fbpx
Wikipedia

Slavery as a positive good in the United States

Slavery as a positive good in the United States was the prevailing view of Southern politicians and intellectuals just before the American Civil War, as opposed to seeing it as a crime against humanity or a necessary evil. They defended the legal enslavement of people for their labor as a benevolent, paternalistic institution with social and economic benefits, an important bulwark of civilization, and a divine institution similar or superior to the free labor in the North.[1]: 58, 480 [2]

"Five Orphan Children for sale...inquire at Slave Depot" (New Orleans Crescent, 1859)
American statesman John C. Calhoun was one of the most prominent advocates of the "slavery as a positive good" viewpoint.

This stance arose in response to the growing anti-slavery movement in the United States in the late 18th century and early 19th century. Various forms of slavery had been practiced across the world for all of human history, but during the American Revolution, slavery became a significant social issue in North America.[3] At this time, the anti-slavery contention that it was both economically inefficient and socially detrimental to the country as a whole was more prevalent than philosophical and moral arguments against slavery.[4] However this perspective rapidly changed as the worldwide demand for sugar and cotton from America increased and the Louisiana Purchase opened up vast new territories ideally suited for a plantation economy.[5]

By the early 19th century, anti-slavery arguments began to depart from claims that it was economically inefficient and towards the contention that slavery was inherently immoral. In response, pro-slavery advocates fought against the abolitionists with their own morality-based defense, which invariably stressed their view that slaves were both well treated and happy, and included illustrations which were designed to prove their points.[6][page needed] A writer in 1835 asserted that American slavery is the best slavery there ever was:

[W]e...deny that slavery is sinful or inexpedient. We deny that it is wrong in the abstract. We assert that it is the natural condition of man; that there ever has been, and there ever will be slavery; and we not only claim for ourselves the right to determine for ourselves the relations between master and slave, but we insist that the slavery of the Southern States is the best regulation of slavery, whether we take into consideration the interests of the master or of the slave, that has ever been devised.[7]

The "positive good" defense of slavery edit

Characterizing American perceptions of slavery at the turn of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in the 1998 documentary series Africans in America: America's Journey Through Slavery, the historian Douglas R. Egerton said:

The planter class in the Age of Revolution never believed for a moment the blacks were happy in their condition and wouldn't try for freedom, the way that white planters in the 1830s and '40s tried to convince themselves that their slaves loved their situation. Americans who lived through the American Revolution understood that this was a violent world and that slaves were held in place only by white military power.[8]

A narrative that enslaved Africans lived in a carefree, comfortable state dates back to the late eighteenth century.[9] This argument mostly focused on the economic feasibility of enslaving people for their labor despite the inherent subjugation and degradation of human beings. The enslaved people of the time were members of what historian Ira Berlin called the revolutionary generations [de] and in his pivotal 1998 work Many Thousands Gone he described the transition in popular sentiments about the Africans and their descendants among ethnically European settlers of North America as,

If in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries transplanted Europeans denounced Atlantic creoles as audacious rogues and if in the eighteenth century the nascent planter class condemned the newly arrived Africans for their "gross bestiality and rudeness of their manners", nineteenth-century white Americans redefined blackness by endowing it with a new hard edge and confining people of African descent to a place of permanent inferiority.[10]

But by the 1810s a new rationale arose that began to treat legalized enslavement as a "positive good" and not as an economically "necessary evil", while still affirming its alleged economic benefits. It appears that this new premise was first expressed by Robert Walsh in 1819:

The physical condition of the American Negro is on the whole, not comparatively alone, but positively good, and he is exempt from those racking anxieties—the exacerbates of despair, to which the English manufacturer and peasant are subject to in the pursuit of their pittance.[9]

Such justification about the "goodness" of enslavement for those who were enslaved became more common in the 1820s. By the late 1820s, the defense of institutional slavery saw it as mutually beneficial for state governments, enslavers, and enslaved people alike. Legal enslavement drifted from being seen as an economic system of private enslavers to a political and philosophical position that portrayed enslavement as possessing national importance, providing benefits to the states, including more tax revenue.

A well-known example of this new pro-enslavement approach was voiced by Governor Stephen D. Miller in his 1829 speech to South Carolina's legislators:

Slavery is not a national evil; on the contrary, it is a national benefit. The agricultural wealth of the country is found in those states owning slaves, and a great portion of the revenue of the government is derived from the products of slave labor—Slavery exists in some form everywhere, and it is not of much consequence in a philosophical point of view, whether it be voluntary or involuntary. In a political point of view, involuntary slavery had the advantage, since all who enjoy political liberty are then, in fact, free.[9]

Not long after Governor Miller's speech, the general defense of involuntary servitude drifted towards a position where a "proper social order and foundation of social welfare played a major role" in the pro-enslavement debate.[11]: 135 

Another economic defense of slave labor came from economist Thomas Roderick Dew, professor at and then president of the College of William and Mary, who downplayed the evil of owning humans after the Virginia House of Burgesses almost passed legislation for the emancipation of enslaved people in 1832.[12] Dew supported enslavement on philosophical, economic and Biblical grounds, arguing that chattel slavery was not necessarily an immoral system.[1]: 476–477  In portraying Southern enslavement-based society as "superior" to Northern free society, Dew's pro-slavery argument turned into a "positive good" defense.[13]

James Henry Hammond and the mudsill theory edit

 
James Henry Hammond

On February 1, 1836, Congressman James Henry Hammond from South Carolina spoke on the House floor for two hours about the perceived menace of abolitionism. He launched an attack on pro-human rights proponents in the North, while defending the social and economic benefits to whites of enslavement in the South. Hammond's speech on enslavement was considered a new departure in the American Congress, distinguished as the "first explicit defense of slavery as a positive good".[14]: 176, 246 

In that 1836 speech, Hammond attempted to justify the practice:

Slavery is said to be an evil.... But it is no evil. On the contrary, I believe it to be the greatest of all the great blessings which a kind Providence has bestowed upon our glorious region.... As a class, I say it boldly; there is not a happier, more contented race upon the face of the earth. I have been born and brought up in the midst of them, and so far as my knowledge and experience extend, I should say they have every reason to be happy. Lightly tasked, well clothed, well fed—far better than the free laborers of any country in the world ...—their lives and persons protected by the law, all their sufferings alleviated by the kindest and most interested care....

