Leaders of the Equality Movement

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Americans, during the second half of the nineteenth century, believed in the notion of equality, but a widely held definition of the word did not arise. This common definition did not arise because equality did not focus on one particular movement, but it spanned several fields of movements. Leaders of these movements defined equality differently because they all came from various backgrounds which lead them to various beliefs. Frederick Douglas, a former slave, used the word equality to further the cause of the right of vote to African Americans because of his perception that the vote would lead to African Americans becoming the same as white, while Chief Joseph, the Chief of the Nez Perce tribe, saw time after time seizure of land used equality to further his cause of equal treatment under law. Both of these were calls to social justice, but equality was also used as a way for William Graham Sumner, a economist professor, to further his cause of getting rid of government intervention into big business because he saw intervention as only benefitting one class of people,the poor. Frederick Douglas, perhaps the most famous abolitionists in history, made it known that after the Civil War, African Americans should be equal to whites. To Douglas, the definition of equality would be the, “immediate, unconditional, and universal enfranchisement of the black man, in every state of the union.” Douglas reasoned that without this specific right that, “he is the slave of society.” Without the right to vote, African Americans would still be second class citizens to whites, and still subjected to white superiority, especially in the South, which would be very much like slavery. Racism was abundant throughout the United States, so the thinki... ... middle of paper ... ... Chief Joseph’s case are getting unfair advantages from an outside source. This was not true equality. The handouts to the poor were a social injustice in the big business’s eyes. 9 Frederick Douglas, Chief Joseph, and William Grahamn Sumner all used equality as a call for a social justice, but all of these men had different views on what equality truly meant. similarities occur because all these men believed that their group were put behind another group of people so their group suffered. African Americans and Indians were put behind white people, while the rich’s rights were being forgotten by the public because of the poor people. The context of each of these men shaped their views on equality, and each one of these men used equality in order to further their groups personal agenda. This is why Americans did no agree on a common definition of the word equality.

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