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Chapter 8 - Emigration and Enmity: The Meaning of Free Soil in a Nation Divided

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 April 2021

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Summary

In the wake of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act, free African Americans felt they had as much to lose as fugitive slaves. Many felt that they would never be recognized as citizens and that they would never be granted legal equality or social acceptance in the predominantly white United States. This chapter shows that, against this backdrop, free-soil havens abroad resonated more than ever as potent symbols of liberty, equality, uplift, and independence. They offered a stark contrast to the United States’ ongoing commitment to slavery at its very highest levels. Building on decades of practice, American anti-slavery advocates in the 1850s leveraged the practical and symbolic value of international free-soil havens to bolster the fight of freedom and equality at home and abroad. From national anti-slavery conventions to burgeoning black nationalist political thought, this chapter shows that free-soil spaces became dominant focal points of escape, resistance, and collective action until the outbreak of civil war in 1861.

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Beacons of Liberty
International Free Soil and the Fight for Racial Justice in Antebellum America
, pp. 195 - 223
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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