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Teaching American History
1492
Discovery and Settlement
1650
Colonial America
1763
The Revolution & Confederation
1783
The Founding
1789
Early Republic
1825
Expansion and Sectionalism
1860
Civil War and Reconstruction
1870
Industrialization and Urbanization
1890
Progressivism and World War 1
1929
The Great Depression and the New Deal
1941
World War II
1945
Cold War America
1992
Contemporary America
Expansion and Sectionalism
Excerpts from Ratification Documents of Virginia a...
June 26, 1788
Ratifying Conventions>New York Ratifying Convention
House Approves Seventeen Amendments
August 24, 1789
The Congress Sends Twelve Amendments to the States
September 25, 1789
Annual Message to Congress (1801): The Barbary Sta...
December 08, 1801
Thomas Jefferson
The Judiciary
Marbury v. Madison
February 24, 1803
John Marshall
Inaugural Address (1805)
March 04, 1805
Thomas Jefferson
Senator Timothy Pickering to President Thomas Jeff...
February 24, 1806
Timothy Pickering
On Opening a School for Poor Children
1806
Isabella Graham
Voter Qualification Law
November 16, 1807
New Jersey State Legislature
Speech of Tenskwatawa
1807
Tenskwatawa
The Embargo Act
April 19, 1808
Thomas Jefferson
A Modest Proposal
October 11, 1808
James Monroe
President James Madison to Secretary of State Robe...
July 17, 1810
James Madison
Address to the Osage
1811
Tecumseh
War Message
June 01, 1812
James Madison
Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Cooper
September 14, 1814
Thomas Jefferson
Resolutions Adopted by the Hartford Convention
January 04, 1815
Hartford Convention
Letter from Thomas Jefferson to William Torrance (...
June 11, 1815
Thomas Jefferson
Annual Message to Congress (1817)
December 02, 1817
James Monroe
Petitions of Cherokee Women
1831
Annual Message to Congress (1818)
November 16, 1818
James Monroe
Mr. Tallmadge in the Congressional Globe
February 15, 1819
Anti-slavery
Speech to Congress
February 15, 1819
James Tallmadge Jr.
Anti-slavery
Speech to Congress
February 15, 1819
James Tallmadge Jr.
The Judiciary
McCulloch v. Maryland
March 06, 1819
John Marshall
My Call to Preach the Gospel
1819
Jarena Lee
Missouri Compromise Act
March 06, 1820
Henry Clay
Letter from Thomas Jefferson to John Holmes (1820)
April 22, 1820
Thomas Jefferson
An Address…Celebrating the Declaration of Independ...
July 04, 1821
John Quincy Adams
An Address. . .Celebrating the Declaration of Inde...
July 4, 1821
John Quincy Adams
Speech to the U.S. House of Representatives
John Quincy Adams
Annual Message to Congress (1823): The Monroe Doct...
December 2, 1823
James Monroe
Native Americans
Letter from John Ross to John C. Calhoun (1824)
February 11, 1824
John Ross
Inaugural Address (1825)
March 04, 1825
John Quincy Adams
Selected Dispatches
March, 1829
Joel Poinsett
Annual Message to Congress (1825)
December 06, 1825
John Quincy Adams
An Address to the Whites
May 26, 1826
Elias Boudinot
Thomas Jefferson to Roger Chew Weightman
June 24, 1826
Thomas Jefferson
Southern Runaway Slave Notices and Our Peculiar Do...
1840
Anonymous
Annual Message to Congress (1828)
December 02, 1828
John Quincy Adams
Rough Draft of What is Called the South Carolina E...
December 19, 1828
John C. Calhoun
Chapter 11: The Nullification Crisis
1832
Commentaries on American Law
1828
James Kent
Inaugural Address (1829)
March 04, 1829
Andrew Jackson
Address to the Colonization Society
July 04, 1829
William Lloyd Garrison
Annual Message to Congress (1829)
December 08, 1829
Andrew Jackson
CIRCULAR: Addressed to Benevolent Ladies of the Un...