Sir, I do firmly believe that domestic slavery regulated as ours is produces the highest toned, the purest, best organization of society that has ever existed on the face of the earth.[15]

A Democrat, Hammond was elected Governor of South Carolina in 1842. He was best known during his lifetime as an outspoken defender of the South and the institution of slavery.[14]: 134 

After traveling through Europe, Hammond concluded that free laborers were being exploited by soulless materialism in England and the North, where workers had the "liberty only to starve", while Southerners were far more protective, assuming "responsibility for every aspect of the lives" of their slaves.[14]: 280–281 

Hammond co-authored The Pro-Slavery Argument with William Harper, Thomas Roderick Dew, and William Gilmore Simms, who composed part of the "sacred circle" of proslavery intellectuals.[16]

In his famous Mudsill Speech (1858), Hammond articulated the pro-slavery political argument during the period at which the ideology was at its most mature (late 1830s – early 1860s).[17] Along with John C. Calhoun, Hammond believed that the bane of many past societies was the existence of the class of the landless poor. This class of landless poor was viewed as being inherently transient and easily manipulated, and as such often destabilized society as a whole. Thus, the greatest threat to democracy was seen as coming from class warfare that destabilized a nation's economy, society, government, and threatened the peaceful and harmonious implementation of laws.

This theory supposes that there must be, and supposedly always has been, a lower class for the upper classes to rest upon: the metaphor of a mudsill theory being that the lowest threshold (mudsill) supports the foundation for a building. The theory was used by Hammond to justify what he saw as the willingness of the non-whites to perform menial work which enabled the higher classes to move civilization forward. With this in mind, any efforts for class or racial equality that ran counter to the theory would inevitably run counter to civilization itself.

Southern pro-slavery theorists asserted that slavery eliminated this problem by elevating all free people to the status of "citizen", and removing the landless poor (the "mudsill") from the political process entirely by means of enslavement. Thus, those who would most threaten economic stability and political harmony were not allowed to undermine a democratic society, because they were not allowed to participate in it. So, in the mindset of those in favour of it, slavery was for protecting the common good of slaves, masters, and society as a whole.[17]

These and other arguments[which?] supported the propertied elite against what were perceived as threats from the abolitionists, lower classes, and non-whites to gain higher standards of living. The economic self-interest of slaveholders certainly played a role, as slaves represented a massive amount of wealth – some historians[who?] estimate that at the time of the Civil War, over 20% of private wealth in the US was slaves.[18] Page number needed

John C. Calhoun and "positive good" slavery edit

The best-known political figure to defend black slavery as a "positive good", was John C. Calhoun, a political theorist and the seventh Vice President of the United States. Calhoun was a leader of the Democratic-Republican Party in the early nineteenth century[19] who, in the Second Party System, initially joined the proslavery Nullifier Party but left by 1839. Though having refused to attend the inauguration of Democratic president Martin Van Buren two years before,[20] Calhoun voted with the Democratic Party for the remainder of his career. To Calhoun, slavery was a great benefit for an inferior race that had no ability to exercise their freedom positively. Calhoun argued:

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... It came to us in a low, degraded, and savage condition, and in the course of a few generations it has grown up under the fostering care of our institutions.[21]

The concept of slavery as a positive good came to the forefront in Calhoun's February 6, 1837, speech on the US Senate floor. In an attempt to disarm the abolitionists' moral outrage over slavery as "man-stealing" and ignoring the anti-slavery tradition of the Founders, Calhoun, like many proslavery Southerners, pointed to the ancient world to help them defend the institution of slavery, especially Aristotle's theory of natural slavery.[22] Greek democracy along with the grandeur of the Roman republic provided Southerners with a perspective that great cultures and slavery were inseparable.[23]: 29 

Attempting to claim the moral mantle for the social defense of involuntary servitude, Calhoun declared:

But I take higher ground. I hold that, in the present state of civilization, where two races of different origin, and distinguished by colour, 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 honour and interests of those I represent are involved.[24]

In that 1837 speech, Calhoun further argued that the slaveholders took care of their slaves from birth to old age, urging the opponents of slavery to "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 poor house" found in Europe and the Northern states.[25]

Such an assertion was predicated on the virtues of benevolent paternalism, the glory of past civilizations, and the traditions of white supremacy.[26] In an effort to illustrate that the North was also guilty of treating and exploiting its free laborers like slaves, Calhoun declared in his speech "that there never has yet existed a wealthy and civilised society in which one portion of the community did not...live on the labour of the other."

Most Southern slaveholders and intellectuals favored Calhoun's ideas and maintained that the institution of slavery "benefited both master and servant".[27] In that arrangement, the slaveholder acquired his labor and the slave was given a standard of living far beyond what he could ever hope to achieve on his own.

Calhoun sought to defend slavery as a positive good, and expanded his argument to condemn the North and industrial capitalism, asserting that slavery was "actually superior to the 'wage slavery' of the North".[27] He believed that free laborers in the North were just as enslaved as the Negro workers in the South. However, in the case of slaves in the South, Calhoun argued that Negros were receiving special protection under a caring and paternalistic master, and therefore were more fortunate.[27]

In his manifesto A Disquisition on Government, Calhoun opposed the "equality upon birth" assertion that the Founders declared in the Declaration of Independence, arguing that not all people are "equally entitled to liberty".[28] To bolster the prospects of slavery, he asserted that liberty was not a universal right but should be "reserved for the intelligent, the patriotic, the virtuous and deserving", which would exclude both free and enslaved Negros. Moreover, in 1820, Calhoun explained to John Quincy Adams that slave labor was the mechanics by which to maintain social control, calling it the "best guarantee for equality among whites".[29]

Effects of the "positive good" argument for slavery edit

Before the 1830s, the support for slavery was weakening in the South. During this period many Southerners agreed that, in the abstract, slavery constituted an evil. They claimed that they had not participated in its introduction, and laid the blame of the existence of the institution on "old Grandam Britain".[30] Nonetheless, few Southerners were willing to also call slavery "a sin".[11]: 132  This attitude resulted in a situation where "slave states contained a great many more anti-slavery societies than the free states".[31]: 44  After the abolitionists escalated their intellectual attacks against slavery, pro-slavery Southerners felt threatened, and retaliated with their own philosophical and morality-based justifications to defend involuntary servitude. The pro-slavery adherents felt compelled to take a hardline stance and engaged in a vehement and growing ideological defense of slavery.[32] Pro-slavery intellectuals and slaveholders began to rationalize slavery as a positive good that benefited both owners and the enslaved. Calhoun believed that the "ownership of Negros" was both a right and an obligation, causing the pro-slavery intelligentsia to position enslavement as a paternalistic and socially beneficial relationship, that required reciprocal "duties" from the enslaved.

