Acknowledgments |
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xxxi | |
Introduction |
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1 | (28) |
PART 1. FIRST ENCOUNTERS |
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29 | (14) |
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32 | (1) |
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1. "They have no iron or steel or weapons, nor are they capable of using them" Christopher Columbus, letter to the sovereigns on his first voyage, February 15-March 4, 1493 |
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32 | (1) |
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Utilizing the Native Labor Force |
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33 | (2) |
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2. "With fifty men they can all be subjugated and made to do what is required of them" Christopher Columbus, journal, October 14, 1492, December 16, 1492 |
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33 | (2) |
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35 | (1) |
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3. "All slavery, and drudgery...is done by bondsmen" Sir Thomas More, Utopia, 1516 |
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35 | (1) |
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36 | (1) |
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4. "This is the best land in the world for Negroes" Alonso de Zuazo, January 22, 1518 |
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36 | (1) |
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37 | (3) |
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5. "Under the guise of developing the country, the Christians (as they call themselves)...engaged in plunder and slaughter" Bartolome de las Casas, Brevisima relacion de la destruccion de las Indias. Seuilla: Trugillo, 1552 |
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37 | (3) |
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A Critique of the Slave Trade |
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40 | (3) |
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6. "A thousand acts of robbery and violence are committed in the course of bartering and carrying off Negroes" Fray Tomas de Mercado, Suma de Tratos y Contratos, 1587 |
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40 | (3) |
PART 2. EUROPEAN COLONIZATION NORTH OF MEXICO |
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43 | (42) |
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Justifications for English Involvement in the New World |
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46 | (2) |
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1. "The Kings of Spain...have rooted out above fifteen millions of reasonable creatures" Richard Hakluyt, "A particular discourse concerning the great necessity and manifold commodities that are like to grow to this Realm of England by the Western discoveries lately attempted," 1584 |
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46 | (2) |
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A Rationale for New World Colonization |
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48 | (2) |
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2. "All...our...trades in all Europe...may...[count] for little...[compared with] America" Richard Hakluyt, A Particular discourse concerning the great necessity and manifold commodities that are like to grow to this Realm of England by the Western discoveries lately attempted," 1584 |
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48 | (2) |
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England's First Enduring North American Settlement |
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50 | (2) |
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3. "Being ready with clubs to beat out his brains, Pocahontas...got his head in her arms" John Smith, Generall Historie of Virginia |
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50 | (2) |
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52 | (1) |
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4. "My brother and my wife are dead" Sebastian Brandt, January 13, 1622 |
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52 | (1) |
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52 | (2) |
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5. "They basely and barbarously murdered, not sparing either age or sex" Edward Waterhouse, 1622 |
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52 | (2) |
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54 | (3) |
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6. "[Virginia] is reported to be an unhealthy place, a nest of Rogues...[and] dissolute...persons" John Hammond, Leah and Rachel, or, The Two Fruitful Sisters Virginia and Mary-land, 1656 |
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54 | (3) |
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57 | (2) |
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7. "All children...shall be held bond or free only according to the condition of the mother" William Waller Hening, Virginia slave laws, December 1662, September 1667, September 1668, October 1669 |
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57 | (2) |
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59 | (1) |
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8. "We walked in the woods amongst wild beasts...at least 20 miles,... expecting to die" Thomas Culpepper, September 20, 1680 |
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59 | (1) |
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The Pilgrims Arrive in Plymouth |
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60 | (3) |
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9. "In 2 or 3 months times, half of their company died" William Bradford, History of Plimouth Plantation, 1620-47 |
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60 | (3) |
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Reasons for Puritan Immigration |
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63 | (1) |
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10. "Most children...are perverted, corrupted, & utterly overthrown by the multitude of evil examples" John Winthrop, Life and Letters of John Winthrop, 1629 |
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63 | (1) |
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64 | (2) |
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11. "Some must be rich, some poor, some high and eminent in power...others mean and in subjection" John Winthrop, "A Modell of Christian Charity," 1630 |
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64 | (2) |
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66 | (1) |
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12. "[Ill] reports is given of my Wyfe for beatinge the maid" John Winter, 1639 |
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66 | (1) |
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Mounting Conflict with Native Americans |
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67 | (2) |
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13. "For the number of our people...be in all about 4000 souls" John Winthrop, May 22, 1634 |
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67 | (2) |
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Native Americans as Active Agents |
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69 | (1) |
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14. "The Monhiggin [Mohican]...refuseth to part with his prey" Roger Williams, July 6, 1640 |
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69 | (1) |
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70 | (1) |
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15. Some false principles are these" John Winthrop, The History of New England, 1640 |
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70 | (1) |
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71 | (2) |
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16. "Various are the reports...of the causes of the present Indian warre" Edward Randolph, 1675 |
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71 | (2) |
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73 | (2) |
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17. "Take, kill, & destroy [th]e enemy without limitation of place or time" Thomas Danforth, February 17, 1689 |
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73 | (2) |
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An Indian Slave Woman Confesses to Witchcraft |
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75 | (5) |
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18. "Tituba an Indian woman [was] brought before us...upon Suspicion of witchcraft" William E. Woodward, comp., Records of Salem Witchcraft, 1692 |
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75 | (3) |
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19. "The devil is now making one attempt more upon us" Cotton Mather, The Wonders of the Invisible World, 1693 |
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78 | (2) |
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80 | (2) |
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20. "Liberty is in real value next to life" Samuel Sewall, The Selling of Joseph: A Memorial, 1700 |
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80 | (2) |
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82 | (3) |
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21. "The Constitution of our English Government [is] the best in the World" Henry Care, English Liberties, Or, The Free-Born Subject's Inheritance, 1685 |