December 31, 1829
Catharine Beecher
Remarks in Congress on the "Tariff of Abominations...
January 25, 1830
Robert Y. Hayne
The Webster-Hayne Debates
January, 1830
Daniel Webster
Presidential Portraits
On the Nullifying Doctrine
April 03, 1830
James Madison
Indian Removal
May 17, 1838
Native Americans
Address to the People of the United States, by the...
July, 1830
John Ross
Letter from James Madison to Edward Everett
August 28, 1830
James Madison
Annual Message to Congress (1830)
December 6, 1830
Andrew Jackson
Letter from William Lloyd Garrison to the Public (...
January 01, 1831
William Lloyd Garrison
Truisms
January 08, 1831
William Lloyd Garrison
Editorial Regarding Walker’s Appeal
January 08, 1831
William Lloyd Garrison
Fort Hill Address
July 26, 1831
John C. Calhoun
Religion and the Pure Principles of Morality: The...
October, 1831
Maria W. Miller Stewart
Annual Message to Congress (1831)
December 06, 1831
Andrew Jackson
The Indians: The Ten Lost Tribes
1831
William Apess
Force Bill of 1832
March 02, 1832
Worcester v. Georgia
March 23, 1832
John Marshall
Veto Message of the Bill on the Bank of the United...
July 10, 1832
Andrew Jackson
Speech on President Jackson’s Veto of the Bank Bil...
July 10, 1832
Henry Clay
The Judiciary
Veto of the Bank Bill
July 10, 1832
Andrew Jackson
Veto of the Bank Bill
July 10, 1832
Andrew Jackson
Veto Message Regarding the Bank of the United Stat...
July 10, 1832
Andrew Jackson
The Judiciary
Speech on the Presidential Veto of the Bank Bill
July 11, 1832
Daniel Webster
Lecture Delivered at Franklin Hall
September 21, 1832
Maria W. Miller Stewart
Lecture Delivered at Franklin Hall
September 21, 1832
Maria W. Miller Stewart
South Carolina’s Ordinance of Nullification
November 24, 1832
South Carolina Ordinance of Nullification
November 24, 1832
South Carolina Convention on the Subject of Nullification
Annual Message to Congress (1832)
December 04, 1832
Andrew Jackson
Proclamation Regarding Nullification
December 10, 1832
Andrew Jackson
Proclamation Regarding the Nullifying Laws of Sout...
December 10, 1832
Andrew Jackson
On the Constitution and the Union
December 29, 1832
William Lloyd Garrison
On the Constitution and the Union
December 29, 1832
William Lloyd Garrison
Epitaph for the Constitution
1832
Anonymous
Lyrics to Jackson and the Nullifiers
1832
Anonymous
Correspondence Between Anthony Butler and Presiden...
October 30, 1833
Andrew Jackson
Inaugural Address (1833)
March 04, 1833
Andrew Jackson
Annual Message to Congress (1833)
December 03, 1833
Andrew Jackson
American Anti-Slavery Society, Declaration of Sent...
December 06, 1833
William Lloyd Garrison
Speeches on the Removal Power
March 07, 1834
Henry Clay
Constitution of the American Anti-Slavery Society
December, 1833
William Lloyd Garrison
Commentaries on the Constitution of the United Sta...
1833
Joseph Story
Message to the Senate Protesting the Censure Resol...
April 15, 1834
Andrew Jackson
Message of Protest to the Senate
April 15, 1834
Andrew Jackson
Annual Message to Congress (1834)
December 01, 1834
Andrew Jackson
Speech on the Appointing and Removing Power
February 18, 1835
Henry Clay
Annual Message to Congress (1835)
December 07, 1835
Andrew Jackson
Letter from William Lloyd Garrison to Thomas Shipl...
December 17, 1835
William Lloyd Garrison
What a Revival of Religion Is
1835
Charles Finney
A Plea for the West
December 31, 1835
Lyman Beecher
The Nature, Importance, and Means of Eminent Holin...
December 31, 1835
Edward Beecher
Report on the Necessity of Jewish Education
1835
Rebecca Gratz
The Nature, Importance, and Means of Eminent Holin...
