The Politics of Union: Northern Politics During the Civil WarDryden Press, 1974 - 202 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 22
Página 107
... accepted were expiring . The Confederacy , after only one year of war , had instituted a draft and , unlike the Union , was using it to fill out existing regiments , wisely mingl- ing recruits with veterans . The United States had never ...
... accepted were expiring . The Confederacy , after only one year of war , had instituted a draft and , unlike the Union , was using it to fill out existing regiments , wisely mingl- ing recruits with veterans . The United States had never ...
Página 121
... accepted by Democrats who liked to believe their party represented the common man and understood the Southern people . In the Middle West the Democrats enjoyed power with their majorities in the Illinois and Indiana legislatures ; and ...
... accepted by Democrats who liked to believe their party represented the common man and understood the Southern people . In the Middle West the Democrats enjoyed power with their majorities in the Illinois and Indiana legislatures ; and ...
Página 157
... accepted in a letter addressed to that committee . The platform emphasized restoration of the Union through vigorous prosecution of the war without compromise and through a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery throughout the ...
... accepted in a letter addressed to that committee . The platform emphasized restoration of the Union through vigorous prosecution of the war without compromise and through a constitutional amendment abolishing slavery throughout the ...
Contenido
Acknowledgments | 1 |
CHAPTER | 6 |
The Appeal to Arms | 18 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 12 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Politics of Union: Northern Politics During the Civil War James A. Rawley Vista de fragmentos - 1980 |
Términos y frases comunes
abolitionist administration amendment American antislavery army authority bill Blacks cabinet called chairman Civil committee Confederacy Confederate confiscation congressional conscription constitutional Copperhead crisis Davis draft election emancipation Emancipation Proclamation enacted executive factions favored federacy Federal Fernando Wood Fessenden finance Fort Sumter freedom Frémont governor habeas corpus Henry Winter Davis House issue Jefferson Davis July Kentucky leader legal tender legislation legislature lican Lincoln loyal Lyman Trumbull majority Maryland McClellan measures ment military militia million national banks navy Negroes North Northern Ohio opposition passed peace platform political president presidential proclamation radical radical Republicans railroad rebels reconstruction Repub Republican party resolution seceded secession secretary sectional Senate session Seward Seymour slavery soldiers South Southern Stanton Stevens Sumner Supreme Court tariff taxation Thirty-seventh Congress tion troops Unionists United Vallandigham victory Virginia volunteers vote voters War Democrats West writ of habeas York