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82 | (3) |
PART 3. A LAND OF CONTRASTS |
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85 | (38) |
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88 | (1) |
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1. "Although this Realm be already exceedingly rich...yet might it be much increased" Thomas Mun, England's Treasure by Forraign Trade, 1664 |
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88 | (1) |
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New Netherlands: America's First Multicultural Society |
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88 | (2) |
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2. "There are, also, various other Negroes in this country" Adriaen Van Der Donck, The Representation of New Netherland, 1650 |
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88 | (2) |
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New Netherlands, Becomes New York |
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90 | (2) |
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3. "All people shall continue free" "True copy of articles whereupon...the New Netherlands were surrendered," January 1674 |
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90 | (2) |
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92 | (3) |
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4. "Yours having entered our houses, taken away and destroyed our goods and People" Propositions of Col. Wm. Kendall authorized by the Governour, Council and Burgesses of Virginia, October 30, 1679 |
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92 | (2) |
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5. "The English...shot some of our People dead" The Oneydes Answer upon the Propositions of Colonel William Kendall, October 31, 1679 |
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94 | (1) |
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6. "The Governor of Canada is Intended to Destroy us" Propositions made by four Sinnekes, June 29, 1685 and Answer to the Propositions, June 29, 1685 |
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94 | (1) |
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95 | (3) |
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7. "As to the causes of this...war...jealousy arising from the trading of our people...seems to be the principal one" Robert Livingston, February 9, 1689-90 |
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95 | (2) |
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8. "The French of Canada have killed [and] Imprisoned...your People" Propositions made by the Honorable Colonel Richd. Ingoldesby, July 14, 1709 |
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97 | (1) |
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Persecution of the Quakers |
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98 | (1) |
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9. "We are...necessitated to lay before the Governor an oppression that we lye under" Petition of New York Quakers to the Governor, November 11, 1702 |
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98 | (1) |
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The Quaker Ideal of Religious Tolerance |
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99 | (3) |
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10. "Persons have been flung into Jails" William Penn, "England's present interests discovered...." 1675 |
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99 | (3) |
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102 | (2) |
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11. Reflecting S[i]r on the weakness of this our Colony" James Moore, March 1, 1698-99 |
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102 | (2) |
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104 | (1) |
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12. "The Trustees intend to relieve such unfortunate persons as cannot subsist here [in England]" James Oglethorpe, 1733 |
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104 | (1) |
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English Liberties and Deference |
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104 | (2) |
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13. "I am as good flesh & blood as you" Governor Joseph Dudley and Thomas Trowbridge, January 23, 1705 |
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104 | (2) |
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106 | (2) |
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14. "They are animated...to such barbarity by the French" Thomas Oliver, October 20, 1708 |
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106 | (2) |
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Immigration and Ethnic Diversity |
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108 | (2) |
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15. "During the voyage there is...terrible misery" Gottlieb Mittelberger, Journey to Pennsylvania in the Year 1750 |
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108 | (2) |
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110 | (1) |
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16. "An apprentice or servant...for...ye Term of fifteen years & five Months" Indenture apprenticing Javin Toby, January 9, 1747 |
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110 | (1) |
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Suspicion of Arbitrary Power |
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111 | (3) |
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17. "If every Man had his Will, all Men would exercise Dominion" John P. Zenger, New York Weekly Journal, March 11, 1733 |
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111 | (3) |
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114 | (2) |
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18. "A great...concern about... Things of Religion...became Universal" The Christian History, July 11, 1743 |
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114 | (2) |
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116 | (3) |
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19. "The Negroes were rising" Daniel Horsmanden, A Journal of the Proceedings in the Detection of the Conspiracy...for burning the city of New-York....1774 |
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116 | (3) |
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America as a Land of Opportunity |
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119 | (4) |
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20. "Why increase the Sons of Africa...where we have so fair an Opportunity...of increasing the lovely White and Red?" Benjamin Franklin, "Observations Concerning the Increase of mankind," 1755 |
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119 | (4) |
PART 4. THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR |
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123 | (16) |
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British North America in 1775 |
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126 | (3) |
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1. "Canada must be subdued" The Maryland Gazette, May 22, 1755 |
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126 | (3) |
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129 | (1) |
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2. "Cutlasses and hatchets playing on every quarter with much effusion of blood" Robert Moses, 1755 |
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129 | (1) |
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130 | (1) |
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3. "The English Colonies...are fallen under the Chastising hand of Heaven" Stephen Hopkins, proclamation of a day of fasting and rest, May 12, 1756 |
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130 | (1) |
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131 | (1) |
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4. "We...clambered up one of the steepest precipices that can be conceived" Captain John Knox, An Historical Journal of the Campaigns in North America, 1757-60 |
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131 | (1) |
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The Seven Years' War and the Growth of Antislavery Sentiment |
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132 | (3) |
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5. "Though we made slaves of the Negroes...I believed that liberty was the natural right of all men equally" John Woolman, journal, 1757 |
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132 | (3) |
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The Fate of Native Americans |
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135 | (4) |
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6. "I most heartily congratulate you on the surrender of Canada" Richard Peters, February 12, 1761 |
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135 | (4) |
PART 5. THE AGE OF REVOLUTION, 1765-1825 |
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139 | (72) |
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144 | (2) |
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1. "The several Nations...of Indians...should not be molested" George III, Proclamation of 1763, October 7, 1763 |
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144 | (2) |
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146 | (5) |