1835
Edward Beecher
Letters and Journals from the Oregon Trail
June 27, 1836
Narcissa Whitman
Constitution
September 26, 1836
Lowell Factory Girls Association
Annual Message to Congress (1836)
December 05, 1836
Andrew Jackson
Appeal to Christian Women of the South
1836
Angelina Grimké
Slavery a Positive Good
February 06, 1837
John C. Calhoun
Speech on Abolition Petitions
February 06, 1837
John C. Calhoun
Speech on Abolition Petitions
February 06, 1837
John C. Calhoun
Protest in Illinois Legislature on Slavery
March 03, 1837
Abraham Lincoln
Farewell Address (1837)
March 04, 1837
Andrew Jackson
Inaugural Address (1837)
March 04, 1837
Martin Van Buren
Annual Message to Congress (1837)
December 05, 1837
Martin Van Buren
Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condi...
1837
Sarah Grimke
The Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions: Ad...
January 27, 1838
Abraham Lincoln
The Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions Add...
January 27, 1838
Abraham Lincoln
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Mrs. Orville Browni...
April 01, 1838
Abraham Lincoln
The Right of the People, Men and Women, to Petitio...
June 16, 1838
John Quincy Adams
Declaration of Sentiments Adopted by the Peace Con...
September 28, 1838
William Lloyd Garrison
Annual Message to Congress (1838)
December 03, 1838
Martin Van Buren
The Great Nation of Futurity
November, 1839
John L. O’Sullivan
Annual Message to Congress (1839)
December 02, 1839
Martin Van Buren
Annual Message to Congress (1840)
December 05, 1840
Martin Van Buren
Disquisition on Government
1840
John C. Calhoun
The Laboring Classes
1840
Orestes Bronson
Poster Advertising Sale of a “Valuable Gang of You...
1840
Balloting for President
1848
Anonymous
Inaugural Address (1841)
March 4, 1841
William Henry Harrison
Speech on Assuming Office of the President
April 09, 1841
John Tyler
Song of the Spinners from the Lowell Offering
April, 1841
Anonymous
Hon. Francis O. J. Smith to Secretary of State Dan...
June 7, 1841
Francis O.J. Smith
Debate on the National Bank Filibuster
June 30, 1841
United States Congress
Annual Message to Congress (1841)
December 07, 1841
John Tyler
The Temperance Address
February 22, 1842
Abraham Lincoln
The Temperance Address
February 22, 1842
Abraham Lincoln
The Temperance Address
February 22, 1842
Abraham Lincoln
Annual Message to Congress (1842)
December 06, 1842
Special Message to Congress (Tyler Doctrine)
December 30, 1842
John Tyler
Record of the Organization and Proceedings of The...
1843
Address to the Slaves of the United States
June 02, 1843
William Lloyd Garrison
Native Americans
Address at Inter-Tribal Council at Tahlequah
June 19, 1843
John Ross
Annual Message to Congress (1843)
December, 1843
John Tyler
Letter From Henry Clay to the Editors of the Natio...
April 17, 1844
Henry Clay
Letter from John C. Calhoun to Richard Pakenham (1...
April 18, 1844
John C. Calhoun
Annual Message to Congress (1844)
December 03, 1844
Cary v. Curtis
January 1, 1845
John McLean
The American Union
January 10, 1845
William Lloyd Garrison
Inaugural Address (1845)
March 04, 1845
James K. Polk
The Westward Course of destiny
Annexation
July 30, 1845
John L. O’Sullivan
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Williamson Durley (...
October 03, 1845
Abraham Lincoln
The Ten Hour System
February, 1846
Sarah G. Bagley
Annual Message to Congress (1845)
December 02, 1845
James K. Polk
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An Am...
1845
Frederick Douglass
Massachusetts Lawmakers Investigate Working Condit...
1845
State (Colonial) Legislatures>Massachusetts State Legislature
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An Am...
