| Ray Burdick Smith - 1922 - 636 str.
...acts of the Thirty-second Congress, the act known as the Fugitive Slave law included, are received and acquiesced in by the Whig party of the United States as a settlement in principle and substance of the dangerous and exciting questions which they embrace; and, so far as they are concerned, we will... | |
| Anson Daniel Morse - 1923 - 320 str.
...acts of the Thirty-second Congress, the act known as the Fugitive Slave Law included, are received and acquiesced in by the Whig party of the United States as a settlement in principle and substance of the dangerous and exciting questions which they embrace . . . and we will maintain this system as... | |
| Abraham Lincoln - 1927 - 136 str.
...acts of the Thirty-second Congress, the act known as the Fugitive Slave Law included, are received and acquiesced in by the Whig party of the United States as a settlement in principle and substance of the dangerous and exciting questions which they embrace; and, so far as they are concerned, we will... | |
| 1937 - 596 str.
...of the 31st. Congress, known as the Compromise, the Fugitive Slave Law, included - are received and acquiesced in by the Whig party of the United States, as a settlement in principle and substance of the dangerous and exciting quesLions which thev embrace, and so far as they are concerned they will... | |
| Horace Greeley - 1864 - 696 str.
...Compromise Measures of 1850 — the act .known as the Fugitive Slave law included^ — are received and acquiesced in by the Whig party of the United States as a settlement, in principle and substance, of the dangerous and exciting questions which they embrace ; and, so far as they are concerned, we... | |
| Michael F. Holt - 1999 - 1302 str.
...complete compliance with that law.8Fillmore declared to Congress that the Compromise measures were "a settlement in principle and substance — a final settlement of the dangerous and exciting subjects which they embraced." Since Congress could not now change the laws regarding California, the... | |
| Jim F. Watts, Fred L. Israel - 2000 - 416 str.
...been enacted under its authority. The series of measures to which I have alluded are regarded by me as a settlement in principle and substance — a final settlement of the dangerous and exciting subjects which they embraced. Most of these subjects, indeed, are beyond your reach, as the legislation... | |
| John C. Waugh - 2003 - 236 str.
...Congress in his first annual message on December 2 that the compromise measures "are regarded by me as a settlement in principle and substance — a final settlement of the dangerous and exciting subjects which they embraced. ... By that adjustment we have been rescued from the wide and boundless... | |
| Tom Lansford, Thomas E. Woods, Jr. - 2007 - 120 str.
...the Thirty-first Congress,— the act known as the Fugitive Slave Law, included— are received and acquiesced in by the Whig Party of the United States as a settlement, ' in principle and substance, of the dangerous and exciting question which they embrace; and, so Jar as they are concerned, we will... | |
| Thomas D. Morris - 2001 - 304 str.
...movement to pledge that the compromise would be honored. The 1850 measures, he said, "are regarded by me as a settlement in principle and substance — a final settlement of the dangerous and exciting subjects which they embraced."17 Both major parties, when they met in 1852 to select presidential nominees,... | |
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