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2. "There is a violent spirit of opposition raised on the continent" Archibald Hinschelwood, August 19, 1765 |
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146 | (2) |
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3. "There is not gold and silver enough in the colonies to pay the stamp duty for one year" Benjamin Franklin, "The Examination of Doctor Benjamin Franklin," 1766 |
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148 | (3) |
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151 | (3) |
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4. "Taxes...are imposed upon the People, without their consent" John Hancock and four other Boston selectmen, September 14, 1768 |
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151 | (1) |
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5. "The governors of too many of ye colonies are not only unprincipled, but...rapacious" James Otis, July 27, 1769 |
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152 | (1) |
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6. "The army...is now publicly declared to be for the purpose of enforcing obedience to the authority of Parliament" Charles Thomson, November 26, 1769 |
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153 | (1) |
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154 | (5) |
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7. "A most horrid murder was committed...by 8 or 9 Soldiers" Deacon John Tudor, 1770 |
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154 | (2) |
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8. "What are all the Riches...of Life compared with...Liberty" Brutus, May 16, 1770 |
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156 | (1) |
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9. "I trust we have Virtue & Resolution" John Dickinson, October 31, 1770 |
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157 | (1) |
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10. "My Enemies were forced to content themselves with abusing me...in the Newspapers" Benjamin Franklin, December 30, 1770 |
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158 | (1) |
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159 | (1) |
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11. "Lawyers, bad everywhere, but in Carolina worse than bad" Richard Henry Lee, June 19, 1771 |
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159 | (1) |
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159 | (2) |
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12. "The Wretch who betrays his Country" Samuel Adams, July 16, 1772 |
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159 | (1) |
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13. "A System of Tyranny gaining ground upon us every day" John Adams, April 19, 1773 |
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160 | (1) |
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161 | (10) |
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14. "Nothing but equal Liberty...can secure the attachment of the Colonies to Britain" John Adams, December 11, 1773 |
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161 | (1) |
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15. "There arrived from England 450 chests of tea" John Easson, December 18, 1773 |
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162 | (1) |
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16. "We consider each Colony on this Continent as parts of the same Body" George Read, Thomas McKean, and Jonathan McKinley, May 26, 1774 |
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162 | (3) |
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17. "They found upwards of fifty thousand men well armed, actually on their march to Boston" Caesar Rodney, September 17, 1774 |
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165 | (1) |
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18. "Ruinous system of colony administration...calculated for enslaving these Colonies" The Association, agreed upon by the Grand American Continental Congress, October 20, 1774 |
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165 | (3) |
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19. "We...lay our grievances before the throne" Petition from the General Congress in America to the king, October 26, 1774 |
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168 | (1) |
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20. "When a Nation...turns advocate for Slavery and Oppression, there is reason to suspect she has...ceased to be virtuous" Letter from the General Congress at Philadelphia, September 5, 1774 |
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169 | (2) |
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American Resistance to Britain |
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171 | (2) |
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21. "It will produce Resistance, and Reprisal, and a Flame through all America" John Adams, December 28, 1774 |
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171 | (1) |
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22. "Kings are servants, not the proprietors of the people" Thomas Jefferson, "A Summary View of the Rights of British America," 1774 |
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171 | (1) |
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23. "We consider ourselves as laying the foundation of a glorious future Empire" Ezra Stiles, April 15, 1775 |
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172 | (1) |
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The Battles of Lexington and Concord |
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173 | (10) |
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24. "Troops...marched to Lexington & there Killed a number of our American Soldiers" Isaac Merrill, April 19, 1775 |
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173 | (2) |
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25. "The name of God has been introduced in the pulpits to excite and justify devestation and massacre" Thomas Gage, Proclamation of amnesty, June 12, 1775 |
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175 | (1) |
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26. "All Europe is interested in the fate of America" Mercy Otis Warren, August 24, 1775 |
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176 | (2) |
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27. "I offer nothing more than simple facts, plain arguments, and common sense" Thomas Paine, Common Sense, 1776 |
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178 | (1) |
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28. "The Course of Events naturally turns the thoughts of Gentlemen to the Subjects of Legislation" John Adams, November 15, 1775 |
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179 | (2) |
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29. "It is not choice...but necessity that calls for Independence" Richard H. Lee, June 2, 1776 |
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181 | (1) |
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30. "Our affairs are hastening fast to a Crisis" John Hancock, June 4, 1776 |
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182 | (1) |
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183 | (3) |
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31. "The Christian King of Great Britain [is] determined to keep open a market where MEN should be bought & sold" Thomas Jefferson, draft of the Declaration of Independence, 1776 |
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183 | (3) |
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Slavery and the American Revolution |
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186 | (15) |
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32. "In the year of our Lord 1775...I entered into the service of the U.S. as a private soldier" Peter Kiteridge, April 6, 1806 |
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187 | (1) |
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33. "The Iniquitous Practice of depriving any of their just right to Liberty" Society of Friends, extracts from the minutes of the yearly meeting, September 23-28, 1776 |
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188 | (1) |
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34. "To prohibit a great people...from making all that they can of every part of their own produce...is a manifest violation of the most sacred rights of mankind" Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, 1776 |
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189 | (2) |
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35. "Our cause is the cause of God, of human nature & Posterity" John Jay, December 23, 1776 |
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191 | (2) |
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36. "It seems their design is, this spring, to spread smallpox thro the country" Josiah Bartlett, April 21, 1777 |
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193 | (1) |
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37. "I hope you will not consider yourself as commander in chief of your own house" Lucy Knox, August 23, 1777 |
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194 | (2) |
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38. "It would be next to impossible for Britain to succeed" George Washington, December 14-15, 1777 |
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196 | (2) |