Another aspect of "slavery as a positive good" motivated some Southern white women to offer the enslaved on plantations material goods, as well as maternal care of those they considered "unfit or feeble-minded Negros". However, all black people were generally, though not universally, believed to be an inherently inferior "race", the schooling of whom would be a waste, as they could not be educated. Some plantation mistresses spent considerable time in an attempt to "civilize" their enslaved laborers by providing food, shelter, and affection. In this sense, antebellum Southern women saw the enslaved as childlike, in need of protection. While engaging in this type of activity, they also attempted to convince the plantation enslaved, who were denied contact with the many abolitionist newspapers, that their condition was far better than those of the white or black factory workers in the industrial North.[33]

George Fitzhugh's extreme defense of slavery edit

George Fitzhugh was a slave owner, a prominent pro-slavery Democrat, and a sociological theorist who took the positive-good argument to its final extreme conclusion.[11]: 135  Fitzhugh argued that slavery was the proper relationship of all labor to capital, that it was generally better for all laborers to be enslaved rather than free.[11]: 100  He insisted that slavery was not a question of race, that in principle anyone of any race could be enslaved, and that this was beneficial to those enslaved as well as to their masters.[11]: 111, 124–126  Fitzhugh argued that Southern slaves had a "guarantee of livelihood, protection and support", and that if a master failed to perform his duties, he could be forced to sell his slaves to a more capable slaveholder.[11]: 222  In this way, Fitzhugh contended that "Slavery protects the infants, the aged and the sick," along with the healthy and the strong.[34]

Fitzhugh declared that "the unrestricted exploitation of so-called free society is more oppressive to the laborer than domestic slavery".[35] In later years, Fitzhugh not only supported slavery for blacks, but like other proslavery intellectuals, came to the conclusion that it was also suitable for whites, if considered unfit.[36] He believed that whites, if trained well and domesticated, could be as "faithful and valuable servants" as blacks.[37]

Taking an authoritarian position, Fitzhugh argued that "All government is slavery", and that "No one ought to be free."[38] And yet he, like other proslavery theorists, believed that "slavery ultimately made democracy work", by referencing the history of Classical Athens, the Roman Republic, and other ancient societies with democratic characteristics, all of which had slavery.[23]: 37  Fitzhugh summed up his pro-slavery stance with the following argument:

"It is the duty of society to protect the weak;" but protection cannot be efficient without the power of control; therefore, "It is the duty of society to enslave the weak."[39]

Fitzhugh's views were influential and widely acknowledged in the South. The Richmond Enquirer found Fitzhugh's pro-slavery sentiments to be sound, declaring that the justification of slavery was not an issue of "mere negro slavery", but that in of itself "slavery is a right, natural and necessary."[40] Fitzhugh maintained that slavery was the best institution to ensure "the rights of man".[31]: 45 

The Southern Democrats' role in reshaping the issue of slavery edit

Founded in 1828, the Southern Democrats's success and prominence across the political landscape has been attributed to its ability to reshape the issue of slavery as a "morally beneficial institution", especially to the more radical faction of Southerners within the Democratic Party.[41] By the mid-nineteenth century, the Democrats of the Second and Third Party Systems had become not only the most ardent defenders of slavery, but the most important institutional supporters of slavery.[42]

Andrew Jackson, who owned throughout his life up to 300 slaves,[43] was the first U.S. President (1829–1837) to be elected from the newly founded Democratic Party. Jackson was accused of beating his slaves, and also of banning the delivery of anti-slavery literature through the mail, calling abolitionists monsters who should "atone for this wicked attempt with their lives".[44]

In the Democratic South, many pro-slavery activists within the Southern intelligentsia and political community took the position that they were simply "upholding the great principles which our fathers bequeathed us".[45] They regarded the practice of holding other humans in chattel bondage as a "constitutional freedom" that was enshrined in the U.S. Constitution.[45]

