Key Ideas
- Women played a critical role in the antebellum slavery debates.
- Enslaved women faced particular hardships in antebellum slavery.
- It is impossible to fully understand the lead up to the American Civil War without understanding the actions and experiences of American women.
Introduction
Antebellum, 1832-1860
The antebellum period is defined as the time between the formation of the U.S. government and the outbreak of the American Civil War.
During this period, federal and state governments grappled with the contradiction of U.S. slavery. States in the northern regions of the country gradually abolished the practice of slavery, even as they maintained strong economic ties to the practice elsewhere in the country. States in the southern regions, whose economies were entirely dependent on large-scale agricultural enterprises fueled by enslavement, made the system ever more restricting and degrading. The chattel slavery practiced in the United States was so integral to the economy that it was adopted and practiced by some First Nations people who sought to benefit from U.S. economic systems. And the practice of slavery did not only provide economic gains for white people and institutions in this period. For example, enslaved people were exploited for advances in medical science that became the foundation of modern gynecology.
But Black people did not quietly accept their enslavement. They actively fought to resist and dismantle the system. Black women were an integral force in the formal and informal opposition to slavery that gained steam in the antebellum period, despite being doubly discounted by people in power because of their race and sex. Black women in Salem, Massachusetts, created the first female anti-slavery society in the United States. Ex-slave abolitionist activists like Sojourner Truth and Harriet Jacobs widely shared their personal experiences of slavery in the North and South, forcing the white American public to confront the daily horrors perpetrated in a country that espoused the ideals of freedom and justice. Harriet Robinson Scott took her fight for emancipation to the U.S. Supreme Court, hoping to force a permanent change in U.S. laws and legislation. And every day, enslaved women across the country actively resisted their oppression, including limiting their ability to have children and taking their own freedom by leaving their enslavers forever.
In states that outlawed the practice of slavery, systemic racism and segregationist practices prevented Black people from achieving full equality with their white peers. Black women fought hard to dismantle these systems across the country, from fighting streetcar segregation in New York City to challenging unfair inheritance practices in Oregon. In Missouri, free Black people were required to apply for a special license to live in the state. Free Black women did not hesitate to assert their right to live and work there, even in the face of nearly insurmountable opposition.
White women in the northern and southern regions of the country also took an active role in the ongoing debate over slavery. The Cult of Domesticity that gained popularity in middle- and upper-class white society in the antebellum period severely limited the ways that white women could engage in public discourse. But slavery was considered as much a moral issue as an economic or political one, and morality was an area in which women were allowed a voice. This meant white women could engage in the debate over slavery publicly, as long as they stuck to moral arguments and channels deemed appropriate for women. Pro- and anti-slavery activist women wrote literature to educate young children about the issue, leveraging their socially prescribed role as educators of the next generation. Writers like Harriet Beecher Stowe and Lydia Maria Childs wrote highly romanticized accounts of slavery and abolitionist actions, taking advantage of the fairly new opportunity for women to pursue careers as novelists. White women all over the country used their domestic skills, such as sewing, preserving, baking, and crafting, to produce thousands of items sold at abolitionist fairs, which funded political anti-slavery campaigns led by men. But stepping outside the bounds of what society deemed appropriate behavior could have dire consequences.
“I Sell the Shadow to Support the Substance.” New-York Historical Society.
Teaching Materials
Resources in this Topic

Abolitionist Crafts
Objects handmade by women to raise consciousness about and money for the abolition of slavery.
Bleeding Kansas
An excerpt from Lydia Maria Child’s dramatic retelling of the attack on Lawrence, Kansas.

Fighting Segregation
The story of Elizabeth Jennings, who fought the segregation of New York City streetcars in 1854.

Freedom Bonds
The conditions required of free Black people who wanted to live in the state of Missouri.

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
Excerpts from the slave narrative of Harriet Jacobs.

Plantation Slavery
Sources that illustrate the lives of women in the plantation system.

Pro- and Anti-Slavery Literature for Children
Two examples of antebellum propaganda written to shape the minds of children.

Resistance
Two documents that demonstrate some of the ways enslaved women resisted slavery in the antebellum period.

Salem Anti-Slavery Society
The constitution of the first female abolitionist society, started by free Black women in Massachusetts..

Slavery and Indian Removal
Two letters that illustrate Choctaw slaveholding and demonstrate that enslaved people were caught up in the removal of the Choctaw Nation.

Anarcha, Betsy, and Lucy
The Mothers of Modern Gynecology. The story of enslaved women who were forced to undergo experimental surgeries that laid the foundations for modern gynecology.

The Grimké Sisters
Southern Abolitionist Sisters. The story of two southern white women who became leading abolitionists and women’s rights activists.

Harriet Robinson Scott
A Personal Fight for Emancipation with National Ramifications. The story of the enslaved woman who challenged slavery in the highest court in the United States.

Letitia Carson
A Free Black Woman in the Antebellum West. The story of a free Black woman who built a life in Oregon.

Sojourner Truth
Fierce Warrior for Social Justice. The story of an enslaved woman who became one of the most important social justice activists in American history.
Get Deeper into Relevant Topics
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Civil War
Women of diverse races and social classes pushed social and political boundaries as they contributed to the Union and Confederate war efforts.
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Reconstruction
After the cataclysm of the Civil War, women remade their own lives while advocating for their vision of what the rebuilt nation should be.