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39. "We had...not less than 2898 men unfit for duty, by reason of their being barefoot and otherwise naked" George Washington, December 29, 1777 |
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198 | (1) |
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40. "The benevolent overtures of Great-Britain towards a re-union and coalition with her colonies" Sir Henry Clinton, "Manifesto and Proclamation to the Members of the General Assemblies, October 3, 1778 |
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199 | (2) |
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Benedict Arnold's Treason |
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201 | (1) |
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41. "The story...is indeed shocking to humanity" Edmund Pendleton, October 17, 1780 |
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201 | (1) |
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202 | (6) |
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42. "The loud roaring of our approaching Enemy" Henry Laurens, February 14, 1780 |
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202 | (1) |
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43. "A considerable Fleet of the Enemy has arrived within our Capes" Thomas Jefferson, October 22, 1780 |
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202 | (1) |
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44. "Measures for suppressing the remains of Rebellion" Charles Cornwallis, "A Proclamation," February 20, 1781 |
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203 | (1) |
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45. "Our affairs have been for some time growing from bad to worse" George Mason, June 3, 1781 |
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204 | (2) |
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46. "We are told that the enemy[`s]...superior fleet will soon drive off the French" Edmund Pendleton, September 10, 1781 |
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206 | (1) |
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47. "The designs of the enemy in strengthening Canada, & bending the residue of their force against the West Indies" Edmund Pendleton, October 21, 1782 |
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207 | (1) |
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The Articles of Confederation |
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208 | (3) |
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48. "Twas high time the confederation was completed" Edmund Pendleton, September 25, 1780 |
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208 | (3) |
PART 6. CREATING A NEW NATION |
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211 | (112) |
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1. "The Loyalists of this Country are all preparing to leave it to settle in Nova Scotia" Brooks Watson, March 14, 1783 |
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214 | (1) |
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Native Americans and the American Revolution |
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215 | (2) |
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2. "An expedition must be instantly undertaken into the Indian Country" Thomas Jefferson, April 19, 1780 |
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215 | (2) |
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217 | (1) |
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3. "The behavior of the soldiers in their insult to Congress" Edmund Pendleton, July 21, 1783 |
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217 | (1) |
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Slavery in Postrevolutionary America |
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218 | (2) |
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4. "The case of the oppressed blacks commands our attention" James Pemberton, November 18, 1784 |
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218 | (1) |
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5. "[Nothing] will ever prevent me from doing all in my Power to obtain Restitution of the Negroes taken from the Southern States" John Adams, April 28, 1785 |
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219 | (1) |
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6. "I never mean...to possess another slave by purchase" George Washington, September 9, 1786 |
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220 | (1) |
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220 | (3) |
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7. "Congress having...invest[ed] us with full Powers entering into a Treaty...with the...Government of Algiers" John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, October 1, 1785 |
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220 | (3) |
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223 | (3) |
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8. "I have done nothing in the late contest, but what I thought myself...bound to do by...Duty" John Adams, June 2, 1785 |
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223 | (1) |
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9. "That nation hates us" Thomas Jefferson May 4, 1786 |
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224 | (2) |
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The Critical Period and Shays' Rebellion |
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226 | (7) |
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10. "This high-handed offence...must tend to subvert all law and government" Governor James Bowdoin, September 2, 1786 |
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226 | (2) |
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11. "The proportion of debtors run high in this State" Benjamin Lincoln, December 4, 1786 |
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228 | (2) |
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12. "There are combustibles in every State, which a spark might set fire to" George Washington, December 26, 1786 |
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230 | (1) |
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13. "A proper arrangement of the militia may be regarded as the foundation of the future glory and power of the United States" Henry Knox, A Plan for the General Arrangement of the Militia, 1786 |
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231 | (2) |
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233 | (1) |
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14. "Neither Slavery nor involuntary Servitude in the said territory" Northwest Ordinance, 1787 |
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233 | (1) |
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Creating Republican Governments |
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234 | (1) |
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15. "The...Power of Government of this State is vested in, and must be derived from the People" New Hampshire, A Declaration of Rights, and Plan of Government, 1779 |
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234 | (1) |
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235 | (3) |
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16. "The only step of moment taken by Cong[res]s...has been a recommendation of the proposed meeting...for revising the federal articles" James Madison, February 24, 1787 |
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235 | (2) |
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17. "My opinion of the energetic wants of the federal government are well known" George Washington, February 3, 1787 |
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237 | (1) |
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Debates within the Constitutional Convention |
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238 | (3) |
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18. "A national government ought to be established consisting of a Supreme Legislature, Judiciary, and Executive" Pierce Butler |
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238 | (3) |
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The Three-fifths Compromise |
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241 | (2) |
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19. "Three-fifths of all other persons" U.S. Constitution, Article 1, Section 2 |
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241 | (1) |
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20. "Objections to the Constitution as far as it has advanced" Edmund Randolph, August 30, 1787 |
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242 | (1) |
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Fugitive Slaves and the Constitution |
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243 | (1) |
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21. "Any person bound to service...[who] shall flee" Pierce Butler |
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243 | (1) |
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243 | (3) |
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22. "Mr. L. Martin proposed...to allow a prohibition or tax on the importation of slaves" Max Farrand, ed., The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787 |
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243 | (3) |
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246 | (6) |
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23. "To expect...unanimity in points of so great magnitude...was contrary to all experience" Edmund Pendleton, October 8, 1787 |
