Virginias Attitude Toward Slavery And Secession

Cover Virginias Attitude Toward Slavery And Secession
Virginias Attitude Toward Slavery And Secession
Beverley B Beverley Bland Munford
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A Note : The author has not cited any examples of the terms employed by the leaders of the Abolitionists in referring to the Southern people. If Webster were denounced as a "monster" and Lincoln as a "slave-hound" because, in their devotion to the Union and their respect for law, they would protect the con- stitutional rights of slaveholders, the reader may readily imagine 222 ABOLITIONISTS APPLAUDED JOHN BROWN But the Abolitionists did not confine tlieir efforts to denunciations of the constit...ution and its defenders, or in devising schemes for the overthrow of the Union. They actually secured the enactment by many Northern Legis- latures of so-called Personal Liberty Laws, designed to nullify the Fugitive Slave Law passed by Congress. In like manner many of them were the apologists, if not the instigators, of servile insurrections, of which John Brown's venture was at once the fell offspring, and the dread sign of more to follow, William Lloyd Garrison declared that Brown deserved "to be held in grateful and honorable remembrance, to the latest posterity, by all those who glory in the deeds of a Wallace or a Tell, a Washington or a Warren.

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