Whittier
John Greenleaf Whittier wrote "Massachusetts to Virginia" specifically to decry the institution of slavery. When Whittier wrote the poem, the United States was very much and bitterly divided over the issue of whether the institution should still be allowed. As a Quaker, Whittier was passionately against slavery. Slavery was something so appalling that Whittier can hardly recognize the American spirit in the South. Using Virginia as a symbol of the slavery-supporting South, and Massachusetts as representative of the Free North, Whittier illustrates the great cultural divide in America that led to the Civil War.
In "Massachusetts to Virginia," Whittier refers to the old names for these colonies: Old Dominion for Virginia and the Bay State for Massachusetts. Whittier makes a clear judgment on the moral characters of these two regions of the United States. Old Dominion has lost its way; the pro-slavery South are "false to their fathers' memory," and also "false to the faith they loved," (line 30). The "fathers'" refers both to the...
The milestone that the Civil Rights Movement made as concerns the property ownership is encapsulated in the Civil Rights Act of 1968 which is also more commonly referred to as the Fair Housing Act, or as CRA '68. This was as a follow-up or reaffirmation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, discussed above. It is apparent that the Civil Rights Act of 1866 outlawed discrimination in property and housing there
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