Great Issues in American History, 2권Richard Hofstadter, Clarence Lester Ver Steeg Vintage Books, 1969 |
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15 페이지
... effect , upon the properties of the inhabitants of the colonies wherefore the relation between the British Americans , and the English electors , is a knot too infirm to be relied on . • ... It appears to me , that there is a clear and ...
... effect , upon the properties of the inhabitants of the colonies wherefore the relation between the British Americans , and the English electors , is a knot too infirm to be relied on . • ... It appears to me , that there is a clear and ...
158 페이지
... effect of the funding system , and of the Assumption , would be temporary ; it would be lost with the loss of the individual members whom it has enriched , and some engine of influence more permanent must be con- trived , while these ...
... effect of the funding system , and of the Assumption , would be temporary ; it would be lost with the loss of the individual members whom it has enriched , and some engine of influence more permanent must be con- trived , while these ...
287 페이지
... effect , and under this grant provision has been made for punishing acts which obstruct the due administration of the laws . .. This , then , is the position in which we stand : A small majority of the citizens of one State in the Union ...
... effect , and under this grant provision has been made for punishing acts which obstruct the due administration of the laws . .. This , then , is the position in which we stand : A small majority of the citizens of one State in the Union ...
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REVOLUTION AND INDEPENDENCE | 3 |
Daniel Dulany Considerations October | 14 |
First Continental Congress Declaration | 26 |
저작권 | |
표시되지 않은 섹션 29개
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Adams adopted amendments American Articles of Confederation authority bank bill Britain British Charles River Bridge charter citizens colonies commerce common compact compromise confederacy Confederation Congress Constitution Convention danger debt declare delegated DOCUMENT duty effect election empire England equal established exclusive executive exercise exist favor Federalists foreign France grant Great-Britain Henry Clay House independent interest Jefferson John Quincy Adams judges justice labor legislation legislature liberty Lincoln manufactures Maysville measures ment Missouri Missouri compromise nation nature necessary necessity never object opinion parliament party passed peace person political present President principle privileges proper proposed protection purpose question regulation representatives republican resolutions respect SAUL LANDAU secession Section Senate Slave Power slaveholding slavery slaves South Carolina spirit stitution taxes territory things Thomas Jefferson tion Townshend Acts trade treaty Union United violation Virginia vote whole