By 1860, the Democratic Party was seen as "irrevocably wedded to the institution of Slavery...hand and heart".[46] As the Southern armies began suffering defeats in the battlefield, the New York Times opined that the Southern Democrats' devotion to slavery held a "stubbornness of fond infatuation such as the world has seldom seen".[46]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Howe, Daniel Walker (2007). What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848. Oxford University Press.
  2. ^ Allan Kulikoff, Abraham Lincoln and Karl Marx in Dialogue, Oxford University Press, 2018, p. 55.
  3. ^ Kolchin, Peter. American Slavery 1619-1877. (2003 revision) ISBN 0-8090-1630-3. pp. 63-64.
  4. ^ Kolchin, Peter. American Slavery 1619-1877. (2003 revision) ISBN 0-8090-1630-3. pp. 65-68.
  5. ^ Wilentz, Sean. The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln. (2005) ISBN 0-393-05820-4. pp. 218-220.
  6. ^ White, Deborah G.; Bay, Mia; Martin Jr., Waldo E. (2013). Freedom on my mind: a history of African Americans, with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's.
  7. ^ "The Excitement — The Fanatics". The Liberator. August 29, 1835. p. 1 – via newspapers.com. Reprinted from the Washington Telegraph.
  8. ^ Jones, Jacquie (1998). "Brotherly Love (1776-1834)". Africans in America: America's Journey Through Slavery. Episode 3. WGBH Educational Foundation. 8:00 minutes in. WGBH. Transcript. Retrieved September 19, 2020 – via Alexander Street Press.[permanent dead link] See also Africans in America: America's Journey Through Slavery: Brotherly Love (1776-1834) at IMDb  .
  9. ^ a b c Tise, Larry Edward (1974). "The "Positive Good" Thesis and Proslavery Arguments in Britain and America, 1701—1861". Proslavery: A History of the Defense of Slavery in America (Thesis) (1987 ed.). Athens, Georgia: University Press of Georgia. p. 97. ISBN 9780820309279. LCCN 86014671. OCLC 5897726.
  10. ^ Berlin, Ira (1998). "Making Race, Making Slavery". Many Thousands Gone: The First Two Centuries of Slavery in North America. Cambridge, Massachusetts and London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. p. 358. hdl:2027/heb.00069. ISBN 9780674810921. LCCN 98019336. OCLC 55720074..
  11. ^ a b c d e f Genovese, Eugene D. (1971). The World the Slaveholders Made: Two Essays in Interpretation. New York, NY: Vintage Books.
  12. ^ Gregory S. Schneider, "The birthplace of American slavery debated abolishing it after Nat Turner's bloody revolt" December 28, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, The Washington Post , June 1, 2019
  13. ^ David F. Ericson, The Debate Over Slavery: Antislavery and Proslavery Liberalism in Antebellum America, New York University Press, 2000, pp. 100–102
  14. ^ a b c Faust, Drew Gilpin (1982). James Henry Hammond and the Old South. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press.
  15. ^ Hammond, James Henry (1836). Remarks of Mr. Hammond, of South Carolina, on the Question of Receiving Petitions for the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia. Delivered in the House of Representatives, February 1, 1836. Washington, D.C. pp. 11–12, 15.
  16. ^ Harper, William; Hammond, James Henry; Simms, W. Gilmore; Dew, Thomas R. (1853). The Pro-Slavery Argument, as Maintained by the Most Distinguished Writers of the Southern States, Containing the Several Essays, on the Subject, of Chancellor Harper, Governor Hammond, and Professor Dew. Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co.
  17. ^ a b Hampton, Gregory Jerome (2015). Imagining Slaves and Robots in Literature, Film, and Popular Culture. Lexington Book. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-7391-9146-0.
  18. ^ Piketty, Thomas (2014). Capital in the Twenty-First Century. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674430006.
  19. ^ Wilentz, Robert Sean (2005). The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 147–148. ISBN 0-393-05820-4.
  20. ^ Remini, Robert V. (1984). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Democracy, 1833–1845. New York: Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. p. 422. ISBN 978-0-8018-5913-7.
  21. ^ John C. Calhoun, "A Positive Good – Teaching American History, 'Slavery a Positive Good'" (February 6, 1837).
  22. ^ Richard Alston, Edith Hall, and Justine McConnell, editors, Ancient Slavery and Abolition: From Hobbes to Hollywood, Oxford University Press, 2011, Chap. 9, S. Sara Monoson, "Recollecting Aristotle Pro-Slavery Thought in Antebellum America and the Argument of Politics Book 1" p. 247-278
  23. ^ a b Finkelman, Paul (2003). Defending Slavery: Proslavery Thought in the Old South—A Brief History with Documents. Bedford/St. Martin's.
  24. ^ John C. Calhoun, [1], "XIV Speech on the Reception of Abolition Petitions, February, 1837; Speeches of John C. Calhoun:Delivered in the Congress of the United States from 1811 to the present time"; Harper & Brothers, New York, 1843, p. 225.
  25. ^ John C. Calhoun, "Slavery a Positive Good" speech, February 6, 1837 October 6, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Clyde Wilson, "John C. Calhoun and Slavery as a "Positive Good:" What He Said" October 6, 2019, at the Wayback Machine June 26, 2014, Abbeville Institute, Clyde Wilson Library
  27. ^ a b c Rafuse, Ethan S. (October 2002). . Civil War Times. Archived from the original on March 6, 2020.
  28. ^ Calhoun, John C. (1840). . Archived from the original on April 2, 2019.
  29. ^ John Niven, John C. Calhoun and the Price of Union: A Biography, LSU Press, 1993, p. 85, The Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, Comprising Portions of His Diary from 1795–1848 September 8, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, New York: Scribner, 1951. "John Quincy Adams and John Calhoun discuss the Compromise", March 2, 1820
  30. ^ The Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, Comprising Portions of His Diary from 1795–1848, New York: Scribner, 1951. "John Quincy Adams and John Calhoun discuss the Compromise", March 2, 1820
  31. ^ a b Schivelbusch, Wolfgang (2004). The Culture of Defeat: On National Trauma, Mourning, and Recovery. New York: NY: Picador: A Metropolitan Book.
  32. ^ David Brion Davis, Inhuman Bondage: The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World, Oxford University Press, 2006, pp. 186–189
  33. ^ Mulligan, Erin R. (August 2012). "Paternalism and the Southern Hierarchy: How Slaves Defined Antebellum Southern Women". Armstrong Undergraduate Journal of History. 2 (2). from the original on March 4, 2020. Retrieved July 17, 2020.
  34. ^ George Fitzhugh, Sociology For The South: Or The Failure Of A Free Society, Richmond, VA, A. Morris, 1854, p. 46.
  35. ^ George Fitzhugh, Cannibals All!, or Slaves Without Masters, 1857, Preface, p. ix.
  36. ^ Craven, Avery (1944). "Southern Attitudes Toward Abraham Lincoln", April 11, 2016, at the Wayback Machine Papers in Illinois History and Transactions for the year 1942, The Illinois State Historical Society, p. 17.
  37. ^ Horace Greeley and his Lost Book, Southern Literary Messenger Volume 31, Issue 3, 1860.
  38. ^ George Fitzhugh, Sociology For The South: Or The Failure Of A Free Society, Richmond, VA, A. Morris, 1854, p. 170.
  39. ^ Cannibals All!, or Slaves Without Masters, Richmond, VA, A. Morris, 1857, p. 278.
  40. ^ J. Watson Webb, Speech of General J. Watson Webb, at the Great Mass Meeting on the Battle Ground of Tippecanoe, 60,000 Freeman in Council, Third Edition, New York: NY, 1856, p. 57.
  41. ^ Colleen J. Shogan, The Moral Rhetoric of American Presidents, Texas A&M University Press, 2007, p. 150.
  42. ^ Prokop, Andrew (December 8, 2014). "23 maps that explain how Democrats went from the party of racism to the party of Obama". Vox. Retrieved July 9, 2022.
  43. ^ H.W. Brands, Andrew Jackson: His Life and Times, New York, NY: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2005, pp. 139–143.
  44. ^ Blakemore, Erin (August 29, 2018). "Why Andrew Jackson's Legacy is So Controversial". HISTORY. Retrieved July 9, 2022.
  45. ^ a b James Henley Thornwell, Our Danger and Our Duty, Columbia, South Carolina, Southern Guardian Steam-Power Press, 1962, p. 5.
  46. ^ a b "Slavery and the Democratic Party". The New York Times. February 20, 1864. p. 6.

