people classify John Brown as a terrorist, but he is actually a freedom fighter. There are many reasons why but, he died to end slavery for peoples freedom. John Brown's a Freedom fighter. He focused on fixing illegal laws that a government should not have passed. One reason he is a freedom fighter is because he felt what he was doing was for God and what he had wanted him to do. He thought the only way to overthrow what he felt was right for God was to use violence. Brown took a vowel…
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John Brown It is extremely hard to be an abolitionist or to go against something that is a custom. John Brown had to do this very thing, and he took it out of hand. Every one agrees John Brown was an abolitionist, but some believe he was a terrorist and some think he is a revolutionary. John Brown Is a terrorist for three reasons: John raided Harpers Ferry, took sons into battle, and murdered five men The first reason John Brown is a terrorist is that he raided Harpers Ferry. He should not…
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have to disagree, John Brown was an abolitionist who assisted in the emancipation of slaves, despite his frequent labeling as a terrorist. Born on May 9, 1800, John Brown was an American abolitionist. In an attempt to spark a revolution against slavery, John Brown and associates planned to invade the federal arsenal on October 16, 1859, but the plan failed and many of them suffered serious injuries or died as a result. After being apprehended and brought into custody, John Brown was tried and convicted…
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This case allowed slave owners to transport their slaves with them to the West, which heightened regional tensions and led up to the Civil War. The abolitionist raid by John Brown on Harper's Ferry provided extra and necessary tension against the South and North so that they wouldn't accommodate each other’s' wishes further. The election of Abraham Lincoln allowed for Lincoln to establish his stance unification of the Union and the Confederacy. During his tenure, he would do many great things such…
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The positive actions of john brown, and the impacts he had on other abolitionist throughout the United States. John brown is a well-known abolitionist known for leading a charge against Harpers Ferry later coming up short in failure. Many believe that he had the intention of arming slaves to help aid their escape (history net). Because of the way he was raised and his beliefs system played a role in one of the many reasons he was anti-slavery. He believed that slave were equal to everyone else and…
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The actions of John Brown in 1859 was imperative to the abolitionist movement to end slavery. Early life John Brown was a man of faith and character that did not believe in slavery and wanted to do something about it. Early in his life John Brown at the age of sixteen became a member of the Congregational Church in Hudson. This is where he studied ministry that helped to form his beliefs. John Brown though eventually returned home to his father’s tannery. Brown married and became a father of thirteen…
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Bleeding Kansas: Contested Liberty in the Civil War Era (Nicole Etcheson) Bleeding Kansas is the term referring to the conflict on the Kansas-Missouri border as to whether the territory of Kansas was to be permitted as a proslavery state or an abolitionist state before and during the Civil War. This conflict was waged on the border-towns of both states and atrocities were committed by both parties. Missouri was to be a slave state based on the Missouri Compromise, which was formed to…
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that John Brown is still being questioned for being a hero or villain? After everything I've seen, I think John Brown is a hero in my opinion. I’ll go over everything showing that he was a hero. This topic is important because John Brown is an important man, and he is probably the reason why slavery isn’t a thing anymore. John Brown is a hero because he saved many lives, died for the end of slavery, and he had many abolitionists helping him let slaves go, which shows he is a good man. John Brown…
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enacted as compromises to prevent the Civil War, but by the 1850s, things were coming to a head. The sparks that ignited the two sides into an actual war were the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 and the Abolition movements by Harriet Beecher Stowe and John Brown. The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 carried the result of the stalemate between the North and the South over the location of the proposed Transcontinental Railroad. The Northerners wanted the railroad to run from Chicago to California, while the…
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Brown throughout that entire night acted like a God whose purpose was to dictate who should live of die. According to the fellow abolitionists John not only decided who would live or die but he never participated in the murder itself. Later he was questioned over the events of Pottawatomie Creek and every time he was, John responded evasively. Brown’s band of abolitionists sparked the start of “Bleeding Kansas” due to the violent response they had to the violent pro-slavery men at Lawrence. They…
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