A New American HistoryFarrar & Rinehart, Incorporated, 1936 - Всего страниц: 900 A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES FROM COLONIAL DAYS TO F.D.R. VERY FEW REFERENCES TO NATIVE AMERICANS. |
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Стр. 283
... slavery was losing ground as an American institution . For years many Southerners of foresight were aboli- tionists before the people of the North had hardly begun to think of the slavery question . Both Washington and Jefferson were ...
... slavery was losing ground as an American institution . For years many Southerners of foresight were aboli- tionists before the people of the North had hardly begun to think of the slavery question . Both Washington and Jefferson were ...
Стр. 455
... slaves were common - law prop- erty ; and , as such , Congress had no authority under the Con- stitution to interfere with slaveownership , or to prohibit slavery in the territories ; nor did any state possess the constitutional right ...
... slaves were common - law prop- erty ; and , as such , Congress had no authority under the Con- stitution to interfere with slaveownership , or to prohibit slavery in the territories ; nor did any state possess the constitutional right ...
Стр. 505
... slavery issue , although it denied that either Congress or the territorial legislatures could give legal existence to slavery in the territories . Nothing was said about the abolition of slavery in states where it already existed . Let ...
... slavery issue , although it denied that either Congress or the territorial legislatures could give legal existence to slavery in the territories . Nothing was said about the abolition of slavery in states where it already existed . Let ...
Содержание
CHAPTER PAGE | 3 |
TWO JAMESTOWN AND VIRGINIA | 27 |
THREE PILGRIMS AND PURITANS | 41 |
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Adams administration affairs Ameri American Andrew Jackson army bank became bill Boston British brought called campaign capital carpetbaggers carried cent citizens Civil colonies Confederate Congress Constitution convention Coolidge cotton court debt declared Democrats Dred Scott economic election England English farmers federal Federalists fight France Frémont French German gold governor Grant Hamilton hand hundred indentured servants Indians industry Jackson Jefferson John knew labor land Lincoln lived lords proprietors Massachusetts ment merchants military million dollars Missouri Compromise nation negroes never newspapers North Northern officers party person Philadelphia political president profit Puritans railroad Republican Roosevelt secession secretary Senate sent ships slavery slaves social sold soldiers South Carolina Southern Spanish tariff Tennessee territory thought thousand tion trade Treasury treaty troops Union Union army United vessels Virginia vote wanted Washington Whigs White House wrote York