Abraham Lincoln and the United StatesEnglish Universities Press, 1955 - 286 páginas |
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Página 23
... called New Salem , then in San- gamon County . Andrew Jackson was now Presi- dent of the United States - the seventh President -and it was in his time and under his strong influence that the Democratic party came to be known by that ...
... called New Salem , then in San- gamon County . Andrew Jackson was now Presi- dent of the United States - the seventh President -and it was in his time and under his strong influence that the Democratic party came to be known by that ...
Página 131
... called for 75,000 volunteers to put down combinations ' too powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings , ' and ' to cause the laws to be duly executed , ' and he called Congress to a special session for ...
... called for 75,000 volunteers to put down combinations ' too powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings , ' and ' to cause the laws to be duly executed , ' and he called Congress to a special session for ...
Página 183
... called together in such circumstances as these . Lincoln accordingly summoned Congress into special session , but he fixed its date of meeting as July 4 -almost three months ahead . Long before this date events had made it necessary for ...
... called together in such circumstances as these . Lincoln accordingly summoned Congress into special session , but he fixed its date of meeting as July 4 -almost three months ahead . Long before this date events had made it necessary for ...
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abolish slavery abolition Abolitionists Abraham Lincoln action admitted adopted amendment appointed April army became bill Cabinet called candidate Civil coln coln's command Commander-in-Chief Confederate Congress Constitution convention crisis debates decision declared defeated Democratic party Dixon line Douglas Dred Scott emancipation executive extension of slavery favour forces Fort Pickens Fort Sumter Freeport Doctrine Frémont frontier gress House of Representatives Illinois Inaugural issue Jefferson Davis John Brown's Body Kansas Kansas-Nebraska Act Kentucky later legislature Louisiana Purchase loyal majority March Mason and Dixon McClellan ment Mexico military Mississippi Missouri Compromise nomination North Northern opposed organised political popular sovereignty President principle proclamation proposed rebel recognised reconstruction Republican party Richmond save the Union seceded secession Secretary Senate Seward side slave slavery South Carolina Southern speech Springfield STEPHEN VINCENT BENET Sumter Tennessee Territory tion United victory Virginia vote Washington Whig wrong