Abraham Lincoln and the United StatesMacmillan Company, 1949 - 286 páginas |
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Página 180
... gress - that is to both Houses , the House of Representatives and the Senate . Further , Con- gress , not the President , is given power ' to raise and support armies , ' ' to provide and maintain a navy , ' ' to make rules for the ...
... gress - that is to both Houses , the House of Representatives and the Senate . Further , Con- gress , not the President , is given power ' to raise and support armies , ' ' to provide and maintain a navy , ' ' to make rules for the ...
Página 190
... gress to abolish slavery in the states . ' Yet he claimed and exercised himself as Commander- in - Chief a power to emancipate slaves in certain areas . • The story of emancipation is told in a later chapter . ' What must be stressed ...
... gress to abolish slavery in the states . ' Yet he claimed and exercised himself as Commander- in - Chief a power to emancipate slaves in certain areas . • The story of emancipation is told in a later chapter . ' What must be stressed ...
Página 264
... gress . To this Davis replied that by rebellion the states were no longer states of the Union ; they were outside the pale of the Constitution . Con- gress might legislate for them as it saw fit . So effective was Davis's advocacy of ...
... gress . To this Davis replied that by rebellion the states were no longer states of the Union ; they were outside the pale of the Constitution . Con- gress might legislate for them as it saw fit . So effective was Davis's advocacy of ...
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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