Early American Views on Negro Slavery from the Time of the Founding of the Republic Until 1830 ...Meador Publishing Company, 1934 - Počet stran: 164 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 34
Strana 75
... problem brought up at a time when it was supposed , at least , to have been set- tled by the Constitution . He was not so opposed to the abolition of slavery itself ; it was , he thought , not the right time to bring up the problem . A ...
... problem brought up at a time when it was supposed , at least , to have been set- tled by the Constitution . He was not so opposed to the abolition of slavery itself ; it was , he thought , not the right time to bring up the problem . A ...
Strana 159
... problems ; how to stop the slave - trade ; how to abolish slavery itself , and what should be done with the slaves , when ... problem to develop . The attempts to solve it can be divided into three recog- nizable elements : the moral ...
... problems ; how to stop the slave - trade ; how to abolish slavery itself , and what should be done with the slaves , when ... problem to develop . The attempts to solve it can be divided into three recog- nizable elements : the moral ...
Strana 161
... problem , it is easy for us to point out what ought and ought not to have been done . There is one great lesson which we can learn from a study of this period . This is : that moral problems of this nature must be faced and met as early ...
... problem , it is easy for us to point out what ought and ought not to have been done . There is one great lesson which we can learn from a study of this period . This is : that moral problems of this nature must be faced and met as early ...
Obsah
PREFACE | 11 |
Franklins Memorial to Congress and the | 30 |
Summary of Fraklins Views | 38 |
Další části 30 nejsou zobrazeny.
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
abolished abolition of slavery Africa American American Revolution Answer appears army believed Colonization Society colony color committee Constitution Continental Congress convention debate Declaration of Independence Diaries economic emancipation England enlist evil favor find Washington Ford Franklin free blacks free negroes freedom freeing the slaves George Washington Georgia give held House of Burgesses human Ibid ideas importation of slaves institution interest Jeffer John Adams labor Lafayette land later Laurens letter liberty Madi Madison masters Missouri Compromise Missouri question Monticello moral Mount Vernon nation nature negro slavery never North number of slaves object opinion pamphlet Pennsylvania Abolition Society persons Phillis Wheatley plantations political President principles problem prohibit purchase race reads revolution Rhode Island says seems Slave Power slave-holder slave-trade soldiers South Carolina Southern Sparks territory Thomas Jefferson thought tion trade Union United VIEWS ON NEGRO Virginia wish Writings of Washington written