Iowa, the First Free State in the Louisiana Purchase : From Its Discovery to the Admission of the State Into the Union, 1673-1846
Iowa, the First Free State in the Louisiana Purchase : From Its Discovery to the Admission of the State Into the Union, 1673-1846
Salter, William, 1821-1910
The book Iowa, the First Free State in the Louisiana Purchase : From Its Discovery to the Admission of the State Into the Union, 1673-1846 was written by author Salter, William, 1821-1910 Here you can read free online of Iowa, the First Free State in the Louisiana Purchase : From Its Discovery to the Admission of the State Into the Union, 1673-1846 book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Iowa, the First Free State in the Louisiana Purchase : From Its Discovery to the Admission of the State Into the Union, 1673-1846 a good or bad book?
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We have been shamefully de- serted in the House of Representatives. The result will be fatal. The pretended concession is of no value, a mere tab to the whale ; for it is revocable at * Eighteen years later, Mr. Calhoun said in Congress that "[he had entirely changed his opinion.*' — *' Thirty Tears in th« United States Senate." Benton, ii., 136. Digitized by Google I20 Iowa: the First Free State pleasure, and has been provided as an apology to members of the free States who have assisted in pu...t- ting us under a government of the privileged order, henceforth to be our masters. Well, therefore, may we consider ourselves conquered, as is indeed our condition. " One State may be formed on the Mississippi that may be a free State ; the country further west is a prairie resembling the steppes of Tartary, without wood or water except on the great river and its branches. Not only may the exclusion of slavery be repealed, but it is avowed that if the country should be settled, the restriction on the territory will not apply, and is not intended to apply to any new State, but that such State may establish slavery if it shall think proper to do so." * Similar views to those of Rufus King were taken more than thirty years afterwards by Stephen A.
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