The History of North America: The Civil War: the national view, by F.N. ThorpeGuy Carleton Lee, Francis Newton Thorpe subscribers only, 1903 |
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Сторінка 203
... ment have , it is true , prostrated her interests , and will soon involve the South in irretrievable ruin . . . . The South is acting on a principle she has always held sacred - resis- tance to unauthorized taxation . " " The people ...
... ment have , it is true , prostrated her interests , and will soon involve the South in irretrievable ruin . . . . The South is acting on a principle she has always held sacred - resis- tance to unauthorized taxation . " " The people ...
Сторінка 207
... ment found utterance in the resolutions of the Georgia State Convention that the State would secede if slavery was abolished in the District of Columbia , or in the Territories . Other Southern States repeated the threat of secession ...
... ment found utterance in the resolutions of the Georgia State Convention that the State would secede if slavery was abolished in the District of Columbia , or in the Territories . Other Southern States repeated the threat of secession ...
Сторінка 253
... ment was enthusiastic , at the North , in justification of the act of Captain Wilkes , but even the president's Cabinet , save Montgomery Blair , the postmaster general , sided with public sentiment . The president was not in sympathy ...
... ment was enthusiastic , at the North , in justification of the act of Captain Wilkes , but even the president's Cabinet , save Montgomery Blair , the postmaster general , sided with public sentiment . The president was not in sympathy ...
Зміст
THE LAND AND THE PEOPLE 339 | 3 |
CHAPTER PAGES | 7 |
CHAPTER PAGES | 131 |
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abolitionists administration amendment American anti-slavery army Articles of Confederation assertion authority Buchanan cause Charleston Civil climate Colonies compact Compromise Compromise of 1850 Confederacy Confederate Congress Constitution Convention cotton decision declared defense delegates demanded doctrine Douglas Dred Scott duty election England existence favor federacy Federal government Fort Sumter free colored free soil Frémont fugitive Georgia independent institution issue Jefferson Jefferson Davis Kansas Kansas-Nebraska Bill Kentucky land laws legislation Legislature limitation Lincoln majority Massachusetts McClellan ment millions mind Mississippi Missouri Missouri Compromise moral negro North and South Northern nullification Ohio opinion Ordinance organized party passed Pennsylvania political population president principle pro-slavery profitable protection question Republican Revolution secede secession sectional Senate sentiment slave labor slave power slave soil slaveholding slavery extension South Carolina Southern sover sovereign sovereignty stitution Sumter Supreme Court tariff Territories tion Union Union army United utterance Virginia vote Washington whole