Further reading edit

slavery, positive, good, united, states, also, proslavery, thought, treatment, slaves, united, states, prevailing, view, southern, politicians, intellectuals, just, before, american, civil, opposed, seeing, crime, against, humanity, necessary, evil, they, defe. See also Proslavery thought and Treatment of slaves in the United States Slavery as a positive good in the United States was the prevailing view of Southern politicians and intellectuals just before the American Civil War as opposed to seeing it as a crime against humanity or a necessary evil They defended the legal enslavement of people for their labor as a benevolent paternalistic institution with social and economic benefits an important bulwark of civilization and a divine institution similar or superior to the free labor in the North 1 58 480 2 Five Orphan Children for sale inquire at Slave Depot New Orleans Crescent 1859 American statesman John C Calhoun was one of the most prominent advocates of the slavery as a positive good viewpoint This stance arose in response to the growing anti slavery movement in the United States in the late 18th century and early 19th century Various forms of slavery had been practiced across the world for all of human history but during the American Revolution slavery became a significant social issue in North America 3 At this time the anti slavery contention that it was both economically inefficient and socially detrimental to the country as a whole was more prevalent than philosophical and moral arguments against slavery 4 However this perspective rapidly changed as the worldwide demand for sugar and cotton from America increased and the Louisiana Purchase opened up vast new territories ideally suited for a plantation economy 5 By the early 19th century anti slavery arguments began to depart from claims that it was economically inefficient and towards the contention that slavery was inherently immoral In response pro slavery advocates fought against the abolitionists with their own morality based defense which invariably stressed their view that slaves were both well treated and happy and included illustrations which were designed to prove their points 6 page needed A writer in 1835 asserted that American slavery is the best slavery there ever was W e deny that slavery is sinful or inexpedient We deny that it is wrong in the abstract We assert that it is the natural condition of man that there ever has been and there ever will be slavery and we not only claim for ourselves the right to determine for ourselves the relations between master and slave but we insist that the slavery of the Southern States is the best regulation of slavery whether we take into consideration the interests of the master or of the slave that has ever been devised 7 Contents 1 The positive good defense of slavery 2 James Henry Hammond and the mudsill theory 3 John C Calhoun and positive good slavery 4 Effects of the positive good argument for slavery 5 George Fitzhugh s extreme defense of slavery 6 The Southern Democrats role in reshaping the issue of slavery 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingThe positive good defense of slavery editCharacterizing American perceptions of slavery at the turn of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in the 1998 documentary series Africans in America America s Journey Through Slavery the historian Douglas R Egerton said The planter class in the Age of Revolution never believed for a moment the blacks were happy in their condition and wouldn t try for freedom the way that white planters in the 1830s and 40s tried to convince themselves that their slaves loved their situation Americans who lived through the American Revolution understood that this was a violent world and that slaves were held in place only by white military power 8 A narrative that enslaved Africans lived in a carefree comfortable state dates back to the late eighteenth century 9 This argument mostly focused on the economic feasibility of enslaving people for their labor despite the inherent subjugation and degradation of human beings The enslaved people of the time were members of what historian Ira Berlin called the revolutionary generations de and in his pivotal 1998 work Many Thousands Gone he described the transition in popular sentiments about the Africans and their descendants among ethnically European settlers of North America as If in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries transplanted Europeans denounced Atlantic creoles as audacious rogues and if in the eighteenth century the nascent planter class condemned the newly arrived Africans for their gross bestiality and rudeness of their manners nineteenth century white Americans redefined blackness by endowing it with a new hard edge and confining people of African descent to a place of permanent inferiority 10 But by the 1810s a new rationale arose that began to treat legalized enslavement as a positive good and not as an economically necessary evil while still affirming its alleged economic benefits It appears that this new premise was first expressed by Robert Walsh in 1819 The physical condition of the American Negro is on the whole not comparatively alone but positively good and he is exempt from those racking anxieties the exacerbates of despair to which the English manufacturer and peasant are subject to in the pursuit of their pittance 9 Such justification about the goodness of enslavement for those who were enslaved became more common in the 1820s By the late 1820s the defense of institutional slavery saw it as mutually beneficial for state governments enslavers and enslaved people alike Legal enslavement drifted from being seen as an economic system of private enslavers to a political and philosophical position that portrayed enslavement as possessing national importance providing benefits to the states including more tax revenue A well known example of this new pro enslavement approach was voiced by Governor Stephen D Miller in his 1829 speech to South Carolina s legislators Slavery is not a national evil on the contrary it is a national benefit The agricultural wealth of the country is found in those states owning slaves and a great portion of the revenue of the government is derived from the products of slave labor Slavery exists in some form everywhere and it is not of much consequence in a philosophical point of view whether it be voluntary or involuntary In a political point of view involuntary slavery had the advantage since all who enjoy political liberty are then in fact free 9 Not long after Governor Miller s speech the general defense of involuntary servitude drifted towards a position where a proper social order and foundation of social welfare played a major role in the pro enslavement debate 11 135 Another economic defense of slave labor came from economist Thomas Roderick Dew professor at and then president of the College of William and Mary who downplayed the evil of owning humans after the Virginia House of Burgesses almost passed legislation for the emancipation of enslaved people in 1832 12 Dew supported enslavement on philosophical economic and Biblical grounds arguing that chattel slavery was not necessarily an immoral system 1 476 477 In portraying Southern enslavement based society as superior to Northern free society Dew s pro slavery