Center the antebellum abolition movement as BLACK-LED intellectually and organizationally — David Walker 1829, Maria Stewart 1832, William Lloyd Garrison 1831, Frederick Douglass 1845-1852, Sojourner Truth 1851, Harriet Tubman + Underground Railroad
Exercise
Difficulty 3
~7 min
hist.g5.s.ex_33
6 Voice Quote Match
Prompt
Match 6 primary-source excerpts to 6 abolitionists (Walker / Stewart / Garrison / Douglass / Truth / Tubman). Identify chronological order.
How it's presented
mode
matching plus chronology
Answer criteria
type
matching and chronological
pairs
- Walker1829 Appeal Preamble
- Garrison
- 1831 Liberator masthead 'I will be heard'
- Stewart1832 'Why sit ye here?'
- Douglass1845 Narrative Chapter 1
- Truth1851 'Ain't I a Woman'
- Tubman
- ~13 Underground Railroad missions
chronological order
Walker 1829Garrison 1831Stewart 1832Douglass 1845Truth 1851
Hints
- Walker preceded Garrison by 2 years
- Stewart was first American-born woman of any race to deliver public political speeches
Misconceptions to watch
- Putting Garrison before Walker
- Missing Stewart 1832
Used in lessons