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Page xvii
... slaves , January 1st ; Battle of Chancellorsville , May 2nd and 3rd ; Battle of Gettys- burg , July 1st and 3rd ; fall of Vicksburg , July 6th ; riots at New York , July 13th ; Battle of Chickamauga , Sep- tember 19th and 20th ; Battle ...
... slaves , January 1st ; Battle of Chancellorsville , May 2nd and 3rd ; Battle of Gettys- burg , July 1st and 3rd ; fall of Vicksburg , July 6th ; riots at New York , July 13th ; Battle of Chickamauga , Sep- tember 19th and 20th ; Battle ...
Page 13
... slaves , they seem to have been well off for all bodily comforts , and to have been most carefully watched over by the Incas , that none might be overworked and all well cared for in old age and sickness . As there was no trade , and no ...
... slaves , they seem to have been well off for all bodily comforts , and to have been most carefully watched over by the Incas , that none might be overworked and all well cared for in old age and sickness . As there was no trade , and no ...
Page 16
... slaves . 13. The Red Indians . - The third group contains those with whom the English settlers had to deal , and it is therefore needful that we should have a clear idea of what manner of people they were . In judging of what they were ...
... slaves . 13. The Red Indians . - The third group contains those with whom the English settlers had to deal , and it is therefore needful that we should have a clear idea of what manner of people they were . In judging of what they were ...
Page 30
... slaves , and though it never gave the settlers full liberty to do as they pleased with them , yet in most of the colonies the natives were from the very beginning completely at the mercy of the Spaniards . Ten years after the discovery ...
... slaves , and though it never gave the settlers full liberty to do as they pleased with them , yet in most of the colonies the natives were from the very beginning completely at the mercy of the Spaniards . Ten years after the discovery ...
Page 31
... slavery and oppres- sion . Thus one unprincipled man could do an amount of evil which no wisdom or moderation afterwards could repair . What lay at the root of all this evil was the great rapidity with which the conquest was carried out ...
... slavery and oppres- sion . Thus one unprincipled man could do an amount of evil which no wisdom or moderation afterwards could repair . What lay at the root of all this evil was the great rapidity with which the conquest was carried out ...
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America appointed army Assembly attack attempt battle Boston British called Cambridge Canada captured charter chief Christ's College cloth coast colonists command Commissioners Confederate Congress Connecticut conquest Cortez Council Court Crown 8vo declared defeated dispute Dutch Edition elected ELEMENTARY enemy English English Government Europe Extra fcap favour Fcap federacy Federal fleet followed force formed France freemen French gave Governor granted hundred important independent Indians inhabitants islands King land laws Lord marched Maryland Massachusetts matter ment Mexico Miantonomo miles Moreover nation natives Newhaven North Northern officers Oglethorpe Opechancanough Owens College Parliament party peace Peru Plymouth Plymouth Company President proprietors Puritans Quakers refused Rhode Island river sailed School seemed sent settled settlement settlers ships slavery slaves soon South Carolina Southern Spain Spaniards Spanish Stamp Act surrender territory thousand tion took town trade treaty tribes troops Virginia Virginia Company voyage Washington whole Yamassees York
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Page 232 - DO, in the name and by the authority of the good people of these colonies, solemnly publish and declare, that these united colonies, are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states ; that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown, and that all political connexion between them and the state of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved...
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