argument turned into a positive good defense 13 James Henry Hammond and the mudsill theory edit nbsp James Henry HammondSee also Gag rule United States On February 1 1836 Congressman James Henry Hammond from South Carolina spoke on the House floor for two hours about the perceived menace of abolitionism He launched an attack on pro human rights proponents in the North while defending the social and economic benefits to whites of enslavement in the South Hammond s speech on enslavement was considered a new departure in the American Congress distinguished as the first explicit defense of slavery as a positive good 14 176 246 In that 1836 speech Hammond attempted to justify the practice Slavery is said to be an evil But it is no evil On the contrary I believe it to be the greatest of all the great blessings which a kind Providence has bestowed upon our glorious region As a class I say it boldly there is not a happier more contented race upon the face of the earth I have been born and brought up in the midst of them and so far as my knowledge and experience extend I should say they have every reason to be happy Lightly tasked well clothed well fed far better than the free laborers of any country in the world their lives and persons protected by the law all their sufferings alleviated by the kindest and most interested care Sir I do firmly believe that domestic slavery regulated as ours is produces the highest toned the purest best organization of society that has ever existed on the face of the earth 15 A Democrat Hammond was elected Governor of South Carolina in 1842 He was best known during his lifetime as an outspoken defender of the South and the institution of slavery 14 134 After traveling through Europe Hammond concluded that free laborers were being exploited by soulless materialism in England and the North where workers had the liberty only to starve while Southerners were far more protective assuming responsibility for every aspect of the lives of their slaves 14 280 281 Hammond co authored The Pro Slavery Argument with William Harper Thomas Roderick Dew and William Gilmore Simms who composed part of the sacred circle of proslavery intellectuals 16 In his famous Mudsill Speech 1858 Hammond articulated the pro slavery political argument during the period at which the ideology was at its most mature late 1830s early 1860s 17 Along with John C Calhoun Hammond believed that the bane of many past societies was the existence of the class of the landless poor This class of landless poor was viewed as being inherently transient and easily manipulated and as such often destabilized society as a whole Thus the greatest threat to democracy was seen as coming from class warfare that destabilized a nation s economy society government and threatened the peaceful and harmonious implementation of laws This theory supposes that there must be and supposedly always has been a lower class for the upper classes to rest upon the metaphor of a mudsill theory being that the lowest threshold mudsill supports the foundation for a building The theory was used by Hammond to justify what he saw as the willingness of the non whites to perform menial work which enabled the higher classes to move civilization forward With this in mind any efforts for class or racial equality that ran counter to the theory would inevitably run counter to civilization itself Southern pro slavery theorists asserted that slavery eliminated this problem by elevating all free people to the status of citizen and removing the landless poor the mudsill from the political process entirely by means of enslavement Thus those who would most threaten economic stability and political harmony were not allowed to undermine a democratic society because they were not allowed to participate in it So in the mindset of those in favour of it slavery was for protecting the common good of slaves masters and society as a whole 17 These and other arguments which supported the propertied elite against what were perceived as threats from the abolitionists lower classes and non whites to gain higher standards of living The economic self interest of slaveholders certainly played a role as slaves represented a massive amount of wealth some historians who estimate that at the time of the Civil War over 20 of private wealth in the US was slaves 18 Page number neededJohn C Calhoun and positive good slavery editThe best known political figure to defend black slavery as a positive good was John C Calhoun a political theorist and the seventh Vice President of the United States Calhoun was a leader of the Democratic Republican Party in the early nineteenth century 19 who in the Second Party System initially joined the proslavery Nullifier Party but left by 1839 Though having refused to attend the inauguration of Democratic president Martin Van Buren two years before 20 Calhoun voted with the Democratic Party for the remainder of his career To Calhoun slavery was a great benefit for an inferior race that had no ability to exercise their freedom positively Calhoun argued 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 It came to us in a low degraded and savage condition and in the course of a few generations it has grown up under the fostering care of our institutions 21 The concept of slavery as a positive good came to the forefront in Calhoun s February 6 1837 speech on the US Senate floor In an attempt to disarm the abolitionists moral outrage over slavery as man stealing and ignoring the anti slavery tradition of the Founders Calhoun like many proslavery Southerners pointed to the ancient world to help them defend the institution of slavery especially Aristotle s theory of natural slavery 22 Greek democracy along with the grandeur of the Roman republic provided Southerners with a perspective that great cultures and slavery were inseparable 23 29 Attempting to claim the moral mantle for the social defense of involuntary servitude Calhoun declared But I take higher ground I hold that in the present state of civilization where two races of different origin and distinguished by colour 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 honour and interests of those I represent are involved 24 In that 1837 speech Calhoun further argued that the slaveholders took care of their slaves from birth to old age urging the opponents of slavery to 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 poor house found in Europe and the Northern states 25 Such an assertion was predicated on the virtues of benevolent paternalism the glory of past civilizations and the traditions of white supremacy 26 In an effort to illustrate that the North was also guilty of treating and exploiting its free laborers like slaves Calhoun declared in his speech that there never has yet existed a wealthy and civilised society in which one portion of the community did not live on the labour of the other Most Southern slaveholders and intellectuals favored Calhoun s ideas and maintained that the institution of slavery benefited both master and servant 27 In that arrangement the slaveholder acquired his labor and the slave was given a standard of living far beyond what he could ever hope to achieve on his own Calhoun sought to defend slavery as a positive good and expanded his argument to condemn the North and industrial capitalism asserting that slavery was actually superior