Lectures on the Growth and Development of the United States: Illustrated, Volume 4Edwin Wiley, Irving Everett Rines, Albert Bushnell Hart American Educational Alliance, 1916 - United States |
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Page 6
... taken . " ― Madison's Works ( Congress ed . ) , vol . i . , p . 381 ; Gay , Life of Madison , p . 116 . together to act on the defensive and had no feasible propositions to ad- vance as a substitute for the Consti- tution now before the ...
... taken . " ― Madison's Works ( Congress ed . ) , vol . i . , p . 381 ; Gay , Life of Madison , p . 116 . together to act on the defensive and had no feasible propositions to ad- vance as a substitute for the Consti- tution now before the ...
Page 10
... taken captive ; children taken out of their schools and carried away . How dreadful was this ! Our distress was so great that we should have been * brought these amendments forward , he said , to quiet the apprehensions glad to snatch ...
... taken captive ; children taken out of their schools and carried away . How dreadful was this ! Our distress was so great that we should have been * brought these amendments forward , he said , to quiet the apprehensions glad to snatch ...
Page 12
... taken on February 6 the friends of adoption carried the Convention by a vote of 187 to 168. In transmitting to Congress * The reader will find these amendments in the Supplement to the Journal of the Federal Convention , pp . 401-404 ...
... taken on February 6 the friends of adoption carried the Convention by a vote of 187 to 168. In transmitting to Congress * The reader will find these amendments in the Supplement to the Journal of the Federal Convention , pp . 401-404 ...
Page 13
... taken no part in the political con- test following the Constitutional Con- " The * Writing to Madison , Randolph said : first raptures in favor of the Constitution were excessive . Every town resounded with applause . The conjectures of ...
... taken no part in the political con- test following the Constitutional Con- " The * Writing to Madison , Randolph said : first raptures in favor of the Constitution were excessive . Every town resounded with applause . The conjectures of ...
Page 17
... taken , is without an example - that it is national in this part , and federal in that part , etc. We may be amused , if we please , by a treatise of political anatomy . In the brain it is national : the stamina are federal- some limbs ...
... taken , is without an example - that it is national in this part , and federal in that part , etc. We may be amused , if we please , by a treatise of political anatomy . In the brain it is national : the stamina are federal- some limbs ...
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1st Congress 1st session 2d Congress 4th Congress Abridgment of Debates adopted Affairs Alexander Hamilton amendments Ameri American State Papers Annals of Congress Anti-Federalists bank Benton bill Boston Britain British cents citizens colonies commerce Constitution Convention debt declared duty Edmund Randolph England established favor Federal Financial History Fisher Ames Ford's Foreign Relations France French Genêt George Washington gress Hamilton House Ibid Indians interest Jay treaty Jefferson's Writings John Adams land legislature letter liberty Lodge Madison Madison's Works Congress manufactures Massachusetts McMaster ment Messages and Papers minister Monroe nation neutral Ohio Ohio Country opinion party passed peace Pennsylvania Philadelphia political ports President principles public credit Randolph ratified Republicans resolutions respect says Schouler Secretary secure Senate sent ships sion South Carolina speech Tariff territory Thomas Jefferson tion trade treaty Union United vessels Virginia vote York