1845
Frederick Douglass
Special Message to the House of Representatives
April 20, 1846
James K. Polk
Special Message to Congress on Mexican Relations
May 11, 1846
James K. Polk
Chapter 13: War with Mexico
Debate on the Constitutionality of the Mexican War
May 12, 1846
United States Congress
Special Message to Congress on Mexican Relations
May 11, 1846
James K. Polk
Veto Message on Rivers and Harbors Bill
August 03, 1846
James K. Polk
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to the Illinois Gazett...
August 11, 1846
Abraham Lincoln
Wilmot Proviso
August 12, 1846
David Wilmot
Annual Message to Congress (1846)
December 08, 1846
James K. Polk
Speech on the Mexican War
December 16, 1846
Andrew Kennedy
Letter from William Lloyd Garrison to Webb (1847):...
July 01, 1847
William Lloyd Garrison
American Slavery
October 22, 1847
Frederick Douglass
Market Speech
November 13, 1847
Henry Clay
Annual Message to Congress (1847)
December 07, 1847
James K. Polk
Spot Resolutions in the U.S. House of Representati...
December 22, 1847
Abraham Lincoln
Speech on the Mexican-American War
1847
Henry Clay
Great Speech of Clay
1847
John L Magee
Cause, Character and Consequences of the War with...
1847
Thomas N. Lord
Speech on the War with Mexico
January 12, 1848
Abraham Lincoln
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
February 02, 1848
Speech on the Oregon Bill
June 27, 1848
John C. Calhoun
Speech on the Oregon Bill
June 27, 1848
John C. Calhoun
What Are the Colored People Doing for Themselves?
July 14, 1848
Frederick Douglass
Address Delivered at Seneca Falls
July 19, 1848
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Declaration of Sentiments
July 19, 1848
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Seneca Falls Resolutions
July 20, 1848
Women's Rights Convention
An Address to the Colored People of the United Sta...
September 29, 1848
Frederick Douglass
Annual Message to Congress (1848)
December 5, 1848
James K. Polk
Conquest of Mexico
1848
John C. Calhoun
The Address of Southern Delegates in Congress to t...
February 09, 1849
Frederick Douglass
Inaugural Address (1849)
March 05, 1849
Zachary Taylor
Prejudice Not Natural: “The American Colonization...
June 08, 1849
Frederick Douglass
Uses and Abuses of the Bible
November 04, 1849
Lucretia Mott
Annual Message to Congress (1849)
December 04, 1849
Zachary Taylor
Civil Disobedience
1849
Henry David Thoreau
Compromise of 1850
January 29, 1850
Henry Clay
The Constitution and the Union
March 07, 1850
Daniel Webster
A General Review of the debate on the Compromise B...
July 22, 1850
Henry Clay
Fugitive Slave Act 1850
September 18, 1850
Annual Message to Congress (1850)
December 02, 1850
Millard Fillmore
Speech on Preserving the Union
1850
Henry Clay
Religious Experience
1850
Sojourner Truth
Number of Slaves in the Territory Enumerated, 1790...
US Census Bureau
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to John Johnston (1851...
January 12, 1851
Abraham Lincoln
Change of Opinion Announced
May 23, 1851
Frederick Douglass
Ain't I a Woman?
May, 1851
Sojourner Truth
Remarks at the Women's Rights Convention
June 21, 1851
Sojourner Truth
African Colonization--By a Man of Color
July 03, 1851
Augustus Washington
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to John D. Johnston (1...
November 4, 1851
Abraham Lincoln
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to John Johnston (1851...
November 9, 1851
Abraham Lincoln
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to John Johnston (1851...
November 25, 1851
Abraham Lincoln
Annual Message to Congress (1851)
December 02, 1851
Millard Fillmore
Documents and Debates vol. 1
Time Table for Lowell Mills
1851
Anonymous
What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?
July 05, 1852
Frederick Douglass
What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?
July 05, 1852
Frederick Douglass
What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?
July 5, 1852
Frederick Douglass
Eulogy of Henry Clay
July 06, 1852
Abraham Lincoln
Eulogy on Henry Clay
July 16, 1852
Abraham Lincoln
Baconianism and the Bible
August 11, 1852
Benjamin Morgan Palmer
Annual Message to Congress (1852)
December 06, 1852
Millard Fillmore
Emigration of the Colored People of the United Sta...
