Mr. Buchanan's Administration on the Eve of the Rebellion

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Digital Scanning Inc, 2000 - 300 páginas

An autobiographical vindication of the policy of the Buchanan administration during the last months of his term, this book is an important source for understanding the political events leading to the secession and the Civil War. Throughout his administration, Buchanan was constantly plagued with the issues of slavery, even though the existence of domestic slavery in the South. This book details the rising conflict within the nation as Southern slave holding states argued with Northern abolitionists and Anti-Slavery societies as to whether or not slavery should continue to flourish in the United States.

Feeling the pressures of the unbearable tension between the North and South, Buchanan tried desperately to compromise, pleading with both sides of the issue. He repeatedly warned his countrymen, at every opportunity, of the imminent danger they were putting the nation in and advised them of the means to avoid the certainty of civil war. Despite these efforts, Congress rejected his recommendations. The result was the escalation of a conflict that led to the secession of the South and one of the bloodiest battles in our nation's history.

 

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Contenido

The rise and progress of AntiSlavery agitation The Higher Law AntiSla
9
CHAPTER II
21
Senator Seward The IrrepressibIe Conflict Helpers Impending Crisis
57
CHAPTER IV
86
CHAPTER V
99
CHAPTER VI
108
CHAPTER VIII
153
CHAPTER IX
162
CHAPTER X
180
CHAPTER XI
209
CHAPTER XII
231
CHAPTER XIII
258
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An autobiographical account of the policy of the Buchanan administration during the last months of his term, this book is an important source for understanding the political events leading to the secession and the Civil War.

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