Bibliographic Information

A necessary evil? : slavery and the debate over the Constitution

edited by John P. Kaminski

(Constitutional heritage series, v. 2)

Madison House, 1995

1st ed

  • : pbk

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

"Published for the Center for the Study of the American Constitution."--T.p.

Includes bibliographical references (p. [279]-282) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780945612162

Description

From abolitionists like Benjamin Rush and John Jay to slaveholders like Washington and Jefferson, slavery presented the creators of the American republic with a profound dilemma. Throughout the period, a growing reform movement stimulated Northern states to emancipate their slaves gradually and prohibit the importation of new ones, but simultaneously entrenched Southern slaveholders and politicians became more dogmatic and defensive as racism triumphed in America. This collection of primary sources, including the complete record of slavery and the Constitiution's ratification, describes the transformation of white America's attitudes toward slavery and freedom from the idealistic beginnings of the Revolution to the harsh realities of postwar depression and nation-building.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Laying Slavery's Foundations Chapter 3 The Constitutional Convention and Slavery Chapter 4 New England Debates Slavery and the Constitution Chapter 5 The Middle States Debate Slavery and the Constitution Chapter 6 The South Debates Slavery and the Constitution Chapter 7 Slavery and the New Nation Chapter 8 Slavery and the Founders: Three Perspectives Chapter 9 Bibliography Chapter 10 Index
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780945612339

Description

From abolitionists like Benjamin Rush and John Jay to slaveholders like Washington and Jefferson, slavery presented the creators of the American republic with a profound dilemma. Throughout the period, a growing reform movement stimulated Northern states to emancipate their slaves gradually and prohibit the importation of new ones, but simultaneously entrenched Southern slaveholders and politicians became more dogmatic and defensive as racism triumphed in America. This collection of primary sources, including the complete record of slavery and the Constitiution's ratification, describes the transformation of white America's attitudes toward slavery and freedom from the idealistic beginnings of the Revolution to the harsh realities of postwar depression and nation-building.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Laying Slavery's Foundations Chapter 3 The Constitutional Convention and Slavery Chapter 4 New England Debates Slavery and the Constitution Chapter 5 The Middle States Debate Slavery and the Constitution Chapter 6 The South Debates Slavery and the Constitution Chapter 7 Slavery and the New Nation Chapter 8 Slavery and the Founders: Three Perspectives Chapter 9 Bibliography Chapter 10 Index

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