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Address to the Non-Slaveholders of the South / on the Social and Political Evils of Slavery cover

Address to the Non-Slaveholders of the South / on the Social and Political Evils of Slavery

Chapter 13: Transcriber's Notes:
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About This Book

A forceful appeal directed at non-slaveholding Southern citizens uses census figures and district examples to show that the mass of white Southerners are numerically superior to slaveholders and thus hold the political power to end the system. It argues that slavery concentrates labor and wealth on large plantations, excludes poor whites from ownership, cultivates a landed aristocracy that equates private privilege with public policy, and inflicts social, economic, and moral harm across the region. Statistical analysis and moral reasoning are combined to urge non-slaveholders to recognize their strength and responsibility to reform or abolish the institution.

Transcriber's Notes:

Errors in punctuation and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected unless otherwise noted. The punctuation of the mid-nineteenth century was very different to that of today; with commas, periods, and colons sometimes appearing to be used interchangeably. Such variations in punctuation were kept as-is.

The tables sometimes have ditto marks, whose meaning are somewhat ambiguous. Those ditto marks are kept as-is.

On page 5, a period was placed after "p. 206".

On page 14, "supeperior" was replaced with "superior".

On page 23, a period was added after "not a slaveholder".

On page 29, "and and" was replaced with "and".

On page 35, "provison" was replaced with "provision".

On page 37, a period was replaced with a comma.

On page 43, "tribuual" was replaced with "tribunal".

On page 44, "patriarchial" was replaced with "patriarchal".

On page 55, "recomend" was replaced with "recommend".