Abraham Lincoln and the United StatesMacmillan Company, 1949 - 286 páginas |
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Página 46
... March of the following year , and did not actually take his seat and begin his legislative business until the following December . By that time there was less than a year to go before the next Congressional elections , so that members ...
... March of the following year , and did not actually take his seat and begin his legislative business until the following December . By that time there was less than a year to go before the next Congressional elections , so that members ...
Página 118
... March 1861 stopped at Westfield , Lincoln asked for Grace Bedell . She was brought to the train and Lincoln kissed her . He was no longer the clean- shaven politician familiar to Illinois . Before giving the figures of the result in the ...
... March 1861 stopped at Westfield , Lincoln asked for Grace Bedell . She was brought to the train and Lincoln kissed her . He was no longer the clean- shaven politician familiar to Illinois . Before giving the figures of the result in the ...
Página 234
... March 6 , 1862 , he recommended them to adopt the following joint resolution : " That the United States ought to co - operate with any state which may adopt gradual abolish- ment of slavery , giving to such state pecuniary aid 234 ...
... March 6 , 1862 , he recommended them to adopt the following joint resolution : " That the United States ought to co - operate with any state which may adopt gradual abolish- ment of slavery , giving to such state pecuniary aid 234 ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
A. L. Rowse 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 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