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قراءة كتاب Virginia's Attitude Toward Slavery and Secession

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Virginia's Attitude Toward Slavery and Secession

Virginia's Attitude Toward Slavery and Secession

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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VIRGINIA'S ATTITUDE TOWARD SLAVERY AND SECESSION


VIRGINIA'S ATTITUDE
TOWARD
SLAVERY AND SECESSION
BY
BEVERLEY B. MUNFORD
HUMANITATEM AMOREMQUE PATRIAE COLITE
NEGRO UNIVERSITIES PRESS
NEW YORK

Originally published in 1909
by Longmans, Green, and Co.
Reprinted 1969 by
Negro Universities Press
A Division of Greenwood Publishing Corp.
New York
Library of Congress Catalogue Card Number 69-16579
PRINTED IN UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

TO
MY WIFE

PREFACE

This work is designed as a contribution to the volume of information from which the historian of the future will be able to prepare an impartial and comprehensive narrative of the American Civil War, or to speak more accurately—The American War of Secession.

No attempt has been made to present the causes which precipitated the secession of the Cotton States, nor the states which subsequently adopted the same policy, except Virginia. Even in regard to that commonwealth the effort has been limited to the consideration of two features prominent in the public mind as constituting the most potent factors in determining her action—namely, devotion to slavery and hostility to the Union. That the people of Virginia were moved to secession by a selfish desire to extend or maintain the institution of slavery, or from hostility to the Union, are propositions seemingly at variance with their whole history and the interests which might naturally have controlled them in the hour of separation. Yet how widespread the impression and how frequent the suggestion from the pen of historian and publicist that the great and compelling motives which led Virginia to secede were a desire to extend slavery into the territories and to safeguard the institution within her own borders, coupled with a spirit of hostility to the Union and the ideals of liberty proclaimed by its founders. To present the true attitude of the dominant element of the Virginia people with respect to these subjects is the work which the author has taken in hand.

As cognate to this purpose the effort has been made to show what was the proximate cause which influenced the great body of the Virginia people in the hour of final decision. There were unquestionably many and widely severed causes—some remote in origin and some immediate to the hour, yet it may be safely asserted that but for the adoption by the Federal Government of the policy of coercion towards the Cotton States, Virginia would not have seceded. That was the crucial and determining factor, which impelled her secession. She denied the right of the Federal Government

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