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American Slavery and its Consequences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Bruce Collins
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow

Abstract

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Type
Review Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1979

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References

1 Stampp, Kenneth M., The peculiar institution (London, 1964 edn), pp. 391–5Google Scholar

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10 This point is implied in Cox, La Wanda, ‘The promise of land for the Freedmen’, Mississippi Valley Historical Review, XLV (19581959), 413–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wharton, Vernon L., The negro in Mississippi, 1865–1890 (New York, 1965 edn), p. 60Google Scholar; Peirce, Paul S., The freedman's bureau: A chapter in the history of reconstruction (Iowa City, 1904), pp. 50, 129–32Google Scholar.

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34 See, for example, Constance Greiff, M., Lost America: from the Atlantic to the Mississippi (Princeton, 1974 edn), ch. 111Google Scholar.

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37 Edmund S. Morgan, ‘The labor problem at Jamestown, 1607–18’, reprinted in Breen (ed.), Shaping Southern society, pp. 17–31; Anderson, Ralph V. and Gallman, Robert E., ‘Slaves as fixed capital: slave labor and Southern economic development’, Journal of American History, LXIV (1977), 2446CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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40 See especially Barney, The secessionist impulse; Thornton, Power and politics in a slave society; Potter, David M. (completed and edited by Fehrenbacher, Don E.) The impending crisis, 1848–1861 (New York, 1976), chs. 17, 18Google Scholar.

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51 Reckoning with slavery, ch. 7.

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56 A few hints are in Owsley, Plain folk, pp. 90–119, 124–32.