1852
Martin R. Delany
National Disfranchisement of Colored People
December 31, 1852
Martin R. Delany
Means of Elevation
1852
Martin R. Delany
A Glance at Ourselves — Conclusion
1852
Martin R. Delany
Things As They Are
1852
Martin R. Delany
Our Elevation in the United States
1852
Martin R. Delany
The Seven Stages of the Office Seeker
1852
Edward Williams Clay
Inaugural Address (1853)
March 04, 1853
Franklin Pierce
Letter from Frederick Douglass to Harriet Beecher...
March 08, 1853
Frederick Douglass
The Destiny of America, Speech at the Dedication o...
September 14, 1853
William Seward
Annual Message to Congress (1853)
December 05, 1853
Franklin Pierce
Appeal of the Independent Democrats in Congress to...
January 19, 1854
Nebraska Territory
January 30, 1854
Stephen A. Douglas
Address to the Legislature of New York
February 15, 1854
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Speech on the Kansas-Nebraska Act and Racial Hiera...
February 24, 1854
R.M.T. Hunter
Fragments on Slavery
April 01, 1854
Abraham Lincoln
Kansas-Nebraska Act
May 30, 1854
Fragment on Government
July 1, 1854
Abraham Lincoln
Speech on the Repeal of the Missouri Compromise (P...
October 16, 1854
Abraham Lincoln
Speech on the Repeal of the Missouri Compromise (P...
October 16, 1854
Abraham Lincoln
Speech on the Repeal of the Missouri Compromise (P...
October 16, 1854
Abraham Lincoln
Speech on the Repeal of the Missouri Compromise
October 16, 1854
Abraham Lincoln
The Ostend Manifesto
October 18, 1854
James Buchanan
Kansas: To Those that Desire that Kansas Should be...
November 22, 1854
Annual Message to Congress (1854)
December 04, 1854
Franklin Pierce
An Act to Organize the Territories of Nebraska and...
1854
Garrison’s Defense of His Positions
1854
William Lloyd Garrison
Sociology for the South, or The Failure of Free So...
1854
George Fitzhugh
Autobiography
1854
Martin Van Buren
Marriage Protest
May 02, 1855
Henry Blackwell
Disunion
June 15, 1855
William Lloyd Garrison
The Doom of the Black Power
July 27, 1855
Frederick Douglass
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Owen Lovejoy (1855)
August 11, 1855
Abraham Lincoln
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to George Robertson (1...
August 15, 1855
Abraham Lincoln
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Joshua F. Speed (18...
August 24, 1855
Abraham Lincoln
The Last Flogging
1855
Annual Message to Congress (1855)
December 31, 1855
Franklin Pierce
Democratic Party Platforms of 1856 and 1860
June 18, 1860
San Francisco
Proclamation
June 09, 1856
San Francisco Vigilance Committee
Annual Message to Congress (1856)
December 02, 1856
Franklin Pierce
Speech at a Republican Banquet
December 10, 1856
Abraham Lincoln
Cannibals All!
1856
George Fitzhugh
Inaugural Address (1857)
March 04, 1857
James Buchanan
Dred Scott v. Sandford
March 06, 1857
Roger Taney
Dred Scott v. Sandford
March 06, 1857
Dred Scott v. Sandford
March 06, 1857
Benjamin R. Curtis
Dred Scott v. Sandford
March 6, 1857
Benjamin R. Curtis
Race and Civil Rights
Speech on the Dred Scott Decision
May 14, 1857
Frederick Douglass
Teachers find that Abraham Lincoln's writing clearly explains American political principles.
Reply to the Dred Scott Decision
June 26, 1857
Abraham Lincoln
Reply to the Dred Scott Decision
June 26, 1857
Abraham Lincoln
Speech on the Dred Scott Decision
June 26, 1857
Abraham Lincoln
Annual Message to Congress (1857)
December 08, 1857
James Buchanan
Teachers find that Abraham Lincoln's writing clearly explains American political principles.
