Between 1830 and 1842, the United States coastwise slave trade raised several issues and provoked numerous debates in Congress. The purpose of this study is to determine the role of the coastwise slave trade and its effect upon attitudes toward slavery in Congress during this period. The primary sources used include official government documents, unpublished and published papers, correspondence, diaries, speeches, and memoirs. This study concludes that the issues raised by the coastwise slave trade crisis and debated in Congress between 1830 and 1842 contributed to the decline of southern dominance in national politics and provided abolitionists with a vital motivation of antislavery agitation in the United States Congress
(Statement of Responsibility) by Alexis Girard d'Albissin(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of ...
Slavery is believed to have left an imprint on the American democracy. Although no regulations trea...
The transatlantic slave trade started in the 17th century and lasted for more than two hundred years...
The international policing of the Atlantic slave trade transformed U.S. ideas and attitudes about in...
tions, 1.81 ̂ 4—18621 has anyone undertaken a study of the role and significance of the Slave Trade ...
This project traces American slaveholding attitudes toward international affairs from British emanci...
This dissertation examines and reconstructs the lives of fugitive slaves who used the maritime indus...
This dissertation examines and reconstructs the lives of fugitive slaves who used the maritime indus...
This dissertation analyzes how United States naval officers’ beliefs about race and slavery shaped s...
This article explores the relationship between the law of maritime labor and the law of slavery. In ...
In 1807, the British Empire ended its legal involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. The relati...
Between 1822 and 1857, eight Southern states barred the ingress of all free black maritime workers. ...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The purpose of this study was...
This thesis has three main objectives in examining the Slave Trade Question, an aspect of British-Am...
Between 1808 and 1820, the U.S. Congress enacted increasingly punitive laws against slave trading. T...
(Statement of Responsibility) by Alexis Girard d'Albissin(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of ...
Slavery is believed to have left an imprint on the American democracy. Although no regulations trea...
The transatlantic slave trade started in the 17th century and lasted for more than two hundred years...
The international policing of the Atlantic slave trade transformed U.S. ideas and attitudes about in...
tions, 1.81 ̂ 4—18621 has anyone undertaken a study of the role and significance of the Slave Trade ...
This project traces American slaveholding attitudes toward international affairs from British emanci...
This dissertation examines and reconstructs the lives of fugitive slaves who used the maritime indus...
This dissertation examines and reconstructs the lives of fugitive slaves who used the maritime indus...
This dissertation analyzes how United States naval officers’ beliefs about race and slavery shaped s...
This article explores the relationship between the law of maritime labor and the law of slavery. In ...
In 1807, the British Empire ended its legal involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. The relati...
Between 1822 and 1857, eight Southern states barred the ingress of all free black maritime workers. ...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The purpose of this study was...
This thesis has three main objectives in examining the Slave Trade Question, an aspect of British-Am...
Between 1808 and 1820, the U.S. Congress enacted increasingly punitive laws against slave trading. T...
(Statement of Responsibility) by Alexis Girard d'Albissin(Thesis) Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of ...
Slavery is believed to have left an imprint on the American democracy. Although no regulations trea...
The transatlantic slave trade started in the 17th century and lasted for more than two hundred years...