THE ANTI-SLAVERY CRUSADE,


A CHRONICLE OF THE GATHERING STORM



By Jesse Macy



New Haven: Yale University Press

Toronto: Glasgow, Brook & Co.

London: Humphrey Milford Oxford University Press

1919






Contents

CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER II. THE GEOGRAPHY OF THE CRUSADE
CHAPTER III. EARLY CRUSADERS
CHAPTER IV. THE TURNING-POINT
CHAPTER V. THE VINDICATION OF LIBERTY
CHAPTER VI. THE SLAVERY ISSUE IN POLITICS
CHAPTER VII. THE PASSING OF THE WHIG PARTY
CHAPTER VIII. THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
CHAPTER IX. BOOKS AS ANTI-SLAVERY WEAPONS
CHAPTER X. "BLEEDING KANSAS"
CHAPTER XI. CHARLES SUMNER
CHAPTER XII. KANSAS AND BUCHANAN
CHAPTER XIII. THE SUPREME COURT IN POLITICS
CHAPTER XIV. JOHN BROWN
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL.   






THE ANTI-SLAVERY CRUSADE





CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION

The Emancipation Proclamation of President Lincoln marks the beginning of the end of a long chapter in human history. Among the earliest forms of private property was the ownership of slaves. Slavery as an institution had persisted throughout the ages, always under protest, always provoking opposition, insurrection, social and civil war, and ever bearing within itself the seeds of its own destruction. Among the historic powers of the world the United States was the last to uphold slavery, and when, a few years after Lincoln's proclamation, Brazil emancipated her slaves, property in man as a legally recognized institution came to an end in all civilized countries.

Emancipation in the United States marked the conclusion of a century of continuous debate, in which the entire history of western civilization was traversed. The literature of American slavery is, indeed, a summary o

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