to the wage slavery of the North 27 He believed that free laborers in the North were just as enslaved as the Negro workers in the South However in the case of slaves in the South Calhoun argued that Negros were receiving special protection under a caring and paternalistic master and therefore were more fortunate 27 In his manifesto A Disquisition on Government Calhoun opposed the equality upon birth assertion that the Founders declared in the Declaration of Independence arguing that not all people are equally entitled to liberty 28 To bolster the prospects of slavery he asserted that liberty was not a universal right but should be reserved for the intelligent the patriotic the virtuous and deserving which would exclude both free and enslaved Negros Moreover in 1820 Calhoun explained to John Quincy Adams that slave labor was the mechanics by which to maintain social control calling it the best guarantee for equality among whites 29 Effects of the positive good argument for slavery editBefore the 1830s the support for slavery was weakening in the South During this period many Southerners agreed that in the abstract slavery constituted an evil They claimed that they had not participated in its introduction and laid the blame of the existence of the institution on old Grandam Britain 30 Nonetheless few Southerners were willing to also call slavery a sin 11 132 This attitude resulted in a situation where slave states contained a great many more anti slavery societies than the free states 31 44 After the abolitionists escalated their intellectual attacks against slavery pro slavery Southerners felt threatened and retaliated with their own philosophical and morality based justifications to defend involuntary servitude The pro slavery adherents felt compelled to take a hardline stance and engaged in a vehement and growing ideological defense of slavery 32 Pro slavery intellectuals and slaveholders began to rationalize slavery as a positive good that benefited both owners and the enslaved Calhoun believed that the ownership of Negros was both a right and an obligation causing the pro slavery intelligentsia to position enslavement as a paternalistic and socially beneficial relationship that required reciprocal duties from the enslaved Another aspect of slavery as a positive good motivated some Southern white women to offer the enslaved on plantations material goods as well as maternal care of those they considered unfit or feeble minded Negros However all black people were generally though not universally believed to be an inherently inferior race the schooling of whom would be a waste as they could not be educated Some plantation mistresses spent considerable time in an attempt to civilize their enslaved laborers by providing food shelter and affection In this sense antebellum Southern women saw the enslaved as childlike in need of protection While engaging in this type of activity they also attempted to convince the plantation enslaved who were denied contact with the many abolitionist newspapers that their condition was far better than those of the white or black factory workers in the industrial North 33 George Fitzhugh s extreme defense of slavery editGeorge Fitzhugh was a slave owner a prominent pro slavery Democrat and a sociological theorist who took the positive good argument to its final extreme conclusion 11 135 Fitzhugh argued that slavery was the proper relationship of all labor to capital that it was generally better for all laborers to be enslaved rather than free 11 100 He insisted that slavery was not a question of race that in principle anyone of any race could be enslaved and that this was beneficial to those enslaved as well as to their masters 11 111 124 126 Fitzhugh argued that Southern slaves had a guarantee of livelihood protection and support and that if a master failed to perform his duties he could be forced to sell his slaves to a more capable slaveholder 11 222 In this way Fitzhugh contended that Slavery protects the infants the aged and the sick along with the healthy and the strong 34 Fitzhugh declared that the unrestricted exploitation of so called free society is more oppressive to the laborer than domestic slavery 35 In later years Fitzhugh not only supported slavery for blacks but like other proslavery intellectuals came to the conclusion that it was also suitable for whites if considered unfit 36 He believed that whites if trained well and domesticated could be as faithful and valuable servants as blacks 37 Taking an authoritarian position Fitzhugh argued that All government is slavery and that No one ought to be free 38 And yet he like other proslavery theorists believed that slavery ultimately made democracy work by referencing the history of Classical Athens the Roman Republic and other ancient societies with democratic characteristics all of which had slavery 23 37 Fitzhugh summed up his pro slavery stance with the following argument It is the duty of society to protect the weak but protection cannot be efficient without the power of control therefore It is the duty of society to enslave the weak 39 Fitzhugh s views were influential and widely acknowledged in the South The Richmond Enquirer found Fitzhugh s pro slavery sentiments to be sound declaring that the justification of slavery was not an issue of mere negro slavery but that in of itself slavery is a right natural and necessary 40 Fitzhugh maintained that slavery was the best institution to ensure the rights of man 31 45 The Southern Democrats role in reshaping the issue of slavery editFounded in 1828 the Southern Democrats s success and prominence across the political landscape has been attributed to its ability to reshape the issue of slavery as a morally beneficial institution especially to the more radical faction of Southerners within the Democratic Party 41 By the mid nineteenth century the Democrats of the Second and Third Party Systems had become not only the most ardent defenders of slavery but the most important institutional supporters of slavery 42 Andrew Jackson who owned throughout his life up to 300 slaves 43 was the first U S President 1829 1837 to be elected from the newly founded Democratic Party Jackson was accused of beating his slaves and also of banning the delivery of anti slavery literature through the mail calling abolitionists monsters who should atone for this wicked attempt with their lives 44 In the Democratic South many pro slavery activists within the Southern intelligentsia and political community took the position that they were simply upholding the great principles which our fathers bequeathed us 45 They regarded the practice of holding other humans in chattel bondage as a constitutional freedom that was enshrined in the U S Constitution 45 By 1860 the Democratic Party was seen as irrevocably wedded to the institution of Slavery hand and heart 46 As the Southern armies began suffering defeats in the battlefield the New York Times opined that the Southern Democrats devotion to slavery held a stubbornness of fond infatuation such as the world has seldom seen 46 See also editAnti Tom literature and Confederate literature Fire Eaters Movement to reopen the transatlantic slave trade Holocaust trivialization Proslavery Tom Cotton s statements about slavery White defensivenessReferences edit a b Howe Daniel Walker 2007 What Hath God Wrought The