Meet General GrantGarden Publishing Company, 1931 - 524 pages |
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Page 66
... Northern farms , and so slavery gradually disappeared , but there was no emphatic feeling against it in the great mass of Northern people . The opposition to slavery was kept alive by small groups of intelligentsia , or reformers , who ...
... Northern farms , and so slavery gradually disappeared , but there was no emphatic feeling against it in the great mass of Northern people . The opposition to slavery was kept alive by small groups of intelligentsia , or reformers , who ...
Page 173
... Northern people to fight about . They wanted to get rid of slavery . Well , they had got rid of it . The Confederate States had no intention of invading Northern ... Northern affairs . Then , what motive was there to induce Northern men.
... Northern people to fight about . They wanted to get rid of slavery . Well , they had got rid of it . The Confederate States had no intention of invading Northern ... Northern affairs . Then , what motive was there to induce Northern men.
Page 174
... Northern working man's reason for going into the war . Not at all - there was no brotherhood idea in it . Northern la- borers detested the negro ; they would not work with him when he came to the North ; they kept him out of all the ...
... Northern working man's reason for going into the war . Not at all - there was no brotherhood idea in it . Northern la- borers detested the negro ; they would not work with him when he came to the North ; they kept him out of all the ...
Contents
MEN AND HORSES | 11 |
OBSESSIONS AND FANTASIES | 25 |
THE UNWILLING SOLDIER | 38 |
Copyright | |
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abolitionists American appeared Badeau bank battle became began bonds Bonnie Blue Flag cadet campaign Captain Carolina cent Civil Colonel command Confederacy Confederate Congress cotton declared Democrats Dent Donelson Federal fight Fort Donelson Frémont friends Galena Garrison gold Grant & Ward gunboats Halleck hand headquarters Horace Porter horses hundred idea Jefferson Davis Jesse Grant Johnson Julia knew land Lee's letter Lincoln lived looked McClellan McClernand Memoirs ment Mexican Mexico miles military Mississippi Missouri Missouri Compromise negro never newspaper North Northern officers paper person political President railroad Rawlins regiment Republican Richmond river says secession Senate sent Sherman side slave slavery soldiers South South Carolina Southern steamers stood Tennessee Texas things thought thousand dollars tion took troops turned Ulysses Union army Vicksburg vote wanted Ward Washington West Point wrote York young