A Basic History of the Old South |
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Page 46
... Declaration of Independence . Steps leading to the Declaration of Independence were shared by Southern commonwealths . On April 12 , 1776 , the North Carolina assembly voted to instruct its delegates in Con- gress to concur with other ...
... Declaration of Independence . Steps leading to the Declaration of Independence were shared by Southern commonwealths . On April 12 , 1776 , the North Carolina assembly voted to instruct its delegates in Con- gress to concur with other ...
Page 117
... Declaration of Independ- ence ; and many of the concepts embodied in the first ten amendments to the Constitution — the nation's Bill of Rights - were earlier written into the Virginia document . 1 イ A declaration of rights made by the ...
... Declaration of Independ- ence ; and many of the concepts embodied in the first ten amendments to the Constitution — the nation's Bill of Rights - were earlier written into the Virginia document . 1 イ A declaration of rights made by the ...
Page 166
... declare the extent of the obligation , and that such declaration is binding on them . . . . . . I shall next proceed to consider the effects of such declarations in reference to the General Government ; -a question which necessarily ...
... declare the extent of the obligation , and that such declaration is binding on them . . . . . . I shall next proceed to consider the effects of such declarations in reference to the General Government ; -a question which necessarily ...
Contents
PART IA BASIC HISTORY OF THE OLD SOUTH | 7 |
Chesapeake Country | 15 |
CarolinaGeorgia Low Country | 23 |
Copyright | |
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agricultural Alabama American ante-bellum period antislavery Assembly Atlantic Back Country became Bluegrass region Burgesses Calhoun Captaine Carolinians century Charleston Chesapeake Country Civil colonial commonwealth Congress Constitution convention corn cotton court crop culture decade Declaration delegates Democratic Document economic eighteenth England English exported fall line farmers field Free Soil party French frontier Georgia Georgia Platform ginia governor hogs House of Burgesses important Indian inhabitants Jefferson John Kentucky land legislature lived Louisiana manufactured Maryland ment Mississippi Missouri negroes North Northern nullification Old Dominion Old South Orleans Overseer party Piedmont plantation planters platform political population presidency production Proprietor region Revolution Rice Coast River secession sectional slave labor slave trade slaveholding slavery social soil South Carolina staple tariff Tennessee territory tion tobacco Union valley Virginia War Hawks West Western Whigs