| United States - 1856 - 654 pages
...population within Uie limits of that county. Such is the rapid, natural increase of toe slaves, and tbe rapid exhaustion of the soil in the cultivation of those crops, (which odd so much to the commercial wealth of the country.) that in a few years it would be impossible to... | |
| United States. Congress - Law - 1857 - 486 pages
...southern States, in which the great staples of cotton and sugar are cultivated to any extent, and connue the present slave population within the limits of...increase of the slaves, and the rapid exhaustion of the Hoiliu the cultivation of those crops, (which add so much to the commercial wealth of the country.)... | |
| John Elliott Cairnes - Slavery - 1862 - 344 pages
...fully recognized by the upholders as by the opponents of slavery. " There is not a slaveholder," says Judge Warner of Georgia, " in this house or out of...add so much to the commercial wealth of the country )T that in a few years it would be impossible to support them within the limits of such county. Both... | |
| Hermann Von Holst - Constitutional history - 1885 - 510 pages
...cultivated to any extent, and confine the present slave population within the limits of thatcounty. Such is the rapid, natural increase of the slaves,...exhaustion of the soil in the cultivation of those crops . . . that in a few years it would be impossible to support them within the limits of such county.... | |
| Hermann Von Holst - Constitutional history - 1885 - 510 pages
...take any single slaveholdiug county in the southern states, in which the great .staples of cotton a:id sugar are cultivated to any extent, and confine the...exhaustion of •the soil in the cultivation of those crops '. . that in a few years it would be impossible to support them within the limits of such •county.... | |
| |