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  1. Like most contemporaries, John Quincy Adams's views on slavery evolved over time. He never joined the movement called "abolitionist" by historians—the one led by William Lloyd Garrison—because it demanded the immediate abolition of slavery and insisted it was a sin to enslave people. Further, abolitionism meant disunion and Adams was a ...

  2. President John Adams expresses his views on slavery, abolitionism, and emancipation in a letter to two Quaker reformers. He opposes radical measures and argues that slavery is diminishing in America.

  3. He also led the repeal of the "gag rule", which had prevented the House of Representatives from debating petitions to abolish slavery.

  4. 20 Feb 2015 · Learn how former U.S. President John Quincy Adams fought to end slavery and advance universal freedom in his career. He challenged the gag rule, represented the Amistad Africans in court, and advocated for Native American rights.

  5. 27 Mei 2024 · John Quincy Adams, sixth president of the United States (1825–29) and son of President John Adams. In his prepresidential years he was one of America’s greatest diplomats (formulating, among other things, what came to be called the Monroe Doctrine), and later as a congressman he fought the expansion of slavery.

  6. Learn how former president John Quincy Adams argued for the freedom of the Amistad captives, Africans who revolted against their enslavement and were seized by a US ship. Read his letter to a friend and explore the historical context and questions for discussion.

  7. 27 Mei 2024 · Adams’s long second career in Congress was at least as important as his earlier career as a diplomat. Throughout, he was conspicuous as an opponent of the expansion of slavery and was at heart an abolitionist, though he never became one in the political sense of the word.