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Lyman Trumbull (185...
December 28, 1857
Abraham Lincoln
Free & Slave-holding States and Territories
1857
A. K. Johnston
Cotton is King
March 04, 1858
James Henry Hammond
Mud Sill Speech
March 04, 1858
James Henry Hammond
Mud Sill Speech
March 04, 1858
James Henry Hammond
Dred Scott and Disunion
March 12, 1858
William Lloyd Garrison
First Lecture on Discoveries and Inventions
April 06, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
House Divided Speech
June 16, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
House Divided Speech
June 16, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
House Divided Speech
June 16, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
Homecoming Speech at Chicago
July 09, 1858
Stephen A. Douglas
Speech at Chicago, Illinois
July 10, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
Speech at Chicago, Illinois
July 10, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
Speech in Reply to Douglas at Springfield, Illinoi...
July 17, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Judiciary
Speech at Springfield, Illinois
July 17, 1858
Stephen A. Douglas
Fragment on Slavery
August 1, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 1st Debate
August 21, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 2nd Debate
August 27, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 3rd Debate Part I
September 15, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 3rd Debate Part II
September 15, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 4th Debate
September 18, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 5th Debate
October 07, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 6th Debate Part I
October 13, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 6th Debate Part II
October 13, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 7th Debate Part I
October 15, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to J. N. Brown (1858)
October 18, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
An Irrepressible Conflict
October 25, 1858
William Seward
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
October, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
Fragment on Slavery
December 1, 1858
Abraham Lincoln
Annual Message to Congress (1858)
December 06, 1858
James Buchanan
Consistent Democracy
1858
Amasa Walker
Fragment on Slavery and Democracy
1858
Abraham Lincoln
Veto Message Regarding Land Grant Colleges
February 24, 1859
James Buchanan
African Civilization Society
February, 1859
Frederick Douglass
Constitutional Convention
Joint Resolution Relative to the Decision of the U...
March 19, 1859
Wisconsin Legislature
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Henry L. Pierce, &a...
April 06, 1859
Abraham Lincoln
Fragment on Free Labor
September 17, 1859
Abraham Lincoln
Address to the Wisconsin State Agricultural Societ...
September 30, 1859
Abraham Lincoln
The Dividing Line Between Federal and Local Author...
September, 1859
Stephen A. Douglas
Teachers find that Abraham Lincoln's writing clearly explains American political principles.
Address before the Wisconsin State Agricultural So...
September 30, 1859
Abraham Lincoln
Address before the Wisconsin State Agricultural So...
September 30, 1859
Abraham Lincoln
"The Whole Affair Seems the Work of a Madman"
October 19, 1859
Horace Greeley
Correspondence
October, 1859
Henry Wise
John Brown Not Insane
November, 1859
Frederick Douglass
John Brown and the Principle of Nonresistance
December 16, 1859
William Lloyd Garrison
Annual Message to Congress (1859)
December 19, 1859
James Buchanan
Letter from Abraham Lincoln to Jesse W. Fell (1859...
December 20, 1859
Abraham Lincoln
Address at Cooper Union
February 27, 1860
Abraham Lincoln
Republican Party Platform (1860)
May 17, 1860
Republican Party Platform (1860)
May 17, 1860
Democratic Party Platform 1860 (Douglas Faction)
June 18, 1860
(Northern) Democratic Party Platform Committee
Democratic Party Platform 1860 (Breckinridge Facti...
November 06, 1860
(Southern) Democratic Party Platform Committee
Annual Message to Congress (1860)
December 03, 1860
James Buchanan
Southern Desperation
December 16, 1860
William Lloyd Garrison
South Carolina’s Declaration of the Causes of Sece...
December 24, 1860
Distribution of the Slave Population by State
1860
Political Chart: Presidential Campaign
1860
The Fugitive’s Song
1860
The Revelation on Celestial Marriage: Trouble Amon...
