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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 18: the irrepressible Conflict.—1858. (search)
taked everything on Kansas and had lost. In both sections of the country there was a growing sense of the political revolution in progress, a growing conviction that the Republicans would at the next election take control of the Government. Governor Moore of Alabama, in his inaugural address to the Andrew B. Moore. Legislature in December, 1857, denounced the Black Republican scheme to stop the extension of slavery—confining it within the limits of the States where it now exists, so as ultimaAndrew B. Moore. Legislature in December, 1857, denounced the Black Republican scheme to stop the extension of slavery—confining it within the limits of the States where it now exists, so as ultimately to render slaves valueless to their owners, and thus effect their emancipation. Lib. 28.1. The Legislature unanimously responded by asking him to call a State Lib. 28.15. Convention if Congress refused to admit Kansas under the Lecompton Constitution. At the so-called Southern Commercial Convention held at Montgomery, Ala., on Lib. 28.87; Hodgson's Cradle of the Confederacy, p. 371. May 10, 1858, to discuss the African slave-trade and the relations of the South to the Union, Roger A. P