Freedom's delay : America's struggle for emancipation, 1776-1865 /

The Declaration of Independence proclaimed freedom for Americans from the domination of Great Britain, yet for millions of African Americas caught up in a brutal system of racially based slavery, freedom would be denied for ninety additional years until the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment t...

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Kaituhi matua: Carden, Allen
Hōputu: Licensed eBooks
Reo:Ingarihi
I whakaputaina: Knoxville : The University of Tennessee Press, [2014]
Putanga:First edition.
Urunga tuihono:https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1083153
Rārangi ihirangi:
  • Machine generated contents note: 1. Slavery and Revolution: Truths Not So Self-Evident
  • 2. Slavery and the Constitution: Freedom Compromised
  • 3. Stumbling Forward: Emancipation Proceeds in New England and Pennsylvania
  • 4. Forward to the Past: The South's "Cavalier Kingdom"
  • 5. Arithmetic of Emancipation: From the Purchase of Louisiana to the Compromise over Missouri
  • 6. Sunset of Northern Slavery: Freedom without Equality
  • 7. Wolf by the Ear: Slave Resistance, White Reaction, and the Growing Abolitionist Movement
  • 8. Freedom's Faith: Slavery Sectionalizes the Sacred
  • 9. Slavery and Manifest Division: The Mexican Cession, Free Soilers, and the Compromise of 1850
  • 10. Rushing toward Disunion: Slavery and the Factious 1850s
  • 11. Presidential Politics and the War for Slavery: The Southern Decision to Secede
  • 12. Thenceforward, and Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
  • 13. Slavery's Death Throes: Emancipation during the Civil War
  • 14. Union Victory and the Thirteenth Amendment: Free at Last?