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John Brown's Influence On American Education

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The year is 1856, the state of Kansas has become a powder keg just waiting for a spark to explode. Popular sovereignty has spread to the state, allowing the citizens of Kansas to decide for themselves if they wish to have slavery. As a result of this, many extremists from both sides of the argument against and for slavery move out to Kansas and begin new lives there to gain citizenship there so that they will have a vote in the matter of slavery in the state. This new influx of citizens in the state, especially with their differentiating strong opinions of slavery, leads to quite a bit of intensity between the two groups. Conflicts began to emerge between the two groups and said conflicts kept getting more and more physical. Eventually, a sheriff-led …show more content…
One of the most profound of these extreme abolitionists was John Brown. Born on May 9, 1800, his hatred of slavery grew over time from the beginning of his life, to the end of it in 1859. His most profound moment in his earlier life against slavery was in 1837, responding to the death of Elijah Parish Lovejoy, a presbyterian minister who had been killed by a pro-slavery mob. The mob had been rioting and destroying many abolitionist media outlets and businesses. They attacked his abolitionist newspaper print and killed him in the process. News of Lovejoy’s death eventually reached the not-too-stable ears of John Brown, which sparked rage inside him towards all things that represented slavery to him. He later publicly proclaimed “Here, before God, in the presence of these witnesses, from this time, I consecrate my life to the destruction of slavery!”. Things didn’t get better for Brown quickly, as in the following years, specifically 1843, four of his children came down with cases of dysentery and died from it. This seemed to solidify his growing madness, giving him even more pent up …show more content…
Brown began to attend abolitionist speeches made by the likes of Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth at the Sanford Street Free Church. This church would later go on to be a huge platform for abolitionists and their speeches. It would als go on to become St. John’s Congregation church. Brown decided at this time to take a large interest in making Springfield an extremely strong outpost for local abolitionists and the underground railroad, becoming one of the railroads biggest stops. Brown had in fact spent a night talking to the famous abolitionist, Franklin Douglass.Douglass said after this night, "From this night spent with John Brown in Springfield, Mass. 1847 while I continued to write and speak against slavery, I became all the same less hopeful for its peaceful abolition. My utterances became more and more tinged by the color of this man's strong impressions”. This quote from him shows what sort of atmosphere and way of thinking that Brown had. He has seemingly almost even convinced the peaceful Frederick Douglass that violence may be the only way for equality for all

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