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246 | (3) |
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24. "We are at the Eve of a Bankruptcy" William Blount, December 15, 1787 |
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249 | (1) |
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25. "We must insist that the Continental Constitution contain a Bill of Rights" Daniel Adams, December 31, 1787 |
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250 | (1) |
|
26. "There never was a time when the public Interest required more attention" John Hancock, ca. 1788 |
|
|
250 | (1) |
|
27. "The property, the ability, and the virtue of the State, are almost solely in favor of the constitution" Henry Knox, February 10, 1788 |
|
|
251 | (1) |
|
28. "Very extensive Petitions will be laid...against the new Constitution" Walter Stewart, February 20, 1788 |
|
|
251 | (1) |
|
29. "Congratulations on the acceptance of the new constitution by the State of Massachusetts" George Washington, March 3, 1788 |
|
|
252 | (1) |
|
|
252 | (7) |
|
30. "Feelings not unlike those of a culprit...going to the place of his execution" George Washington, April 1, 1789 |
|
|
252 | (2) |
|
31. "We are too poor for Monarchy, too wise for despotism, too...selfish & extravagant for Republicanism" Mercy Otis Warren, September 20, 1789 |
|
|
254 | (1) |
|
32. "Molasses has shipwrecked New England virtue" George Clymer, ca. 1789 |
|
|
255 | (1) |
|
33. "A mortifying consciousness of inferiority" Judith Sargent Stevens Murray, "On the Equality of the Sexes," March and April 1790 |
|
|
256 | (1) |
|
34. "The postage of a single letter...amounts almost to a prohibition of communication through the post office" Samuel Osgood, Postmaster's First Report, January 20, 1790 |
|
|
257 | (1) |
|
35. "The assumption of the debts of the several states...is now under consideration" Roger Sherman, March 6, 1790 |
|
|
258 | (1) |
|
The Birth of Political Parties |
|
|
259 | (6) |
|
36. "[The British] view a war as very possible" Thomas Jefferson, August 12, 1790 |
|
|
260 | (1) |
|
37. "The expediency of encouraging manufactures in the United States" Alexander Hamilton, "Report on Manufactures," 1791 |
|
|
261 | (3) |
|
38. "The contests of European Nations" George Washington, March 25, 1793 |
|
|
264 | (1) |
|
|
265 | (2) |
|
39. "St. Domingo has expelled all its whites" Thomas Jefferson, December 1, 1793 |
|
|
265 | (1) |
|
40. "Show no mercy with anyone" General Charles Victor Emmanuel LeClerc, August 6, 1802 |
|
|
266 | (1) |
|
|
267 | (1) |
|
41. "You have probably heard of a great misunderstanding between Mr Genet & us" Thomas Jefferson, November 27, 1796 |
|
|
267 | (1) |
|
|
267 | (4) |
|
42. "A daring and cruel outrage has been committed" U.S. Congress, July 25, 1794 |
|
|
267 | (2) |
|
43. "To resist and prevent the execution of the law...by violence...[is] treason" U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice William Paterson, May 29, 1795 |
|
|
269 | (1) |
|
44. "Britain has acted unwisely and unjustly" John Jay, April 9, 1794 |
|
|
270 | (1) |
|
45. "[Jay's Treaty] excited much uneasiness in the councils of...[the French] government" James Monroe, January 17, 1795 |
|
|
270 | (1) |
|
Washington's Farewell Address |
|
|
271 | (4) |
|
46. "The immense value of your national Union" George Washington, September 17, 1796 |
|
|
271 | (2) |
|
47. "Great anxiety prevails...[about] the future President" Charles Carroll, December 5, 1796 |
|
|
273 | (1) |
|
48. "What is more important than a perfect free trade" Robert Fulton, April 14, 1798 |
|
|
274 | (1) |
|
The Quasi-War with France and the XYZ Affair |
|
|
275 | (10) |
|
49. "It would be both just and proper to declare the treaty with France to be void" John Jay, June 25, 1798 |
|
|
275 | (1) |
|
50. "A profest Democrat...will leave nothing unattempted to overturn the Government of this Country" George Washington, September 30, 1798 |
|
|
276 | (1) |
|
51. "Liberty without limit...is the worst kind of tyranny" Alexander Addison, January 1799 |
|
|
277 | (1) |
|
52. "Folly begets folly" Thomas Jefferson, January 21, 1799 |
|
|
278 | (1) |
|
53. "Let [the Jeffersonians] set up a broomstick, and call it a true son of Liberty...and it will command their votes in toto!" George Washington, July 21, 1799 |
|
|
279 | (2) |
|
54. "If Jefferson and Burr come with equal votes...the former ought to be preferred" Alexander Hamilton, December 23, 1800 |
|
|
281 | (1) |
|
55. "The votes are even between Jefferson & Burr" Elizur Goodrich, January 1, 1801 |
|
|
282 | (1) |
|
56. "Hamilton's schemes to...monopolize power to himself" John Adams, December 4, 1805 |
|
|
283 | (2) |
|
Jeffersonian Republicanism |
|
|
285 | (2) |
|
57. "The fatal errors which have lost to nations the present hope of liberty" Thomas Jefferson, April 15, 1811 |
|
|
286 | (1) |
|
The Jeffersonians in Power |
|
|
287 | (1) |
|
58. "The President's inauguration past gave great hopes that he would...concil[iate] all parties" Elias Boudinot, April 25, 1801 |
|
|
287 | (1) |
REPEAL OF THE JUDICIARY ACT OF 1801 |
|
287 | (36) |
|
|
288 | (1) |
|
59. "To disable the court from deciding constitutional questions" John Marshall, December 22, 1823 |
|
|
288 | (1) |
|
Louisiana, Expansion, and Disunionist Conspiracies |
|
|
289 | (6) |
|
60. "None but an armed nation can dispense with a standing army" Thomas Jefferson, February 2, 1803 |
|
|
289 | (1) |
|
61. "A Governor is to be placed over us, whom we have not chosen" Pierre Derbigney, 1804 |
|
|
290 | (3) |
|
62. "Saw immense herds of buffalo today" Meriwether Lewis, 1805 |
|
|
293 | (1) |
|
63. "I am anxious to see the Progress of Burr's Tryal" John Adams, September 1, 1807 |
|
|
294 | (1) |
|
Slavery and Race in Jeffersonian America |
|
|
295 | (4) |
|
64. "The Abolition of Slavery must be gradual" John Adams, January 24, 1801 |
|
|
295 | (1) |
|
65. "[The slaves in question] are not felons" Thomas Jefferson, July 13, 1802 |
|
|
296 | (1) |
|
66. "At no period since the slave-trade was prohibited, have all our citizens abstained from...[this] traffic" James Madison, circular letter, April 9, 1803 |
|
|
297 | (1) |
|
67. "Every consideration of justice, humanity and safety, forbids that any more Negroes should be brought into your state" William Few, June 30, 1804 |
|
|
297 | (1) |
|
68. "Establish an impregnable rampart of Slaveholding power, under the false batteries of democracy" John Quincy Adams, July 17, 1804 |
|
|
298 | (1) |
|
The American Eagle, the French Tiger, and the British Shark |
|
|
299 | (3) |
|
69. "Seamen who are not British subjects...shall be exempt from impressments" John Marshall, September 20, 1800 |
|
|
299 | (1) |
|
70. "Nearly the whole of the American Commerce...will fall under the destructive operation of the [British] order" James Madison, March 29, 1807 |
|
|
300 | (1) |
|
71. "War? or No War? That is the question" John Adams, September 1, 1807 |
|
|
301 | (1) |
|
|
302 | (2) |
|
72. "The only honorable expedient for avoiding war" Thomas Jefferson, ca. 1808 |
|
|
302 | (1) |
|
73. "Jefferson expired and Madison came to Life last night" John Adams, March 4, 1809 |
|
|
303 | (1) |
|
|
304 | (1) |
|
74. "Open Mexico to the political influence of the U.S." William Shaler, May 2 and October 5, 1812 |
|
|
305 | (1) |
|
|
305 | (11) |
|
75. "An immense majority of the people are...averse from a conflict...menacing ruin to themselves" [J.C. Jones], June 11, 1812 |
|
|
306 | (1) |
|
76. "The friends of Peace, Commerce and Liberty...are hourly rising" Columbian Centinel, September 5, 1812 |
|
|
307 | (1) |
|
77. "Our Northern & Western Armies seemed to be doomed to misfortune and Disgrace" Benjamin Tallmadge, November 29, 1812 |
|
|
308 | (1) |
|
78. "The great & immortal Jackson, leads the valiant & daring sons of Tennessee to victory & to glory" Ephraim Hubbard Foster, April 8, 1814 |
|
|
308 | (2) |
|
79. "The proceedings at Hartford have excited much anxiety" James Monroe, January 11, 1815 |
|
|
310 | (1) |
|
80. "The war...on our part, is entirely defensive" Niles Weekly Register, January 28, 1815 |
|
|
310 | (3) |
|
81. "A treaty of peace was received last night" James Monroe, February 18, 1815 |
|
|
313 | (2) |
|
82. "The British naval Commanders...have carried away from the United States all the slaves they have taken" John Quincy Adams, August 31, 1815 |
|
|
315 | (1) |
|
Clearing the Land of Indians |
|
|
316 | (2) |
|
83. "Introduce among the several Indian Nations...the arts of civilization" Henry Dearborn, July 8, 1803 |
|
|
316 | (1) |
|
84. "They would have...been amalgamated with us within no distant period of time" Thomas Jefferson, December 6, 1813 |
|
|
316 | (1) |
|
85. "The warriors of that village was [sic] with me fighting the battles of our country" Andrew Jackson, May 4, 1818 |
|
|
317 | (1) |
|
Missionary Work and Indian Policy |
|
|
318 | (5) |
|
86. "I had the pleasure of being introduced to the principal Chief of the Potawatamie Indians" William Dickson, May 28, 1834 |
|
|
318 | (1) |
|
87. "We beg the President...to hear us patiently" John Ross, August 14, 1840 |
|
|
319 | (1) |
|
88. "Prevent those people from cultivating the soil" Zachary Taylor, March 25, 1838 |
|
|
320 | (3) |
PART 7. ANTEBELLUM AMERICA |
|
323 | (178) |
SHIFTS IN SENSIBILITY: FAMILY, GENDER ROLES, RELIGION, AND THE RISE OF HUMANITARIANISM |
|
326 | (7) |
|
The Emergence of the Republican Family |
|
|
326 | (2) |
|
1. "Now is your time to lay a foundation for future usefulness" William Ellery, January 16, 1803 |
|
|
327 | (1) |
|
|
328 | (3) |
|
2. "Dear Children! I tremble for you" Susan Mansfield Huntington, April 4, 1815 |
|
|
328 | (1) |
|
3. "I have felt...a sense of my obligations to God" Benjamin Rush, March 9, 1790 |
|
|
329 | (2) |
|
Religious Liberalism and Evangelical Revivalism |
