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    John Brown

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    John Brown: Terrorist or Revolutionary? John Brown was a man starkly opposed to slavery. In 1855‚ John Brown led an unsuccessful raid on Harper ’s Ferry in order to arm slaves with weapons Brown and his men seized from the arsenal in order for the slaves to free themselves. Because this was against law of the time‚ John Brown was tried and executed for treason. Due to his methods‚ many people labeled him as a terrorist; however‚ because he worked for a good cause‚ the abolition of slavery

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    John Brown

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    Darius McPherson The white abolitionist John Brown who has been thought of as a thief and in contrast a religious prophet led a raid at Harper’s Ferry in 1859. He attempted to start an armed slave revolt by gathering 16 whites and 5 blacks. They stole a numerous amount weapons held at the U.S Federal Arms. The raid was then stopped by a squad of U.S. Marines‚ that was led by Robert E. Lee. In my opinion John Brown was justified in the events of Harper’s Ferry because all of the

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    John Brown

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    John Brown as a "Martyr” A martyr is defined as a person who is put to death or endures great suffering on behalf of any belief‚ principle‚ or cause. To many people back in eighteen fifty-nine‚ this defined a man named John Brown in many ways. John Brown was a devoted abolitionist who had been important in the conflict of slavery in Kansas. In October of eighteen fifty-nine‚ Brown led an interracial group of men who took over a federal arsenal in Harper’s Ferry‚ Virginia‚ hoping to spark a slave

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    owners. Some of the rebellions were so insignificant that word never got around‚ others like the Nat Turner Rebellion changed history‚ especially because it was based on what God told Turner. This rebellion was a major turning point in history because; of the amount of slave owners killed‚ showing that slaves have the ability to be violent putting constant fear for every white family in the south. Turner described to the journalist‚ “I was intended for some great purpose” (Gray‚ page 7). He even

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    Nat Turner’s Stand Against Slavery “Good communication is the bridge between confusion and clarity.” (Nat Turner.) A lot of people think about Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad when they hear about slave rebellions but Nat Turner also played a big part in slave rebellions. Nat Turner grew up a slave and had a big religious impact on his life that lead to his rebellions against slavery. Nat Turner was born on October 2‚ 1800‚ on a plantation in Virginia. Nat spent a lot of time as a kid

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    John Turner was a Canadian prime minister who was born on the 7th of June 1929‚ in Richmond‚ England to an English father and a Canadian mother‚ and still alive to this day at the age of 85. However‚ his father passed away when he was only three years old‚ so his mother decided to move to Canada with John. They first lived in Rossland‚ British Colombia. However‚ she worked her way up in the civil service until she got promoted‚ which required moving to Ottawa (CanadaHistory). Turner was a brilliant

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    John Brown Abolitionism

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    John Brown Throughout the early history of the United States‚ the development of two clearly diverse cultures‚ the Northern culture and the Southern culture‚ had acted as an adverse foreshadowing of the internal conflict to come. The hostility between these two cultures peaked in the mid-1800’s over their different economic and social ways‚ but more specifically‚ over the issue of slavery. During this time‚ the South was defending their right to practice slavery‚ while the North’s desire to end

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    The Enigma of John Brown

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    John Brown was an American abolitionist‚ born in Connecticut and raised in Ohio. He felt passionately and violently that he must personally fight to end slavery. This greatly increased tension between North and South. Northern mourned him as a martyr and southern believed he got what he deserved and they were appalled by the north’s support of Brown. In 1856‚ in retaliation for the sack of Lawrence‚ he led the murder of five proslavery men on the banks of the Pottawatomie River. He stated that he

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    John Brown DBQ

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    DBQ John Brown is the man who stirred up America for standing up for the most controversial flaw of American history: slavery. The opinions of the North and South regarding John Brown and his intense actions tremendously changed after 1859. Prior to the invasion of the federal armory at the Harper’s Ferry in Virginia‚ Brown had little reputation among the North and the South. John Brown’s actions were regarded as extreme in the years before the American Civil War and they served as a reflection

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    John Brown Article

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    John Brown: The Father of American Terrorism 1. Chowder contends that Brown represented “two competing legends.” What were these two competing legends? Brown was considered both a Hero and murderer. He was heroic to the northern abolitionists and he was a symbol of courage. Southerners believed that John Brown was a horrible fanatic man‚ he was complete evil. 2. Describe John Brown’s life before he became embroiled in the antislavery movement. Grew up in Ohio‚ married at twenty‚ lost wife 11

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