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 84
... allowed negroes to enlist . When , with the Declaration of Independence , the theory of man's inalienable rights and of his equal creation be- came the common belief of all Americans , he was forced to be more lenient toward the negroes ...
... allowed negroes to enlist . When , with the Declaration of Independence , the theory of man's inalienable rights and of his equal creation be- came the common belief of all Americans , he was forced to be more lenient toward the negroes ...
Strana 100
... allowed to remain in the document , for it seems rather unfair that George the Third should be held solely re- 10 Clause struck out of the Declaration of Independence . 11 Jefferson's Works , Vol . I , p . 19 . 12 Ibid , Vol . VIII , p ...
... allowed to remain in the document , for it seems rather unfair that George the Third should be held solely re- 10 Clause struck out of the Declaration of Independence . 11 Jefferson's Works , Vol . I , p . 19 . 12 Ibid , Vol . VIII , p ...
Strana 143
... allowed them will more or less depend . " " 2. The kind of labor to be performed . " He men- tions sugar and rice plantations as unfavorable examples . " 3. The national spirit of their masters , which has been graduated by philosophic ...
... allowed them will more or less depend . " " 2. The kind of labor to be performed . " He men- tions sugar and rice plantations as unfavorable examples . " 3. The national spirit of their masters , which has been graduated by philosophic ...
Obsah
PREFACE | 11 |
Franklins Memorial to Congress and the | 30 |
Summary of Fraklins Views | 38 |
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