|
|
331 | (2) |
|
4. "It is more than forty years, since...I renounced the Calvinistic Scheme" Timothy Pickering, January 6, 1816 |
|
|
332 | (1) |
|
|
333 | (1) |
|
5. "Any person may separate from one...Religious Society and join another" Columbian Centinel, April 28, 1824 |
|
|
333 | (1) |
ORIGINS OF THE AMERICAN REFORM TRADITION |
|
333 | (10) |
|
|
334 | (1) |
|
6. "Dueling is a mode of settling certain points of honour...by single combat" William Ellery, November 5, 1805 |
|
|
334 | (1) |
|
|
335 | (3) |
|
7. "The school was large, and the pupils rather ungovernable" Accounts of two New England teachers, August and October 1831 |
|
|
335 | (1) |
|
8. "An uniform system of weights and measures" John Quincy Adams, 1821 |
|
|
336 | (2) |
|
|
338 | (4) |
|
9. "They neither enjoyed the immunities of freemen, nor...the incapacities of slaves, but partook...of both" "A View of Exertions Lately Made for the Purpose of Colonizing the Free People of Color," 1817 |
|
|
338 | (2) |
|
10. "The existence of distinct and separate castes...is an inherent vice in the composition of society" Bushrod Washington, "Memorial of the President and board of Managers of the American society for colonizing the Free People of Color of the U.S.," January 14, 1817 |
|
|
340 | (1) |
|
11. "No adequate provision...was made for the shelter and comfort of the people" E.B. Caldwell, October 27, 1826 |
|
|
340 | (2) |
|
Postwar Nationalism and Division |
|
|
342 | (1) |
|
12. "We were embarked in the same sacred cause of liberty" James Monroe, July 4, 1817 |
|
|
342 | (1) |
1818 AND 1819: WATERSHED YEARS IN AMERICAN HISTORY |
|
343 | (21) |
|
The Second Bank of the United States |
|
|
344 | (2) |
|
13. "The Bank bill has passed" John F. Lovett, March 14, 1815 |
|
|
344 | (1) |
|
14. "The expediency of taxing the United States Bank" Jonathan Roberts, January 16, 1818 |
|
|
345 | (1) |
|
|
346 | (1) |
|
15. "The Judgement of the Supreme Court...in the case of McCullough agst. the State of Maryland" James Madison, September 2, 1819 |
|
|
346 | (1) |
|
|
347 | (2) |
|
16. "Different hordes of people...have violated our laws...and have committed every kind of outrage" James Monroe, November 16, 1818 |
|
|
347 | (2) |
|
|
349 | (1) |
|
17. "The American continents...are henceforth not to be considered...for future colonization by any European powers" James Monroe, December 2, 1823 |
|
|
349 | (1) |
|
|
350 | (4) |
|
18. "The great question which now agitates the nation" John Tyler, February 14, 1820 |
|
|
350 | (2) |
|
19. "A...deliberate sanction seems to be...given to the continuance of domestic slavery" Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, April 13, 1820 |
|
|
352 | (2) |
|
20. "It is not a moral question, but one merely of power" Thomas Jefferson, December 26, 1820 |
|
|
354 | (1) |
|
|
354 | (3) |
|
21. "The policy of liberating the slaves in the W. Indies" James Monroe, May 20, 1824 |
|
|
354 | (1) |
|
22. "We have the wolf by the ear & feel the danger of holding or letting loose" Thomas Jefferson, July 18, 1824 |
|
|
355 | (1) |
|
23. "John Harris is a Citizen of the United States of America" Ezekiel Savage, October 23, 1824 |
|
|
356 | (1) |
|
|
357 | (1) |
|
24. "The master & mistress...treated her with great severity, so much so as to induce some of the friends of Freedom...to assist her in making her escape" Edward Lawton, May 22, 1825 |
|
|
357 | (1) |
|
The Rise of the Second Party System |
|
|
358 | (4) |
|
25. "I believe their existence to be salutary" Thomas Jefferson, September 5, 1822 |
|
|
358 | (2) |
|
26. "The same parties exist now which existed before" Thomas Jefferson, October 28, 1822 |
|
|
360 | (1) |
|
27. "I zealously supported the emancipation ticket" Henry Clay, August 28, 1823 |
|
|
361 | (1) |
|
|
362 | (2) |
|
28. "I think it certain that the election will come into the H[ouse] of R[epresentatives]" Henry Clay, March 6, 1824 |
|
|
362 | (1) |
|
29. "Roads and Canals are among the most essential means of improving the condition of the Nation" John Quincy Adams, May 6, 1824 |
|
|
363 | (1) |
POWER AND IDEOLOGY IN JACKSON'S AMERICA |
|
364 | (41) |
|
Nullification and the Bank War |
|
|
365 | (12) |
|
30. "[The tariff] has divided the country into two great geographical divisions" Connecticut Herald, August 30, 1831 |
|
|
365 | (3) |
|
31. "Disunion, by armed force, is TREASON" Andrew Jackson, December 10, 1832 |
|
|
368 | (3) |
|
32. "I recognize no ALLEGIANCE, as paramount to that which the citizens of South Carolina owe to the State of their birth" Governor Robert Y. Hayne, December 13, 1832 |
|
|
371 | (2) |
|
33. "The union between Mr. Clay & Calhoun" Andrew Jackson, February 23, 1833 |
|
|
373 | (1) |
|
34. "A metallic currency to meet the wants of the labouring class" Andrew Jackson, March 14, 1834 |
|
|
373 | (1) |
|
35. "My great dread is a Civil War" David Crockett, April 4, 1834 |
|
|
374 | (2) |
|
36. "I will go to the Wilds of Texas" David Crockett, December 25, 1834 |
|
|
376 | (1) |
|
Political Democratization and the Dorr War |
|
|
377 | (2) |
|
37. "Choice of those who make and administer laws is a Natural Right" Thomas W. Dorr, "An Address to the People of Rhode Island," 1834 |
|
|
377 | (2) |
|
Party Competition and the Rise of the Whigs |
|
|
379 | (2) |
|
38. "We are now in the midst of a higher political excitement than I have ever yet witnessed" James Buchanan, June 29, 1840 |
|
|
379 | (2) |
|
Antebellum Reform: The Shift to Immediatism |
|
|
381 | (2) |
|
39. "The fatal consequences of Intemperance" "A Mirror for the Intemperate" 1830 |
|
|
381 | (1) |
|
40. "Men of wealth and respectability, who...throw their influence into the scale of intemperance" J. Kitredge, July 4, 1829 |
|
|
381 | (1) |
|
41. "30,000 to 50,000 individuals...become sots every year" Edward Hitchcocks, 1830 |
|
|
382 | (1) |
|
|
383 | (3) |
|
42. "How is it with the slave" William Lloyd Garrison, July 14, 1830 |
|
|
383 | (3) |
|
43. "Slavery is undoubtedly a manifest violation of the rights of man" Henry Clay, May 19, 1831 |
|
|
386 | (1) |
|
Nat Turner's Insurrection |
|
|
386 | (10) |
|
44. "Disagreeable rumors have reached this city of an insurrection of the slaves in Southampton County" Constitutional Whig, August 23, 1831 |
|
|
386 | (1) |
|
45. "Without any cause or provocation" Richmond Enquirer, August 30, 1831 |
|
|
387 | (1) |
|
46. "Doomed...in this 'Land of Liberty' to a state of cruel bondage!" Samuel Warner, Authentic and Impartial Narrative of the Tragical Scene Which was Witnessed in Southampton County, 1831 |
|
|
388 | (2) |
|
47. "What we have long predicted...has commenced its fulfillment" The Liberator, September 3, 1831 |
|
|
390 | (1) |
|
48. "Any scheme of abolition...so soon after the Southampton tragedy, would...appear to be the result of the...massacre" Thomas R. Dew, "Review of the Debate in the Virginia Legislature," 1832 |
|
|
391 | (1) |
|
49. "Cease to send that paper to this office" Elijah P. Lovejoy, January 30, 1835 |
|
|
392 | (1) |
|
50. "What is the actual condition of the slaves in the United States?" Theodore Dwight Weld, American Slavery As It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses, 1839 |
|
|
393 | (3) |
|
Narrative and Testimony of Sarah M. Grimke |
|
|
396 | (3) |
|
51. "I left my native state on account of slavery" Sarah M. Grimke in Weld, American Slavery As It Is, 1839 |
|
|
396 | (1) |
|
52. "Privations of the Slaves" From Weld, American Slavery As It Is, 1839 |
|
|
397 | (2) |
|
Testimony of Angelina Grimke |
|
|
399 | (2) |
|
53. "It would be utterly impossible to recount the...ways the heart of the slave is continually lacerated" Angelina Grimke in Weld, American Slavery As It Is, 1839 |
|
|
399 | (1) |
|
54. "General Testimony to the Cruelties Inflicted Upon Slaves" From Weld, American Slavery As It Is, 1839 |
|
|
399 | (1) |
|
55. "I take this opportunity of writing to you" Slave letter by an unidentified slave, October 8, 1859 |
|
|
400 | (1) |
|
|
401 | (1) |
|
56. "The abolitionist...[should] pay attention to his own affairs" E.W. Taylor, January 25, 1837 |
|
|
401 | (1) |
|
From Antislavery to Women's Rights |
|
|
401 | (4) |
|
57. "Mere circumstances of sex does not give to man higher rights...than to women" Angelina Emily Grimke, letter XII, October 2, 1837, Letters to Catherine E. Beecher |
|
|
401 | (1) |
|
58. "The American Anti-Slavery [Society]...divided when women were put among its officers" Abigail Kelley Foster, March 9, 1881 |
|
|
402 | (1) |
|
59. "How many truly harmonious households have we now" Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "Address Delivered at Seneca Falls," July 19, 1848 |
|
|
403 | (1) |
|
60. "The isolated household is a source of innumerable evils" The Phalanx, February 8, 1844 |
|
|
404 | (1) |
MANIFEST DESTINY |
|
405 | (35) |
|
|
405 | (4) |
|
61. "The...violations of the constitutional rights of the people of Texas...have compelled us to arm in self-defense" Stephen F. Austin, February 16, 1836 |
|
|
406 | (2) |
|
62. "The people of Texas, do now constitute a FREE, SOVEREIGN, and INDEPENDENT REPUBLIC" Republic of Texas, March 2, 1836 |
|
|
408 | (1) |
|
63. "We...have news that St. Anna has been taken by the Texans" E.G. Fisk, May 22, 1836 |
|
|
408 | (1) |
|
|
409 | (4) |
|
64. "Annexation...would risk a war with Mexico" John Quincy Adams, ca. 1842-1843 |
|
|
409 | (1) |
|
65. "It would be far better for this country that Texas should remain an independent State" James Buchanan, February 3, 1844 |
|
|
410 | (1) |
|
66. "The annexation of Texas is a great offense against humanity" Abiel Abbot, March 11, 1845 |
|
|
411 | (1) |
|
67. "In our Mountain home we feel not the withering...influence of political...despotism" Brigham Young, June 29, 1854 |
|
|
411 | (2) |
|
Mounting Sectional Antagonisms |
