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- From Emancipation to Juneteenth: The Long Road to Freedom . . .
President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation had taken force in January 1863, freeing “thenceforward and forever” all persons held in bondage in states that did not return to the Union, an action taken as a military necessity The enslaved in states that had not seceded from the Union remained in bondage
- Resistance and Rebellion - Understanding Slavery
Understand how the enslaved actively resisted and rebelled at every stage of oppression including uprisings on board ship, forming their own communities and maintaining cultural heritage
- Slave Resistance, Freedoms Story, TeacherServe®, National . . .
Slave masters monopolized armed power, severely restricting slaves’ access to weapons Slave masters also closely monitored their slaves’ activities, limiting their movement and freedom of association Under these circumstances, organization and planning were next to impossible
- Resistance and Abolition | African - Library of Congress
Daily life in a slave workplace was marked by countless acts of everyday resistance Although their freedom was denied by the law, enslaved African Americans used a wide variety of strategies to contest the authority of slaveholders and to assert their right to control their own lives
- Slavery, Resistance, and Emancipation: The Struggle for . . .
Enslaved people engaged in a variety of resistance tactics, where much of the rebellion was intended to revolt against the daily conditions of their bondage Faking illness, working slowly, delivering subpar work, and misplacing or breaking tools and equipment were a few of the less mild forms of defiance
- Journey to Freedom - Equal Justice Initiative Reports
By the time the war ended with Confederate surrender to the Union on April 9, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln had issued an Emancipation Proclamation abolishing slavery in the rebel territories and Congress had advanced a constitutional amendment that aimed to abolish slavery nationwide
- America Must Reckon With Slaverys Long and Violent End | TIME
While the proclamation effectively ended slavery in all areas of the Confederacy in active rebellion, the executive order excluded slaveholding states that remained in the Union—Kentucky,
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