Reflection On The Declaration Of Independence

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The Declaration of Independence was America’s declaration of freedom from Great Britain. Americans had begun to shift their view from Britain as a mother country to Britain as an oppressor. The early colonists were no longer willing to endure the oppression, thus a declaration was drafted that declared or demanded freedom. This document was an instrument of hope for the majority of the citizenry; however, it was a source of anguish for those still in bondage. Over the course of seventeen days in June of 1776, Thomas Jefferson drafted a document that is still “the nation’s most cherished symbol of liberty” (Charters of Freedom). It was a formalized document to begin the process of America’s independence from British governance and an overbearing …show more content…

There was a segment of the population who was denied equality and many, due to their slave status, were also denied liberty. As more and more Americans realized the injustice of owning other human beings and denying their “unalienable Rights,” there was a chorus of disapproval from religious and women’s rights groups and abolitionist. Members of the Quaker religion were among the first to recognize the need to end slavery and were a force within the reform movement that called for the discontinuance of a practice that they found to be an atrocity. They used newspapers and pamphlets to spread the …show more content…

They encouraged slaves to tell their stories in written form and at public gatherings. Frederick Douglass became such a spokesperson. In Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave, Written by Himself, Douglass related a poignant tale of his life as a slave and his escape to freedom. He told of horrendous acts by the white slave owners on the person of their slaves. Many masters were cruel and beat their slaves for minor mistakes causing, as Douglass said, “the warm, red blood…came dripping to the floor” (949). According to Douglass, he had witnessed the murder of a slave and knew that the murderer received no punishment for the crime. Because slaves could not provide testimony to the facts of a crime, this was the norm in such situations. The white slave owners were a law unto themselves regarding any actions they might take against their property (slaves). Though the lives of the male slave were difficult, those of the female slaves were even worse. Not only were they subject to the same abuse as the males and made to work just as hard, many were also subject to forced sexual encounters with their masters or the overseers. The children who were products of such encounters were also slaves as their status was determined by that of the mother. Children were usually taken from their mother by the end of the first

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