Kansas: The Prelude to the War for the UnionHoughton, Mifflin, 1885 - 334 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... speeches about it . To put the matter beyond recall ; to breathe against the great disturber " The hopeless word of - -never to return , " forty - four members of the thirty - first Congress , including many leading politicians of the ...
... speeches about it . To put the matter beyond recall ; to breathe against the great disturber " The hopeless word of - -never to return , " forty - four members of the thirty - first Congress , including many leading politicians of the ...
Page 4
... intellect and power of will still unbroken , listened to the reading of his last speech , thickly sown with anx- ieties and ill - boding ; as when Daniel Webster on - the 7th of March rallied all the splendid forces 4 KANSAS .
... intellect and power of will still unbroken , listened to the reading of his last speech , thickly sown with anx- ieties and ill - boding ; as when Daniel Webster on - the 7th of March rallied all the splendid forces 4 KANSAS .
Page 5
... speech March 3d , 1854 , " the committee of thirteen took these two bills and put a wafer between them and reported them back to the Senate as one bill , with some slight amendments . One of these amendments was that the territorial ...
... speech March 3d , 1854 , " the committee of thirteen took these two bills and put a wafer between them and reported them back to the Senate as one bill , with some slight amendments . One of these amendments was that the territorial ...
Page 20
... speeches , pipe - smokings , distributions of presents , peace- dances , and general assurances of profound and mutual regard . It is singular that the finale of this much - protesting intercourse should have been a tragedy of utter ...
... speeches , pipe - smokings , distributions of presents , peace- dances , and general assurances of profound and mutual regard . It is singular that the finale of this much - protesting intercourse should have been a tragedy of utter ...
Page 24
... in " Letters for the People on the Present Crisis , " writing at St. Louis , September 7 , 1853. " In speeches he has been making in various portions of the State · he is reported as taking the ground . . . DRIVING DOWN STAKES ·
... in " Letters for the People on the Present Crisis , " writing at St. Louis , September 7 , 1853. " In speeches he has been making in various portions of the State · he is reported as taking the ground . . . DRIVING DOWN STAKES ·
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Common terms and phrases
34th Congress abolitionism abolitionists affairs American anti-slavery appeared armed arrest Atchison authorities began bill biography border Boston cabin called camp Captain Carney citizens Colonel Cooke Colonel Sumner command committee Congress constitution convention Creek delegates Democratic Douglas Douglas County dred Dutch Henry's Crossing election Emigrant Aid Company ernor expedition federal fight force Fort Scott free-state Governor Geary Governor Robinson Governor Shannon hostility hundred Indian interest jayhawking John Brown Kansas Lane Lane's Lawrence leaders Leavenworth Lecompton Lecompton constitution marauding March marshal ment miles military Minneola Missouri Missouri Compromise Missourians murder Nebraska organization Osawatomie political polls popular sovereignty Pottawatomie massacre prairie pro-slavery party reached rence returned ritory ruffians rumors Senate sent sentiment session Sharpe's rifles slave slavery souri South Southern speech Squatter territorial legislature thousand tion took Topeka Topeka constitution town troops ture Union vote Wakarusa Wakarusa war Walker Washington York
Popular passages
Page 222 - The right of property is before and higher than any constitutional sanction ; and the right of> the owner of a slave to such slave and its increase is the same and as inviolable as the right of the owner of any property whatever.
Page 138 - Tis time New hopes should animate the world, new light Should dawn from new revealings to a race Weighed down so long, forgotten so long...
Page 154 - ... about six o'clock next morning, when we prepared to attack them at once, on foot, leaving Frederick and one of Captain Shore's men to guard the horses. As I was much older than Captain Shore, the principal direction of the fight devolved on me. We got to within about a mile of their camp before being discovered by their scouts, and then moved at a brisk pace, Captain Shore and men forming our left, and my company the right. When within about sixty rods of the enemy. Captain Shore's men halted...
Page 6 - A few weeks afterward the committee of thirteen took those two bills and put a wafer between them, and reported them back to the Senate as one bill, with some slight amendments. One of these amendments was, that the Territorial Legislatures should not legislate upon the subject of African slavery. I objected to that provision...