Wednesday, September 4, 2019
The American Revolution: Freedom for the White Man :: Essays on American Revolution
The American Revolution was a glorious war fought to free the  American colonies from the British rule.  Although we won that war,  there were still many people who were not free from our rule.  One group of  people were the black slaves.  The black people had many  struggles to freedom which helped shape our American culture today.     Three different periods characterized there struggles: the slaves before  the Civil War, during Reconstruction, and during the civil rights  movements.  These three eras mark a pivotal point in the movement and  advancement of the black race to social equality.      During the time before the Civil War, it was not easy for slaves to  organize and rebel against their slaveholders or whites in general.     There were numerous laws that specifically took away slaves rights as  men.  Slaves also feared the whip and even death if they were to act out  against their owners.  The Declaration of Independence did not apply to  many groups and the black race was one of those excluded groups.  "We  hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal,  that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,  that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness"(Primus  295).  Thomas Jefferson, having slaves himself, recognized the fact that  he could not free the slaves himself in that document.  It was difficult  enough for him to get the Declaration approved by all of the colonies in  itself.  In fact the last man to sign the Declaration of Independence  did not do so until the year 1778.  The slaves were kept in ignorance of  any knowledge which might have led to their freedom.  Laws forbade  reading and writing for slaves.  They also forbade anyone to teach a  slave to read.  To keep the slaves obedient, slaveholders often made an  example of a slave by beating him with the cow skin, or even killing  him.  "He[Gore] gave Denby but few stripes; the latter broke away from  him and plunged into the creek, and, standing there to the depth of his  neck in water, he refused to come out at the order of the overseer;  whereupon, for this refusal, Gore shot him dead!"(My Bondage and My  Freedom 122).  This era was definitely a period were the black people  had little voice in their future and society.      Most people in the north felt differently however. These people  were called the abolitionists, and they were dedicated to freeing the  slaves.  The southern states, strongly disagreed with their views and    					    
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