Transformation of America 1815 1848 Oxford University Press Allan Kulikoff Abraham Lincoln and Karl Marx in Dialogue Oxford University Press 2018 p 55 Kolchin Peter American Slavery 1619 1877 2003 revision ISBN 0 8090 1630 3 pp 63 64 Kolchin Peter American Slavery 1619 1877 2003 revision ISBN 0 8090 1630 3 pp 65 68 Wilentz Sean The Rise of American Democracy Jefferson to Lincoln 2005 ISBN 0 393 05820 4 pp 218 220 White Deborah G Bay Mia Martin Jr Waldo E 2013 Freedom on my mind a history of African Americans with documents Boston Bedford St Martin s The Excitement The Fanatics The Liberator August 29 1835 p 1 via newspapers com Reprinted from the Washington Telegraph Jones Jacquie 1998 Brotherly Love 1776 1834 Africans in America America s Journey Through Slavery Episode 3 WGBH Educational Foundation 8 00 minutes in WGBH Transcript Retrieved September 19 2020 via Alexander Street Press permanent dead link See also Africans in America America s Journey Through Slavery Brotherly Love 1776 1834 at IMDb nbsp a b c Tise Larry Edward 1974 The Positive Good Thesis and Proslavery Arguments in Britain and America 1701 1861 Proslavery A History of the Defense of Slavery in America Thesis 1987 ed Athens Georgia University Press of Georgia p 97 ISBN 9780820309279 LCCN 86014671 OCLC 5897726 Berlin Ira 1998 Making Race Making Slavery Many Thousands Gone The First Two Centuries of Slavery in North America Cambridge Massachusetts and London The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 358 hdl 2027 heb 00069 ISBN 9780674810921 LCCN 98019336 OCLC 55720074 a b c d e f Genovese Eugene D 1971 The World the Slaveholders Made Two Essays in Interpretation New York NY Vintage Books Gregory S Schneider The birthplace of American slavery debated abolishing it after Nat Turner s bloody revolt Archived December 28 2019 at the Wayback Machine The Washington Post June 1 2019 David F Ericson The Debate Over Slavery Antislavery and Proslavery Liberalism in Antebellum America New York University Press 2000 pp 100 102 a b c Faust Drew Gilpin 1982 James Henry Hammond and the Old South Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press Hammond James Henry 1836 Remarks of Mr Hammond of South Carolina on the Question of Receiving Petitions for the Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia Delivered in the House of Representatives February 1 1836 Washington D C pp 11 12 15 Harper William Hammond James Henry Simms W Gilmore Dew Thomas R 1853 The Pro Slavery Argument as Maintained by the Most Distinguished Writers of the Southern States Containing the Several Essays on the Subject of Chancellor Harper Governor Hammond and Professor Dew Philadelphia Lippincott Grambo amp Co a b Hampton Gregory Jerome 2015 Imagining Slaves and Robots in Literature Film and Popular Culture Lexington Book p 25 ISBN 978 0 7391 9146 0 Piketty Thomas 2014 Capital in the Twenty First Century Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674430006 Wilentz Robert Sean 2005 The Rise of American Democracy Jefferson to Lincoln W W Norton amp Company pp 147 148 ISBN 0 393 05820 4 Remini Robert V 1984 Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Democracy 1833 1845 New York Harper amp Row Publishers Inc p 422 ISBN 978 0 8018 5913 7 John C Calhoun A Positive Good Teaching American History Slavery a Positive Good February 6 1837 Richard Alston Edith Hall and Justine McConnell editors Ancient Slavery and Abolition From Hobbes to Hollywood Oxford University Press 2011 Chap 9 S Sara Monoson Recollecting Aristotle Pro Slavery Thought in Antebellum America and the Argument of Politics Book 1 p 247 278 a b Finkelman Paul 2003 Defending Slavery Proslavery Thought in the Old South A Brief History with Documents Bedford St Martin s John C Calhoun 1 XIV Speech on the Reception of Abolition Petitions February 1837 Speeches of John C Calhoun Delivered in the Congress of the United States from 1811 to the present time Harper amp Brothers New York 1843 p 225 John C Calhoun Slavery a Positive Good speech February 6 1837 Archived October 6 2019 at the Wayback Machine Clyde Wilson John C Calhoun and Slavery as a Positive Good What He Said Archived October 6 2019 at the Wayback Machine June 26 2014 Abbeville Institute Clyde Wilson Library a b c Rafuse Ethan S October 2002 John C Calhoun The Man Who Started the Civil War Civil War Times Archived from the original on March 6 2020 Calhoun John C 1840 A Disquisition on Government Archived from the original on April 2 2019 John Niven John C Calhoun and the Price of Union A Biography LSU Press 1993 p 85 The Memoirs of John Quincy Adams Comprising Portions of His Diary from 1795 1848 Archived September 8 2019 at the Wayback Machine New York Scribner 1951 John Quincy Adams and John Calhoun discuss the Compromise March 2 1820 The Memoirs of John Quincy Adams Comprising Portions of His Diary from 1795 1848 New York Scribner 1951 John Quincy Adams and John Calhoun discuss the Compromise March 2 1820 a b Schivelbusch Wolfgang 2004 The Culture of Defeat On National Trauma Mourning and Recovery New York NY Picador A Metropolitan Book David Brion Davis Inhuman Bondage The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World Oxford University Press 2006 pp 186 189 Mulligan Erin R August 2012 Paternalism and the Southern Hierarchy How Slaves Defined Antebellum Southern Women Armstrong Undergraduate Journal of History 2 2 Archived from the original on March 4 2020 Retrieved July 17 2020 George Fitzhugh Sociology For The South Or The Failure Of A Free Society Richmond VA A Morris 1854 p 46 George Fitzhugh Cannibals All or Slaves Without Masters 1857 Preface p ix Craven Avery 1944 Southern Attitudes Toward Abraham Lincoln Archived April 11 2016 at the Wayback Machine Papers in Illinois History and Transactions for the year 1942 The Illinois State Historical Society p 17 Horace Greeley and his Lost Book Southern Literary Messenger Volume 31 Issue 3 1860 George Fitzhugh Sociology For The South Or The Failure Of A Free Society Richmond VA A Morris 1854 p 170 Cannibals All or Slaves Without Masters Richmond VA A Morris 1857 p 278 J Watson Webb Speech of General J Watson Webb at the Great Mass Meeting on the Battle Ground of Tippecanoe 60 000 Freeman in Council Third Edition New York NY 1856 p 57 Colleen J Shogan The Moral Rhetoric of American Presidents Texas A amp M University Press 2007 p 150 Prokop Andrew December 8 2014 23 maps that explain how Democrats went from the party of racism to the party of Obama Vox Retrieved July 9 2022 H W Brands Andrew Jackson His Life and Times New York NY Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group 2005 pp 139 143 Blakemore Erin August 29 2018 Why Andrew Jackson s Legacy is So Controversial HISTORY Retrieved July 9 2022 a b James Henley Thornwell Our Danger and Our Duty Columbia South Carolina Southern Guardian Steam Power Press 1962 p 5 a b Slavery and the Democratic Party The New York Times February 20 1864 p 6 Further reading editHoward Thomas Brophy Alfred 2019 Proslavery Thought In McInnis Maurie D Nelson Louis P eds Educated in Tyranny Slavery at Thomas Jefferson s University Charlottesville Virginia University of Virginia Press pp 141 170 ISBN 9780813942865 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Slavery as a positive good in the United States amp oldid 1197598408, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.