ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
19th-Century American Literature Videos 35 videos
Should you ever find yourself on a raft, floating down the Mississippi River, you're going to want something to do. Reading Mark Twain's classic, T...
Moby-Dick - una ballena extraña. Nuestro amigo capitán Ahab la había perseguido para años, pero no es el mejor lider en el mundo. Piensas que p...
ELA 11 5.2: William Lloyd Garrison 108 Views
Share It!
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]
Related Videos
“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...
Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?
¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...
Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...