To enjoy our rights and liberties we must understand them ; their security and protection ought to be the first object of a free people; and it is a well established fact that no nation has ever continued long in the enjoyment of civil and political freedom,... Journal of the Senate - Page 21by Illinois. General Assembly. Senate - 1836Full view - About this book
| United States. Office of Education - 1948 - 1064 pages
...liberty. The first school law of Illinois stipulated that: To enjoy our rights and liberties, we must understand them; their security and protection ought to be the first object of a free people; . . . The vital relationship of education to freedom was stated by Woodrow Wilson as follows : Freedom... | |
| 1941 - 120 pages
...evil spirits at the dawn of day.—Thomas Jefferson (1816). To enjoy our rights and liberties, we must understand them; their security and protection ought...the enjoyment of civil and political freedom, which has ever continued long in the enjoyment of believing that the advancement of literature always has... | |
| United States. Office of Education - 1942 - 678 pages
...spirits at the dawn of day. — Thomas Jefferson (1816). To enjoy our rights and liberties, we must understand them: their security and protection ought...the enjoyment of civil and political freedom, which has ever continued long in the enjoyment of believing that the advancement of literature always has... | |
| Illinois State Historical Society - 1920 - 322 pages
...this bill as introduced by Mr. Duncan reads as follows : "To enjoy our rights and liberties, we must understand them; their security and protection ought...political freedom, which was not both virtuous and enlightened; and believing that the advancement of literature always has been, and ever will be the... | |
| United States. Office of Education - 1942 - 694 pages
...spirits at the dawn of day. — Thomas Jefferson (1816). To enjoy our rights and liberties, we must understand them; their security and protection ought...the enjoyment of civil and political freedom, which has ever continued long in the enjoyment of believing that the advancement of literature always has... | |
| Donald Hugh Parkerson, Jo Ann Parkerson - 2001 - 300 pages
...Constitution of 1825 is a good example. It stares "To enjoy our liberty and righrs we must understand them ... it is a well established fact that no nation has ever continued long m the enjoyment of civil and political freedom [without] the improvement and cultivation o1 the inrellectual... | |
| United States. Office of Education - 1948 - 1066 pages
...liberty. The first school law of Illinois stipulated that: To enjoy our rights and liberties, we must understand them; their security and protection ought to be the first object of a free people; . . . The vital relationship of education to freedom was stated by Woodrow Wilson as follows : Freedom... | |
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