1875
Ann Eliza Young
Recollections of the War
1885
Ulysses S. Grant
Mormonism and Jesuitism
October 14, 1890
F.W. Gunsaulus
The Significance of the Frontier in American Histo...
December 31, 1893
Frederick Jackson Turner
The Folly of Colonization
January 09, 1894
Frederick Douglass
The Judiciary
Reply to Jackson’s Veto Message
July 11, 1932
Daniel Webster
Teaching American History

Slavery a Positive Good

by John C. Calhoun
  • February 06, 1837
Image: John. C. Calhoun. Wikimedia Commons. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:JCCalhoun.jpg

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I do not belong, said Mr. C., to the school which holds that aggression is to be met by concession. Mine is the opposite creed, which teaches that encroachments must be met at the beginning, and that those who act on the opposite principle are prepared to become slaves. In this case, in particular I hold concession or compromise to be fatal. If we concede an inch, concession would follow concession–compromise would follow compromise, until our ranks would be so broken that effectual resistance would be impossible. We must meet the enemy on the frontier, with a fixed determination of maintaining our position at every hazard. Consent to receive these insulting petitions, and the next demand will be that they be referred to a committee in order that they may be deliberated and acted upon. At the last session we were modestly asked to receive them, simply to lay them on the table, without any view to ulterior action. . . . I then said, that the next step would be to refer the petition to a committee, and I already see indications that such is now the intention. If we yield, that will be followed by another, and we will thus proceed, step by step, to the final consummation of the object of these petitions. We are now told that the most effectual mode of arresting the progress of abolition is, to reason it down; and with this view it is urged that the petitions ought to be referred to a committee. That is the very ground which was taken at the last session in the other House, but instead of arresting its progress it has since advanced more rapidly than ever. The most unquestionable right may be rendered doubtful, if once admitted to be a subject of controversy, and that would be the case in the present instance. The subject is beyond the jurisdiction of Congress – they have no right to touch it in any shape or form, or to make it the subject of deliberation or discussion. . . .

As widely as this incendiary spirit has spread, it has not yet infected this body, or the great mass of the intelligent and business portion of the North; but unless it be speedily stopped, it will spread and work upwards till it brings the two great sections of the Union into deadly conflict. This is not a new impression with me. Several years since, in a discussion with one of the Senators from Massachusetts (Mr. Webster), before this fell spirit had showed itself, I then predicted that the doctrine of the proclamation and the Force Bill–that this Government had a right, in the last resort, to determine the extent of its own powers, and enforce its decision at the point of the bayonet, which was so warmly maintained by that Senator, would at no distant day arouse the dormant spirit of abolitionism. I told him that the doctrine was tantamount to the assumption of unlimited power on the part of the Government, and that such would be the impression on the public mind in a large portion of the Union. The consequence would be inevitable. A large portion of the Northern States believed slavery to be a sin, and would consider it as an obligation of conscience to abolish it if they should feel themselves in any degree responsible for its continuance, and that this doctrine would necessarily lead to the belief of such responsibility. I then predicted that it would commence as it has with this fanatical portion of society, and that they would begin their operations on the ignorant, the weak, the young, and the thoughtless –and gradually extend upwards till they would become strong enough to obtain political control, when he and others holding the highest stations in society, would, however reluctant, be compelled to yield to their doctrines, or be driven into obscurity. But four years have since elapsed, and all this is already in a course of regular fulfilment.

Standing at the point of time at which we have now arrived, it will not be more difficult to trace the course of future events now than it was then. They who imagine that the spirit now abroad in the North, will die away of itself without a shock or convulsion, have formed a very inadequate conception of its real character; it will continue to rise and spread, unless prompt and efficient measures to stay its progress be adopted. Already it has taken possession of the pulpit, of the schools, and, to a considerable extent, of the press; those great instruments by which the mind of the rising generation will be formed.