|
|
413 | (6) |
|
68. "The stake in the question is your right to petition, your freedom of thought and of action" John Quincy Adams, March 3, 1837 |
|
|
413 | (2) |
|
69. "I am no advocate of slavery...but" Franklin Pierce, March 18, 1838 |
|
|
415 | (1) |
|
70. "It will do more to unite...the slaveholding states than can be effected by anything else" John C. Calhoun, June 15, 1838 |
|
|
415 | (1) |
|
71. "The slave holding states...retained the complete control...of slavery within their...boundaries" William Henry Harrison, October 12, 1838 |
|
|
416 | (1) |
|
72. "The combination of Northern labour and Southern capital to suppress the right of Petition" John Quincy Adams, September 21, 1838 |
|
|
417 | (2) |
|
|
419 | (9) |
|
73. "However unjust...the slave trade may be, it is not contrary to the law of nations" John Forsyth, 1839 |
|
|
419 | (5) |
|
74. "All we want is make us free" Kale, January 4, 1841 |
|
|
424 | (1) |
|
75. "I appear...on...behalf of thirty-six individuals, the life and liberty of every one...depend on...this Court" John Quincy Adams, February 24 and March 1, 1841 |
|
|
425 | (2) |
|
76. "No action of mine can...contribute...to the abolition of Slavery" John Quincy Adams, July 15, 1845 |
|
|
427 | (1) |
|
|
428 | (3) |
|
77. "We have pursued slavery...into all its hiding places" Gerrit Smith, ca. 1840 |
|
|
428 | (2) |
|
78. "The Liberty party is what its enemies reproachfully call it--'a one idea party'" Gerrit Smith, January 1, 1845 |
|
|
430 | (1) |
|
|
431 | (1) |
|
79. "The Whig and Democratic candidates...are the shameless tools of the slave-power" Gerrit Smith, August 15, 1848 |
|
|
431 | (1) |
|
|
432 | (8) |
|
80. "The Wilmot Proviso will shake that body to its center" Zachary Taylor, October 19, 1847 |
|
|
433 | (1) |
|
81. "This people have been conceived in sin &...have been degraded by oppression" General Persifor Smith, October 26, 1847 |
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434 | (3) |
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82. "The citizens of the country have...encouraged ambushes" Zachary Taylor, "Proclamation," March 22, 1847 |
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437 | (1) |
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83. "We are not furnished with a uniform" Wellington G. Burnett, April 4, 1848 |
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438 | (1) |
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84. "The close of my congressional career" Abraham Lincoln, June 27, 1848 |
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439 | (1) |
THE ESCALATING CONFLICT OVER SLAVERY |
|
440 | (12) |
|
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441 | (8) |
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85. "What kind of settlement of the slavery question will be made I cannot tell" David R. Atchison, April 5, 1850 |
|
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441 | (1) |
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86. "The Compromise Bill is not a pro-Slavery measure" Senator James Shields of Illinois, June 22, 1850 |
|
|
441 | (1) |
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87. "Read and Ponder the Fugitive Slave Law!" Read and Ponder the Fugitive Slave Law, ca. 1850 |
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442 | (1) |
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88. "Live and Die freemen" Robert C. Nell, "Declaration of Sentiments of the Colored Citizens of Boston," 1850 |
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443 | (1) |
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89. "Momentarily liable to be seized by the strong arm of government" "Declaration of Sentiments of the Colored Citizens of Boston," 1850 |
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444 | (2) |
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90. "We pour out upon the Fugitive Slave Law the fullest measure of our contempt and hate and execration" Frederick Douglass and Gerrit Smith, January 7-9, 1851 |
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446 | (3) |
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91. "This simple narrative is an honest attempt to enlist...sympathies...in the sufferings of an oppressed race" Harriet Beecher Stowe, March 20, 1852 |
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449 | (1) |
|
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449 | (2) |
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92. "Most...who died of ship-fever were delirious" William Smith, An Emigrant's Narrative, 1850 |
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449 | (2) |
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The Know-Nothings and the Disintegration of the Second-Party System |
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451 | (1) |
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93. "I am not a Know-Nothing" Abraham Lincoln, letter to Joshua F. Speed, August 24, 1855 |
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451 | (1) |
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94. "We work now to overturn the Slave-Power" Salmon P. Chase, January 26, 1856 |
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452 | (1) |
AMERICA AT MIDCENTURY |
|
452 | (49) |
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Revival of the Slavery Issue |
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454 | (5) |
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95. "The Democrats are undisguised open servants of the slave-power" Gerrit Smith, November 1, 1854 |
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454 | (1) |
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96. "This state can be made certain for Fremont" Gideon Welles, July 12, 1856 |
|
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455 | (2) |
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97. "The people of Kansas...are suffering at the hands of the Federal Administration and the Missouri ruffians" Gerrit Smith, March 13, 1856 |
|
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457 | (2) |
|
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459 | (1) |
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98. "We feel more, & more certain that Kansas will be a Free State" John Brown, December 5, 1855 |
|
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459 | (1) |
|
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459 | (1) |
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99. "The liberty of white as well as black...will become a name only" Senator Charles Sumner, December 20, 1856 |
|
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459 | (1) |
|
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460 | (2) |
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100. "The right of property in a slave is distinctly and expressly affirmed in the Constitution" Roger B. Taney, 1857 |
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460 | (2) |
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462 | (12) |
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101. "The value of all the property...in seven slave States...is less than the real and personal estate...in...New York" Hinton Rowan Helper, The Impending Crisis of the South, 1857 |
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463 | (1) |
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102. "A house divided against itself cannot stand'" Abraham Lincoln, ca. 1858 |
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464 | (1) |
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103. "We never hear of the man who wishes to...[be] a slave himself" Abraham Lincoln, ca. 1857-1858 |
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465 | (1) |
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104. "Mr. Buchanan is a very weak man in the two Houses of Congress" Andrew Johnson, January 23, 1858 |
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466 | (1) |
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105. "The Democratic Party has become so startlingly wicked" Robert Goodenow, Astounding Disclosures!, August 18, 1858 |
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467 | (1) |
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106. "Mr. Lincoln stands on the Old Whig Platform, with Clay and Webster" Abraham Lincoln, Facts for the People, ca. 1858 |
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468 | (1) |
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107. "Why can't this Union endure permanently, half slave and half free?" Abraham Lincoln, Facts for the People, ca. 1858 |
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469 | (1) |
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108. "Senator Douglas contends that the Territorial Legislatures may lawfully evade the Constitution" Abraham Lincoln, Facts for the People, ca. 1858 |
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470 | (1) |
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109. "Douglas `Don't Care'" Abraham Lincoln, Facts for the People, ca. 1858 |
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471 | (1) |
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110. "I have said that I do not understand the Declaration to mean that all men are created equal in all respects" Abraham Lincoln, July 17, 1858 |
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472 | (2) |
|
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474 | (15) |
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111. "My father and two brothers...went down to Harper's Ferry" Annie Brown Adams, December 15, 1887 |
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474 | (1) |
