born in Massachusetts in 1805 his
Full Transcript
- 00:26
dad ditched the family when Garrison was just a kid which meant young William had [young boy at a drink stand selling lemonade]
- 00:29
to go to work at an early age you know kinda like the Olsen twins by the time
- 00:35
he was 13 however garrison had found his destiny he got a gig at a local paper as
- 00:40
a writer and editor young William wasn't just a wonderful [William Garrison scribbling on paper while a house burns]
- 00:45
journalist though he was also a devout Christian who believed that his purpose
- 00:48
in life was to crusade against sin and reform the people and institutions
- 00:52
around him it's nice to have a higher purpose even when that higher purpose [A man with a sword knocking on a door]
- 00:56
gets a lot of doors slammed in your face at the age of 25 Garrison decided to
- 01:01
hop onto the right side of history and become an abolitionist while there were
- 01:06
other abolitionists in the US at the time none of them really knew what they [two people reading about abolitionists]
- 01:09
were doing should slavery be abolished immediately or gradually should freed
- 01:15
slaves be allowed to stay in the US they're shipped back to Africa with
- 01:18
was slavery and moral and religious problems or a legal and political one shouldn't [a man stood beside a bible and a USA flag]
- 01:23
slave owner to abuse their slaves be burned at the stake beheaded or drawn
- 01:27
and quartered so many questions initially Garrison was associated with
- 01:32
the American Colonization Society which was a group that wanted to send all free [men carrying another man to a boat to send him away from the country]
- 01:36
blacks to Africa where they'd be happy and free but when Garrison realized that
- 01:40
the society really just wanted to ditch all free blacks in order to preserve
- 01:44
slavery he nope right out of there on January 1st 1831 Garrison published
- 01:49
[newspaper article titled the liberator] the first edition of his abolitionist newspaper The Liberator it was a
- 01:54
showcase for his extremely radical views you should have heard the way this guy
- 01:59
thought you should eat a pizza slice and not only did Garrison believe that every
- 02:03
slave in the US should have been freed like yesterday but he also thought [Garrison attempting to free a slave]
- 02:07
blacks could assimilate into American society garrison was also a fan of
- 02:10
non-violence and passive resistance and his delightful combination of banana pants
- 02:14
crazy and VW driving hippie earned him enough of following that he helped form [people following another man dressed in bright color clothing and sunglasses]
- 02:19
two societies to push or immediate emancipation however by 1840 the
- 02:24
American anti-slavery society that Garrison belonged to had split the man
- 02:28
was just too radical and not in the totally rad kind of way not only did [Garrison riding a skateboard and falling off]
- 02:33
Garrison despise political parties and believe that women should be
- 02:36
evolutionist too but he was more than happy to yell at anybody who wasn't [Garrison carrying a flaming pitchfork yelling at other people]
- 02:40
ready to burn down the system like he was in the 1850s Garrison got into it
- 02:45
with Frederick Douglass a former slave and formidable writer and speaker Douglas
- 02:49
believed that the US Constitution could be used to end slavery Garrison believed [US constitution holding a sword to make a slave free]
- 02:53
that the US Constitution was an inherently pro-slavery document they
- 02:57
also had different opinions about which way to hang a roll of toilet paper the
- 03:01
two men couldn't agree to disagree and they never reconciled by the time [Garrison and Douglass fighting each other]
- 03:05
Abraham Lincoln had rolled into the White House with his bad self Garrison
- 03:09
had been an abolitionist for 30 years he gave his full support to Lincoln's
- 03:13
Emancipation Proclamation and after the 13th amendment passed in 1865 garrison [a document of the 13th amendment]
- 03:19
shut the Liberator down his mission to end slavery accomplished Garrison's
- 03:24
newspaper never had a circulation above 3,000 and it hemorrhaged money every [a huge stock pile of unsold newspapers]
- 03:28
year it was in print Garrison's influence never extended beyond New
- 03:32
England and his views were never in line with the majority opinion and yet he was
- 03:37
important garrison was one of the few who pointed out over and over again that [man pointing to the declaration of independence and US constitution]
- 03:42
while the Declaration of Independence and the US Constitution said one thing
- 03:45
the US government practiced something completely different plus he believed
- 03:50
the idea of life liberty and the pursuit of happiness we're supposed to extend
- 03:54
every American no matter the color of their skin [A diverse line of american citizens smiling]
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