However sound the great body of the non-slaveholding States are at present, in the course of a few years they will be succeeded by those who will have been taught to hate the people and institutions of nearly one-half of this Union, with a hatred more deadly than one hostile nation ever entertained towards another. It is easy to see the end. By the necessary course of events, if left to themselves, we must become, finally, two people. It is impossible under the deadly hatred which must spring up between the two great nations, if the present causes are permitted to operate unchecked, that we should continue under the same political system. The conflicting elements would burst the Union asunder, powerful as are the links which hold it together. Abolition and the Union cannot coexist. As the friend of the Union I openly proclaim it–and the sooner it is known the better. The former may now be controlled, but in a short time it will be beyond the power of man to arrest the course of events. We of the South will not, cannot, surrender our institutions. To maintain the existing relations between the two races, inhabiting that section of the Union, is indispensable to the peace and happiness of both. It cannot be subverted without drenching the country in blood, and extirpating one or the other of the races. Be it good or bad, [slavery] has grown up with our society and institutions, and is so interwoven with them that to destroy it would be to destroy us as a people. But let me not be understood as admitting, even by implication, that the existing relations between the two races in the slaveholding States is an evil:–far otherwise; I hold it to be a good, as it has thus far proved itself to be to both, and will continue to prove so if not disturbed by the fell spirit of abolition. I appeal to facts. Never before has the black race of Central Africa, from the dawn of history to the present day, attained a condition so civilized and so improved, not only physically, but morally and intellectually.

In the meantime, the white or European race, has not degenerated. It has kept pace with its brethren in other sections of the Union where slavery does not exist. It is odious to make comparison; but I appeal to all sides whether the South is not equal in virtue, intelligence, patriotism, courage, disinterestedness, and all the high qualities which adorn our nature.

But I take higher ground. I hold that in the present state of civilization, where two races of different origin, and distinguished by color, and other physical differences, as well as intellectual, are brought together, the relation now existing in the slaveholding States between the two, is, instead of an evil, a good–a positive good. I feel myself called upon to speak freely upon the subject where the honor and interests of those I represent are involved. I hold then, that there never has yet existed a wealthy and civilized society in which one portion of the community did not, in point of fact, live on the labor of the other. Broad and general as is this assertion, it is fully borne out by history. This is not the proper occasion, but, if it were, it would not be difficult to trace the various devices by which the wealth of all civilized communities has been so unequally divided, and to show by what means so small a share has been allotted to those by whose labor it was produced, and so large a share given to the non-producing classes. The devices are almost innumerable, from the brute force and gross superstition of ancient times, to the subtle and artful fiscal contrivances of modern. I might well challenge a comparison between them and the more direct, simple, and patriarchal mode by which the labor of the African race is, among us, commanded by the European. I may say with truth, that in few countries so much is left to the share of the laborer, and so little exacted from him, or where there is more kind attention paid to him in sickness or infirmities of age. Compare his condition with the tenants of the poor houses in the more civilized portions of Europe–look at the sick, and the old and infirm slave, on one hand, in the midst of his family and friends, under the kind superintending care of his master and mistress, and compare it with the forlorn and wretched condition of the pauper in the poorhouse. But I will not dwell on this aspect of the question; I turn to the political; and here I fearlessly assert that the existing relation between the two races in the South, against which these blind fanatics are waging war, forms the most solid and durable foundation on which to rear free and stable political institutions. It is useless to disguise the fact. There is and always has been in an advanced stage of wealth and civilization, a conflict between labor and capital. The condition of society in the South exempts us from the disorders and dangers resulting from this conflict; and which explains why it is that the political condition of the slaveholding States has been so much more stable and quiet than that of the North. . . . Surrounded as the slaveholding States are with such imminent perils, I rejoice to think that our means of defense are ample, if we shall prove to have the intelligence and spirit to see and apply them before it is too late. All we want is concert, to lay aside all party differences and unite with zeal and energy in repelling approaching dangers. Let there be concert of action, and we shall find ample means of security without resorting to secession or disunion. I speak with full knowledge and a thorough examination of the subject, and for one see my way clearly. . . . I dare not hope that anything I can say will arouse the South to a due sense of danger; I fear it is beyond the power of mortal voice to awaken it in time from the fatal security into which it has fallen.

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