1776-1865: from BONDAGE to HOLY WAR
Pro-Slavery Propoganda in the South

To combat abolitionist literature, white southern writers distributed a flood of pro-slavery propaganda. According to these articles, most of the enslaved were content with their easy life. Supposedly, they worked only until noon, dressed and ate better than most poor whites, and enjoyed job security that would be envied by most northern factory workers. Many people in the North were taken in by these fictions, and as a result abolitionists were often harassed by hostile mobs.