Speech of Honorable Lewis Davis Campbell of Ohio on Southern Aggression - The Purposes of the Union - And the Comparative Effects of Slavery and Freedom, February 19, 1850 at the House of Representatives in Washington D.C..Ohio Representative Lewis Campbell argues that Southern, not Northern Aggression, is the root of political disunity. Campbell argues the founders meant to limit the spread of slavery by using the 1774 Articles of Association and choice quotes from Jefferson denouncing slavery as immoral. Finally, Campbell compares the South and North according to economic and educational standards and argues the damaging effect Slavery has on the South
In the last half of the nineteenth century we find a proposition in the Congress of the Republic to ...
Clay, Henry. "Speech of the Hon. Henry Clay of Kentucky: On Taking Up His Compromise Resolutions on ...
This article explores the arguments used by southern secessionists to explain why they left the Unio...
Full title: Slavery question. Speech of Hon. Edward Wade, of Ohio, in the House of Representatives, ...
The speech addresses the question, how can the union be preserved? He goes on to explain the threat...
Slavery is believed to have left an imprint on the American democracy. Although no regulations trea...
Caption title.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-pamphlets/1631/thumbnail.jp
The American conflict over slavery reached a turning point in the early 1840s when three leading abo...
Full title: Freedom in Kansas. Speech of William H. Seward in the Senate of the United States, March...
The most significant issue in antebellum American politics was the question of slavery. Although a s...
Antebellum politicians knew that words mattered. In 1856 Louisianan Judah P. Benjamin complained in ...
Speech by Charles Sumner before the Senate, June 4, 1860 on the admittance of Kansas as a free state
Full title: The barbarism of slavery: speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, on the bill for the admission o...
At head of title: Tribune tracts, no. 2; Originally published under title: Territorial slave code.ht...
From 1787 until the Civil War, slavery was probably the single most important economic institution i...
In the last half of the nineteenth century we find a proposition in the Congress of the Republic to ...
Clay, Henry. "Speech of the Hon. Henry Clay of Kentucky: On Taking Up His Compromise Resolutions on ...
This article explores the arguments used by southern secessionists to explain why they left the Unio...
Full title: Slavery question. Speech of Hon. Edward Wade, of Ohio, in the House of Representatives, ...
The speech addresses the question, how can the union be preserved? He goes on to explain the threat...
Slavery is believed to have left an imprint on the American democracy. Although no regulations trea...
Caption title.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/fvw-pamphlets/1631/thumbnail.jp
The American conflict over slavery reached a turning point in the early 1840s when three leading abo...
Full title: Freedom in Kansas. Speech of William H. Seward in the Senate of the United States, March...
The most significant issue in antebellum American politics was the question of slavery. Although a s...
Antebellum politicians knew that words mattered. In 1856 Louisianan Judah P. Benjamin complained in ...
Speech by Charles Sumner before the Senate, June 4, 1860 on the admittance of Kansas as a free state
Full title: The barbarism of slavery: speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, on the bill for the admission o...
At head of title: Tribune tracts, no. 2; Originally published under title: Territorial slave code.ht...
From 1787 until the Civil War, slavery was probably the single most important economic institution i...
In the last half of the nineteenth century we find a proposition in the Congress of the Republic to ...
Clay, Henry. "Speech of the Hon. Henry Clay of Kentucky: On Taking Up His Compromise Resolutions on ...
This article explores the arguments used by southern secessionists to explain why they left the Unio...