![]() The Constitution has a clause stating that fugitives from labor must be sent back to the South if captured in the North. The issue of fugitive slaves in a sense became one of the most powerful weapons in the hands of the Abolitionist Movement. Foner also describes the role of former slaves in shaping the abolitionist movement. Historian Eric Foner explains why the Fugitive Slave Act was such a divisive political act and a turning point in the sectional conflicts that had plagued American society during the antebellum era. ![]() Great Depression and World War II (1929-1945)Ī Historian Explains the Significance of the Fugitive Slave Act.Industrialization and Expansion (1877-1913).Civil War and Reconstruction (1861-1877).Colonization and Settlement (1621-1750).Military History and the LGBTQ+ Community.Two Wings of the Same Bird: Cuban Immigration and Puerto Rican Migration to the United States.Why They Fought: Ordinary Soldiers in the Civil War.Expansion at the Turn of the Twentieth Century ![]() ![]() Early Twentieth Century Mexican Immigration to the U.S.Who Freed the Slaves? How a War for Union Became a War for Freedom. ![]()
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