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The slave trade

Chapter 26: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The work offers a historical examination of slavery and race in the United States, tracing how colonial statutes, legal decisions, and public opinion evolved into contentious national debates. It follows developments from early laws and importation policies through Constitutional deliberations and the growing sectionalism that shaped political alignments. The narrative analyzes legislative measures, social attitudes toward color, and proposals for managing a large enslaved and free population, arguing that what began as a question of slavery became a broader conflict of color that continued to influence law, policy, and public discourse into the twentieth century.

FOOTNOTES:

[295] Stone, The American Race Problem.

[296] Stanley, In Darkest Africa, Vol. I, p. 384.

[297] Hart, The Southern South, p. 113.

[298] Bulletin XII Fifth Canadian Census, p. 12.

[299] Oliver, Immigration Facts and Figures, p. 9.

[300] London Times, April 3, 1911.

[301] Ibid.

[302] Bureau Census U. S. 1910 Bul. 129 p. 15.

[303] News and Courier, August 22, 1913.

[304] Hoffman, Race Traits and Tendencies, p. 3.

[305] Bryce, American Commonwealth Vol. II, Rev. Ed. p. 513.

[306] Bryce, American Commonwealth, Vol. II, pp. 515-537-552.

[307] Hart, Southern South, p. 113.

[308] London Times, June 27, 1913.

[309] Johnston, The Negro in the New World, p. VIII.

[310] Ibid. p. IX.

[311] Ibid. p. X.

[312] Ibid. p. 380.

[313] Ibid. p. 363.

[314] Ibid. p. 368.

[315] McCrady, S. C. Under Royal Govt. p. 185.

[316] Phillips, American Negro Slavery, p. 469.

[317] Ibid. p. 470.

[318] Johnston, The Negro in the New World, p. 413.

[319] Ibid. p. 415.

[320] Ibid. p. 413.

[321] Ibid. p. X.

[322] Ibid. p. 476.

[323] Ibid. p. 477.