Fugitive Slaves Part 37

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=Larned, E. C.= Argument on the Trial of Joseph Stout, indicted for rescuing a Fugitive Slave from a United States Deputy Marshal at Ottawa, Ill., Oct. 20, 1859, delivered March 12 and 13, 186-. Chicago, 186-. pp.

43.

=----.= The new Fugitive Slave Law. Speech of E. C. Larned, Chicago, Oct. 25, 1850. Chicago, 1850.

=Latimer Case.= From the _Law Reporter_, March, 1843. Boston, 1843. pp.

10.

=Letter= to His Excellency, William H. Seward, Governor of the State of New York, touching the Surrender of certain Fugitives from Justice. New York, 1841. pp. 101.

=Lord, J. C.= The Higher Law in its Application to the Fugitive Slave Bill. Buffalo, 1851.

=Madison, James.= The Const.i.tution a Pro-slavery Compact. New York, 1844.

=Mann, Horace.= Fugitive Slave Law. Boston, 1851.

=Ma.s.sachusetts Senate.= Various Doc.u.ments. Senate, 1851, No. 89 (examination of Sims Case).

=May, S. J.= American Antislavery Society. The Fugitive Slave Law and its Victims. New York, 1856, 1861.

=----.= Catalogue of Antislavery Publications in America, 1750-1830.

=Moore, G. H.= Notes on the History of Slavery in Ma.s.sachusetts. New York, 1866.

=Narrative= of Facts in the Case of Pa.s.smore Williamson. Philadelphia, 1855.

=Narrative= of Solomon Northrup, a Citizen of New York, kidnapped in Was.h.i.+ngton in 1844, and rescued in 1853 from a Cotton Plantation near Red River, Louisiana. Cincinnati, H. W. Derby.

=Needles, Edward.= Historical Memoir of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery. Philadelphia, 1848.

=New York Court of Appeals=, Report of the Lemmon Slave Case. New York, 1861. pp. 446.

=New York Legal Observer=, Supplement to, containing Report of the Case In the Matter of George Kirk, a Fugitive Slave, heard before J. W.

Edmunds, Circuit Judge; also the Argument of John Jay, Counsel for the Slave. New York, 1844. pp. 20.

=Oberlin-Wellington Rescue.= New Englander, XVII. 686.

=Olmsted, F. L.= The Cotton Kingdom. 2 vols. New York, 1861.

=Paine, Byron=, and =Smith, A. D.= Unconst.i.tutionality of the Fugitive Slave Act. Argument of A. D. Smith. Milwaukee, 1854. pp. 35.

=Paine, L. W.= Six Years in a Georgia Prison. Narrative of L. W. Paine, who suffered Imprisonment for aiding Slaves to escape from that State after he had fled from Slavery. Boston, 1852.

=Parker, Joel.= Personal Liberty Laws (State of Ma.s.sachusetts) and Slavery in the Territories (Case of Dred Scott). Boston, 1861. pp. 97.

=Parker, Theodore.= Anthony Burns. [Collection made and arranged in the form of a sc.r.a.p-book by Theodore Parker, whose Autograph and Ma.n.u.script it contains.] Boston Public Library.

=Peabody, Andrew Preston.= [Address before the New England Historic-Genealogical Society, May 6, 1891.]

=Peabody, E.= Narratives of Fugitive Slaves. _Christian Examiner_, XLVII. 61.

=Phillips, Wendell.= Argument of Wendell Phillips, Esq., against Repeal of the Personal Liberty Laws before the Committee of the Legislature, Tuesday, January 29, 1861. Boston, 1861.

=----.= No Slave Hunting in the Old Bay State, before Committee on Federal Relations, H. R., Thursday, Feb. 17, 1859. Boston, 1859.

=----.= Speech in the House of Representatives of Ma.s.sachusetts before the Committee on Federal Relations [against the recapture of fugitive slaves]. Boston, 1859.

=Pickard, Mrs. K. E. R.= The Kidnapped and the Ransomed. Personal Reflections of Peter Still and his Wife Vina after Forty Years of Slavery. Syracuse, New York, 1856.

=Pierce, E. L.= Remarks of E. L. Pierce before the Committee of the Legislature of Ma.s.sachusetts on the General Statutes relating to Personal Liberty, at their Hearing of Feb. 1, 1861. Boston, 1861.

=Pomeroy, J. N.= An Introduction to the Const.i.tutional Laws of the United States. Boston, 1868.

=Poole, W. F.= Sketch of Antislavery Opinion before Year 1800. An Essay read before the Cincinnati Literary Club, Nov. 16, 1872. Cincinnati, 1873.

=Randolph, Peter=, an emanc.i.p.ated slave. Sketches of Slave Life. Boston, 1855. pp. 82.

=Rantoul, Robert.= Speech at Lynn, April 3, 1852, on the Fugitive Slave Law. Speech in Congress on June 11, 1852, on the Const.i.tutionality of the Fugitive Slave Law.

=Rendition of Fugitive Slaves.= Acts of 1793 and 1850, and Decisions of the Supreme Court sustaining them. The Dred Scott Case. 1860. pp. 15.

=Refugees' Home Society=, Report of Committee. Winsor, 1852. pp. 8.

=Report= of the Trial of Castner Hanway for Treason, etc. Philadelphia, 1852. pp. 275.

=Report= of the Case of Edward Prigg against the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Superior Court. Philadelphia, 1842.

=Roper, Moses=, Narrative of the Adventures and Escape of, from American Slavery. Philadelphia, 1838. pp. 89.

=Sergeant, Thomas.= On Const.i.tutional Law. Philadelphia, 1830.

=Seward, W. H.= John Van Zandt, etc., Argument for Defendant by W. H.

Seward. Albany, 1847. pp. 40.

=Sherman, H.= Slavery in the United States; from the Establishment of the Confederation to the present Time. Hartford, 1860. pp. 60.

=s.h.i.+pherd, J. R.= History of Oberlin-Wellington Rescue. Boston, 1859.

=Smedley, R. C., M. D.= History of the Underground Railroad in Chester and neighboring Counties of Pennsylvania. Lancaster, Pa., 1883. pp. 395.

=Smith, Gerrit.= Argument on the Fugitive Slave Law, June, 1852, on the Trial of H. W. Allen for Kidnapping. Syracuse. pp. 32. No date.

=South Bend Fugitive Slave Case, The.= (John Ames _vs._ L. B. Newton.) New York. pp. 24.

=Spooner, L.= A Defence for Fugitive Slaves against the Acts of Congress of Feb. 12, 1793, and Sept. 18, 1850. Boston, 1850. Pam.

=Stearns, Charles.= Narrative of Henry Box Brown, who escaped from Slavery enclosed in a Box three feet long and two wide. Boston, 1849.

=Stearns, Charles.= The "Fugitive Slave Law of the United States."

Fugitive Slaves Part 37

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Fugitive Slaves Part 37 summary

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