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112. "I deny every thing but...a design on my part to free Slaves" John Brown, December 2, 1859 |
|
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475 | (1) |
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113. "The boys met their fate very cheerful" Aaron D. Stevens, January 5, 1860 |
|
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476 | (1) |
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114. "The old Union-saving machinery will...be put in motion again" "Free Press--Free Speech--Free Soil--Free Men," Paterson Daily Guardian, November 22, 1859 |
|
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477 | (1) |
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115. "We have a warm time here with the Southern fire eaters" William Windom, December 10, 1859 |
|
|
478 | (1) |
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116. "Witness the growing distrust with which the people of the North and South begin to regard each other" E.N. Elliot, ed. Cotton Is King, 1860 |
|
|
479 | (1) |
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117. "God...established slavery" Thornton Stringfellow, Cotton Is King, 1860 |
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480 | (1) |
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118. "Let us refer to figures and facts" Samuel A. Cartwright, "The Education, Labor, and Wealth of the South," Cotton Is King, 1860 |
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481 | (1) |
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119. "Will ye be led away by a cruel and misguided philanthropy, or by designing demagogues" E.N. Elliott, ed., Cotton Is King, 1860 |
|
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481 | (2) |
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120. "Our friends...are organizing thoroughly for the fight" Stephen A. Douglas, June 29, 1860 |
|
|
483 | (1) |
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121. "The foundations of the Republic tremble under the shock of contending factions" Resolutions of The Southern Rights Vigilance Club of Savannah, 1860 |
|
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484 | (2) |
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122. "I am for...Universal Liberty" Frederick Douglass, November 10, 1860 |
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486 | (3) |
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123. "Sixteen rifle Cannons...Also, One Hundred thousand (100,000) pounds of lead" Paul Jones Semmes, December 19, 1860 |
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489 | (1) |
|
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489 | (12) |
|
124. "The People of South Carolina...have solemnly declared that the Union...is dissolved" The South Carolina Convention, December 20, 1860 |
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489 | (4) |
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125. "Every body is rampant in favour of disunion" William P. Gibson, December 22, 1860 |
|
|
493 | (1) |
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126. "The unanimity of the feeling...in opposition to the...Union" New York Herald, January 14, 1861 |
|
|
493 | (2) |
|
127. "The South cannot be conquered" Robert Campbell, February 1, 1861 |
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495 | (1) |
|
128. "The temper of the Black Republicans is not to give us our right in the Union, or allow us to go peaceably out of it" Jefferson Davis, January 13, 1861 |
|
|
496 | (1) |
|
129. "I feel that I have been...an humble instrument in the hands of our Heavenly Father" Robert A. Anderson, January 21, 1861 |
|
|
497 | (1) |
|
130. "The duty of getting possession of the Forts now held within our limits" Jefferson Davis, February 22, 1861 |
|
|
498 | (3) |
PART 8. CIVIL WAR |
|
501 | |
|
1. "Terrible News!" Marietta (Ohio) Home News Extra, April 13, 1861 |
|
|
503 | (3) |
|
2. "Invasion of our soil will be considered as an act of war" Robert E. Lee, April 24, 1861 |
|
|
506 | (1) |
|
3. "The battle [is] opened" Frederick Pearce, May 13, 1861 |
|
|
506 | (1) |
|
4. "We had an alarm last night" James R. Kelly, July 22, 1861 |
|
|
507 | (1) |
|
5. "We have an agency...for the abolition of slavery in the...war" John Jay, July 24, 1861 |
|
|
508 | (1) |
|
6. "The men who have struck this blow at our government are playing for a bigger stake than the right to...extend slavery" David Hopkins, August 18, 1861 |
|
|
509 | (1) |
|
7. "I propose to offer you a few suggestions" Abraham Lincoln, October 24, 1861 |
|
|
510 | (1) |
|
8. "Nathaniel Gordon was indicted and convicted for being engaged in the Slave Trade" Abraham Lincoln, February 4, 1862 |
|
|
511 | (1) |
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9. "I would like the bill to have...three main features" Abraham Lincoln, March 24, 1862 |
|
|
511 | (1) |
|
10. "A great number...were killed on Sunday" Edgar Pearce, April 17, 1862 |
|
|
512 | (2) |
|
11. "Shall our mothers, our wives, our daughters, and our sisters, be...outraged by the ruffianly soldiers of the North...?" General Pierre G.T. Beauregard, May 19, 1862 |
|
|
514 | (1) |
|
12. "Our country is involved in desolating war" Jefferson Davis, August 18, 1862 |
|
|
514 | (2) |
|
13. "The Cherokee People...desire...ample Military Protection for life and property" John Ross, September 16, 1862 |
|
|
516 | (2) |
|
14. "To the question 'Why was not the rebel army bagged...?...you answer 'That is not the game'" Abraham Lincoln, September 26, 1862 |
|
|
518 | (1) |
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF NAMES |
|
519 | (38) |
The Emancipation Proclamation |
|
520 | (10) |
|
15. "All persons held as slaves within any State...in rebellion...shall be...free" Abraham Lincoln, September 22, 1862 |
|
|
520 | (3) |
|
16. "Lincoln's proclamation will produce dissensions and trouble at the North" Mansfield Lovell, October 30, 1862 |
|
|
523 | (1) |
|
17. "An incalculable element of strength to the Union cause" Rufus Blanchard, ca. 1863 |
|
|
523 | (2) |
|
18. "How is the Proclamation to be enforced?" Amos Lewis, January 16, 1863 |
|
|
525 | (1) |
|
19. "The administration are generally damned by the soldiers" A soldier in the 12th Vermont Militia, January 18, 1863 |
|
|
525 | (1) |
|
20. "We have not been paid anything since I was at home" David V.M. Smith, October 5, 1862 |
|
|
526 | (1) |
|
21. "We left...numbering near 3600...To day we do not number more than 1200" George C. Burling, October 25, 1862 |
|
|
526 | (1) |
|
22. "I proposed a national Banking system" Samuel P. Chase, January 27, 1863 |
|
|
527 | (1) |
|
23. "We seem to have the whole world against us" Major General Daniel H. Hill, March 9, 1863 |
|
|
528 | (1) |
|
24. "They are all moving to Texas with their Negroes" General William Tecumseh Sherman, March 30, 1863 |
|
|
528 | (1) |
|
25. "If I could not command a Co[mpany] of white men, I would not command any" Joseph M. Maitland, April 22, 1863 |
|
|
529 | (1) |
|
26. "I am very sorry to hear that the Rebels are in Pennsylvania" Samuel Shenk, June 25, 1863 |
|
|
530 | (1) |
Gettysburg |
|
530 | (27) |
|
27. "Worrying will do no good" Captain Josiah C. Fuller, July 4, 1863 |
|
|
530 | (3) |
|
28. "Our wickedness...has brought [us] to what we are" Christian M. Epperly, August 15, 1863 |
|
|
533 | (1) |
|
29. "I am...in the midst of death in every form and shape" Abram Bogart, September 9, 1863 |
|
|
534 | (1) |
|
30. "The whites...will not allow their Ind[ian]s to roam in their midst much longer" George Bonga, October 22, 1863 |
|
|
535 | (1) |
|
31. "The condition of the Freed Negroes...is daily becoming worse" James E. Yeatman et al., November 6, 1863 |
|
|
536 | (2) |
|
32. "The recruitment of colored troops has become the settled purpose of the Government" Major General Benjamin F. Butler, December 5, 1863 |
|
|
538 | (3) |
|
33. "You are directed to have a transport...sent to the...colony established...at...San Domingo" Abraham Lincoln, February 1, 1864 |
|
|
541 | (1) |
|
34. "Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude...shall exist" Thirteenth Amendment Resolution, April 8, 1864 |
|
|
541 | (2) |
|
35. "Be prepared for the worst" Lieutenant John McKinley Gibson, April 12, 1864 |
|
|
543 | (1) |
|
36. "White children are to...mix in the same cabin with the Negro with the same Yankee Marm for the teacher!" Tobias Gibson, April 14, 1864 |
|
|
544 | (1) |
|
37. "Sad and awful Execution[s] which [have] taken place" Christian M. Epperly, May 8, 1864 |
|
|
544 | (1) |
|
38. "If the South gains its independence plenty of slaves can be got from Africa" Tobias Gibson, August 3, 1864 |
|
|
545 | (1) |
|
39. "All the senators are more anxious to have Mr. Lincoln live than...ever...before" Mary Y. Prentiss, March 8, 1865 |
|
|
545 | (1) |
|
40. "How shall we End the Rebellion...Coax it, or Crush it?" "The Two Roads to Peace," n.d. |
|
|
546 | (4) |
|
41. "I think a majority of the soldiers are for Lincoln" Andrew Knox, September 10, 1864 |
|
|
550 | (1) |
|
42. "The cry[is]...on to Richmond" A.R. Lord, April 5, 1865 |
|
|
551 | (1) |
|
43. "The Army...has been compelled to yield by overwhelming numbers and resources" Robert E. Lee, April 10, 1865 |
|
|
552 | (1) |
|
44. "The President is murdered" J.B. Stonehouse, April 14, 1865 |
|
|
553 | (1) |
|
45. "The news...came...like a clap of thunder in a clear sky" W. Henry Pearce, April 16, 1865 |
|
|
554 | (1) |
|
46. "It is a very hard blow for this nation to lose our President" Union soldier, April 18, 1865 |
|
|
554 | (1) |
|
47. "Our country is now in a disturbed condition" Edwin H. McCaleb, June 1, 1865 |
|
|
555 | (2) |
TOWARD RECONSTRUCTION |
|
557 | |
|
The Nature and History of the Gilder Lehrman Collection |
|
|
561 | |