| Thomas Jefferson - United States - 1820 - 486 pages
...never permitted him to clear off his debt. These debts had become hereditary from father to son, for many generations, so that the planters were a species...property, annexed to certain mercantile houses in London. 5. The members of Congress are differently paid by different States. Some are on fixed allowances,... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - 1829 - 984 pages
...never permitted him to clear off his debt. These debts had become hereditary from father to son, for many generations, so that the planters were a species...property, annexed to certain mercantile houses in London. 5. The members of Congress are differently paid by different States. Some are on fixed allowances,... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - 1829 - 990 pages
...never permitted him to clear off his debt. These debts had become hereditary from father to son, for many generations, so that the planters were a species...property, annexed to certain mercantile houses in London. 5. The members of Congress are differently paid by different States. Some are on fixed allowances,... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - Constitutional history - 1829 - 486 pages
...never permitted him to clear off his debt. These debts had become hereditary from father to son, for many generations, so that the planters were a species...property, annexed to certain mercantile houses in London. 5. The members of Congress are differently paid by different States. Some are on fixed allowances,... | |
| Richard Hildreth - United States - 1851 - 716 pages
...making the advance. " These debts," says Jefferson, " had become hereditary from father to son for many generations, so that the planters were a species...property annexed to certain mercantile houses in London." The idea of being again subjected to this thraldom, or, at least, compelled to square up the old accounts,... | |
| Richard Hildreth - United States - 1852 - 718 pages
...making the advance. " These debts," says Jefferson, " had become hereditary from father to son for many generations, so that the planters were a species...property annexed to certain mercantile houses in London." The idea of being again subjected to this thraldom, or, at least, compelled to square up the old accounts,... | |
| Timothy Shay Arthur, William Henry Carpenter - Virginia - 1852 - 374 pages
...amounting in the aggregate to ten millions of dollars, "had become hereditary from father to son for many generations, so that the planters were a species of property annexed to certain mercantile houses m London." Beggared as they already were from losses sustained during the war, and from the expenses... | |
| Timothy Shay Arthur, William Henry Carpenter - Virginia - 1853 - 354 pages
...amounting in the aggregate to ten millions of dollars, "had become hereditary from father to son for many generations, so that the planters were a species...property annexed to certain mercantile houses in London/' Beggared as they already were from losses sustained during the war, and from the expenses of a contest... | |
| Thomas Jefferson - United States - 1854 - 608 pages
...never permitted him to clear off his debt. These debts had become hereditary from father to son, for many generations, so that the planters were a species...property, annexed to certain mercantile houses in London. 5. The members of Congress are differently paid by different Stales. Some are on fixed allowances,... | |
| Seventy Six Society - United States - 1857 - 236 pages
...sources, but the whole continent. This added to her Kentucky policy and her want of exertion in affording assistance to South Carolina, will place her in a...disagreeable point of view with respect to the other states. America is full of resources if properly called forth. If we fail in the present contest it will not... | |
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