Early American Views on Negro Slavery from the Time of the Founding of the Republic Until 1830 ...Meador Publishing Company, 1934 - Počet stran: 164 |
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Strana 58
... South Carolina , wrote a letter to his father from headquarters proposing a plan to increase the man - power of his state " from an un- tried source . In South Carolina the British forces were enlisting slaves who ran away from their ...
... South Carolina , wrote a letter to his father from headquarters proposing a plan to increase the man - power of his state " from an un- tried source . In South Carolina the British forces were enlisting slaves who ran away from their ...
Strana 63
... South Carolina were very angry about the reso- lutions and even proposed remaining neutral until the end of the war . Meanwhile , Col. Laurens kept up his fight in South Caro- lina for the raising of the negro slave battalions . When in ...
... South Carolina were very angry about the reso- lutions and even proposed remaining neutral until the end of the war . Meanwhile , Col. Laurens kept up his fight in South Caro- lina for the raising of the negro slave battalions . When in ...
Strana 74
... South regarding slavery . It must not be thought that the South of these early times was the South as we know it today ; for , it was only South Carolina and Georgia which insisted that the slave - trade be continued . It must have been ...
... South regarding slavery . It must not be thought that the South of these early times was the South as we know it today ; for , it was only South Carolina and Georgia which insisted that the slave - trade be continued . It must have been ...
Obsah
PREFACE | 11 |
Franklins Memorial to Congress and the | 30 |
Summary of Fraklins Views | 38 |
Další části 30 nejsou zobrazeny.
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