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Apocalyptic Abolitionism
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02 June 2026

Shows how apocalypticism helped drive anti-slavery abolitionism and inspire progressive social reform in nineteenth-century America
In March 1844, Melissa Botsford of Meriden, Connecticut, defiantly left her local Methodist church because it supported slavery and other “sins” that permeated America. Botsford was among one hundred thousand other abolitionists who abandoned their evangelical churches throughout the decade. These protesters came out with a stern apocalyptic warning: God would soon judge America—and its churches—for the sins of slavery and race prejudice.
It has long been assumed that apocalypticism is antithetical to social reform. Yet in Apocalyptic Abolitionism, Kevin M. Burton uncovers the untold story of how apocalypticism shaped the abolitionist cause and helped destroy slavery in the United States. Contrary to popular opinion, the revival fires of the Second Great Awakening did not drive most evangelicals to progressive social reforms like abolitionism. Neither were the denominational schisms during that period a fight between northern abolitionists and southern slaveholders. Rather, before the Methodist and Baptist denominations split along sectional lines, most abolitionists, particularly members of the Adventist movement, had already left their churches in what was likely the largest mass exodus from mainstream evangelicalism in American history, precisely because most evangelicals opposed radical social reform movements. This volume makes the case that evangelicals receive undeserved credit for antislavery, and that it was apocalyptic abolitionists who led the way.
Drawing from rare and overlooked sources to create a database of biographies of nearly 2000 people to track their religious affiliations and activism over time, Burton offers invaluable data to develop a robust framework for understanding apocalypticism, evangelicalism, and social reform politics of the nineteenth century.
— Matthew Avery Sutton, author of Chosen Land: How Christianity Made America and Americans Remade Christianity
"Kevin Burton has made original, crucial contributions to the social and religious histories of the United States by bringing together two of its central themes: Adventism and social reform. Burton’s valuable accomplishment serves everyone interested in millenarian convictions and anti-slavery by showing how the first contributed to the second."
— Nell Irvin Painter, author of I Just Keep Talking: A Life in Essays and Sojourner Truth, A Life, A Symbol
"A groundbreaking and stunningly meticulous book that establishes beyond doubt the role of Adventists at the forefront of the abolitionist movement. It likewise strikingly overturns the claim that apocalypticism and social reform cannot coexist. Historical research and writing at its very best and a major contribution to American religious history."
— John Corrigan, author of The Feeling of Forgetting: Christianity, Race, and Violence in America
"Kevin Burton's book is an extremely valuable addition to the abolitionist history canon. Not only does it bring to light an immense amount of new evidence, but the book opens up new paths for additional research and discussion. Truly important scholarship not only breaks new ground but also lays the foundation for more research."
— Milton C. Sernett, author of North Star Country: Upstate New York and the Crusade for African American Freedom