Positions And Duties of the North Slavery

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Positions And Duties of the North Slavery
Andrew P Andrew Preston Peabody
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That was their last great battle. Defeated then tlu'ough the treachery of men, on whom they implicitly de- pended, they left the field, and were probably disbanded ; for we find no subsequent traces of their existence.
The defection of the North from its legitimate principles on that occasion no doubt deadened the general conscience ; and little was said or thought on the subject of slavery for the succeeding ten or twelve years. Meanwhile new relations were growing up between the North and the
... South. The Southern cotton trade during this interval rose from utter insignificance to a place second to no other branch of lousiness. The manufactories of the New England States l^ecame numerous and extensive, and depended on the South for their raw material. Our New England ships, shut out by univer- sal peace from the general carr^-ing trade, which they had once enjoj'ed, fomid the transportation of Southern cotton theu- surest and most lucrative employment. Thus had the North in a very ] irief space of time become connected with the South by the clos- est and most constraining pecuniary ties, so that the rejHiblication of views, which twenty years before it had been scandalous not to admit, now touched new chords of interest, on which it jan*ed harsh and unwelcome music.

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