Drag the description of the strategy for ending slavery to the group or person who practiced it.

Put responses in the correct input to answer the question. Select a response, navigate to the desired input and insert the response. Responses can be selected and inserted using the space bar, enter key, left mouse button or touchpad. Responses can also be moved by dragging with a mouse.

(3 points)
Put responses in the correct input to answer the question. Select a response, navigate to the desired input and insert the response. Responses can be selected and inserted using the space bar, enter key, left mouse button or touchpad. Responses can also be moved by dragging with a mouse.
Advocated nonviolence and published The Liberator
Wrote about personal experiences of slavery to tell others of its evils
Helped enslaved people on the Underground Railroad

Advocated nonviolence and published The Liberator - William Lloyd Garrison

Wrote about personal experiences of slavery to tell others of its evils - Frederick Douglass

Helped enslaved people on the Underground Railroad - Harriet Tubman

Advocated nonviolence and published The Liberator - William Lloyd Garrison

Wrote about personal experiences of slavery to tell others of its evils - Frederick Douglass
Helped enslaved people on the Underground Railroad - Harriet Tubman

Advocated nonviolence and published The Liberator:

This strategy was practiced by the abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison. He believed in using peaceful means to end slavery and published the newspaper called The Liberator to spread his message and rally support for the cause.

Wrote about personal experiences of slavery to tell others of its evils:

This strategy was practiced by former slaves such as Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs. They wrote autobiographies detailing their firsthand experiences of slavery, exposing its brutalities and injustices to educate and raise awareness among the general public.

Helped enslaved people on the Underground Railroad:

This strategy was practiced by various individuals and groups involved in the Underground Railroad, a network of secret routes and safe houses that helped enslaved people escape to free states or Canada. Prominent figures like Harriet Tubman played a crucial role in guiding and facilitating the escape of enslaved individuals to freedom.