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
  1. Walker1829 Appeal Preamble
    1. Garrison
    2. 1831 Liberator masthead 'I will be heard'
  2. Stewart1832 'Why sit ye here?'
  3. Douglass1845 Narrative Chapter 1
  4. Truth1851 'Ain't I a Woman'
    1. Tubman
    2. ~13 Underground Railroad missions
chronological order
Walker 1829Garrison 1831Stewart 1832Douglass 1845Truth 1851
Hints
  1. Walker preceded Garrison by 2 years
  2. Stewart was first American-born woman of any race to deliver public political speeches
Misconceptions to watch
  • Putting Garrison before Walker
  • Missing Stewart 1832