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قراءة كتاب Thomas Hart Benton

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Thomas Hart Benton

Thomas Hart Benton

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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American Statesmen

EDITED BY

JOHN T. MORSE, JR.


American Statesmen


THOMAS HART BENTON

BY

THEODORE ROOSEVELT

BOSTON AND NEW YORK
HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
The Riverside Press, Cambridge

1890



Copyright, 1886,
By THEODORE ROOSEVELT.

All rights reserved.



FIFTH EDITION.


The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A.
Electrotyped and Printed by H. O. Houghton & Company.

CONTENTS.

PAGE

CHAPTER I.

The Young West1

CHAPTER II.

Benton's Early Life and Entry into the Senate23

CHAPTER III.

Early Years in the Senate47

CHAPTER IV.

The Election of Jackson, and the Spoils System69

CHAPTER V.

The Struggle with the Nullifiers88

CHAPTER VI.

Jackson and Benton make War on the Bank114

CHAPTER VII.

The Distribution of the Surplus143

CHAPTER VIII.

The Slave Question appears in Politics157

CHAPTER IX.

The Children's Teeth are set on Edge184

CHAPTER X.

Last Days of the Jacksonian Democracy209

CHAPTER XI.

The President without a Party237

CHAPTER XII.

Boundary Troubles with England260

CHAPTER XIII.

The Abolitionists Dance to the Slave Barons' Piping290

CHAPTER XIV.

Slavery in the New Territories317

CHAPTER XV.

The Losing Fight341


THOMAS HART BENTON.


CHAPTER I.

THE YOUNG WEST.

Even before the end of the Revolutionary War the movement had begun which was to change in form a straggling chain of sea-board republics into a mighty continental nation, the great bulk of whose people would live to the westward of the Appalachian Mountains. The hardy and restless backwoodsmen, dwelling along the eastern slopes of the Alleghanies, were already crossing the mountain-crests and hewing their way into the vast, sombre forests of the Mississippi basin; and for the first time English-speaking communities were growing up along waters whose outlet was into the Gulf of Mexico and not into the Atlantic Ocean. Among these communities Kentucky and Tennessee were the earliest to form themselves into states; and around them, as a nucleus, other states of the woodland and the prairie were rapidly developed, until, by the close of the second decade in the present century, the region between the Great Lakes and the Gulf was almost solidly filled in, and finally, in 1820, by the admission of Missouri, the Union held within its borders a political body whose whole territory lay to the west of the Mississippi.

All the men who founded these states were of much the same type; they were rough frontiersmen, of strong will and adventurous temper, accustomed to the hard, barren, and yet strangely fascinating life of those who dwell as pioneers in the wilderness. Moreover, they were nearly all of the same blood. The people of New York and New England were as yet filling out their own territory; it was not till many years afterwards that their stock became the predominant one in the northwestern country. Most of the men who founded the new states north of the Ohio came originally from the old states south of the Potomac; Virginia and North Carolina were the first of the original thirteen to thrust forth their children in masses, that they might shift for themselves in the then untrodden West.

But though these early Western pioneers were for the most part of Southern stock, they were by no means of the same stamp as the men who then and thereafter formed the ruling caste in the old slave-holding states. They were the mountaineers, the men of the foot-hills and uplands, who lived in what were called the backwater counties. Many of them were themselves of northern origin. In

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