The Reconstruction Amendments : the essential documents.: the essential documents. Volume 1 (2021)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- The Reconstruction Amendments : the essential documents.: the essential documents. Volume 1 (2021)
- Main Title:
- The Reconstruction Amendments : the essential documents.
- Further Information:
- Note: Edited by Kurt T. Lash.
- Editors:
- Lash, Kurt T
- Contents:
- Volume 1 Introduction to the Collection Part 1. The Antebellum Constitution Introduction to Part 1 A. Foundational Documents 1. The Declaration of Independence (July 4, 1776) 2. The Northwest Ordinance (July 13, 1787) 3. The Constitution of the United States and the First Twelve Amendments (1787–1804) B. Federalism and the Structure of Antebellum Constitutional Liberty Introduction to Part 1B 1. The Federalist, No. 32 (Hamilton) (Jan. 3, 1788) 2. The Federalist, No. 33 (Hamilton) (Jan. 3, 1788) 3. The Federalist, No. 39 (Madison) (Jan. [15–18], 1788) 4. The Federalist, No. 43 (Madison) (Jan. 23, 1788) 5. The Federalist, No. 44 (Madison) (Jan. 25, 1788) 6. The Federalist, No. 45 (Madison) (Jan. [25–29], 1788) 7. James Madison, Speech Introducing Proposed Amendments (June 8, 1789) 8. The Alien and Sedition Acts (July 6, July 14, 1798) 9. The Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 (Nov. 10, 1798) 10. The Virginia Resolutions (Dec. 24, 1798) 11. The Kentucky Resolutions of 1799 (Nov. 22, 1799) 12. James Madison, Report on the Virginia Resolutions (Jan. 7, 1800) 13. St. George Tucker, A View of the Constitution (1803) 14. Louisiana Purchase Treaty (Apr. 30, 1803) 15. Report and Resolutions of the Hartford Convention (Jan. 4, 1815) 16. McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) 17. James Madison, Detached Memoranda (1819) 18. Corfield v. Coryell (1823) 19. James Kent, Commentaries; Of the Absolute Rights of Persons (1827) 20. John C. Calhoun, South Carolina Exposition (Dec. 1828) 21. James Madison toVolume 1 Introduction to the Collection Part 1. The Antebellum Constitution Introduction to Part 1 A. Foundational Documents 1. The Declaration of Independence (July 4, 1776) 2. The Northwest Ordinance (July 13, 1787) 3. The Constitution of the United States and the First Twelve Amendments (1787–1804) B. Federalism and the Structure of Antebellum Constitutional Liberty Introduction to Part 1B 1. The Federalist, No. 32 (Hamilton) (Jan. 3, 1788) 2. The Federalist, No. 33 (Hamilton) (Jan. 3, 1788) 3. The Federalist, No. 39 (Madison) (Jan. [15–18], 1788) 4. The Federalist, No. 43 (Madison) (Jan. 23, 1788) 5. The Federalist, No. 44 (Madison) (Jan. 25, 1788) 6. The Federalist, No. 45 (Madison) (Jan. [25–29], 1788) 7. James Madison, Speech Introducing Proposed Amendments (June 8, 1789) 8. The Alien and Sedition Acts (July 6, July 14, 1798) 9. The Kentucky Resolutions of 1798 (Nov. 10, 1798) 10. The Virginia Resolutions (Dec. 24, 1798) 11. The Kentucky Resolutions of 1799 (Nov. 22, 1799) 12. James Madison, Report on the Virginia Resolutions (Jan. 7, 1800) 13. St. George Tucker, A View of the Constitution (1803) 14. Louisiana Purchase Treaty (Apr. 30, 1803) 15. Report and Resolutions of the Hartford Convention (Jan. 4, 1815) 16. McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) 17. James Madison, Detached Memoranda (1819) 18. Corfield v. Coryell (1823) 19. James Kent, Commentaries; Of the Absolute Rights of Persons (1827) 20. John C. Calhoun, South Carolina Exposition (Dec. 1828) 21. James Madison to Edward Everett (Aug. 28, 1830) 22. South Carolina, Ordinance of Nullification (Nov. 24, 1832) 23. Daniel Webster, The Constitution Is Not a Compact (Feb. 16, 1833) 24. James Madison to Daniel Webster (Mar. 15, 1833) 25. Barron v. Baltimore (1833) 26. Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution (1833) 27. William Yates, Rights of Colored Men (1838) 28. Woman's Rights Convention, Seneca Falls, New York, Declaration of Sentiments (July 19, 1848) 29. Luther v. Borden (1849) 30. John C. Calhoun, A Discourse on the Constitution (I) (1851) 31. Campbell v. Georgia (1852) 32. Address of the Colored National Convention to the People of the United States, Rochester, New York (July 6–8, 1853) 33. John Bingham, Speech Opposing the Admission of Oregon (Feb. 11, 1859) C. Slavery: Antebellum Law and Politics Introduction to Part 1C 1. Virginia, An Act concerning Servants and Slaves (Oct. 1705) 2. Sommersett's Case (1772) 3. Pennsylvania, An Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery (Mar. 1, 1780) 4. Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (1785) 5. The Northwest Ordinance (July 13, 1787) 6. Debates in the Philadelphia Constitutional Convention (June, July, Aug. 1787) 7. Constitutional Provisions Relating to Slavery (1787) 8. Charles C. Pinckney, South Carolina House of Representatives, The Three-Fifths Clause (Jan. 18, 1788) 9. Debates in the Virginia Ratifying Convention (Article I, Section 9, Clause 1) (June 15, 1788) 10. Fugitive Slave Act (Feb. 12, 1793) 11. St. George Tucker, A Dissertation on Slavery (May 20, 1796) 12. US Congress, Debate on the Tallmadge Amendment (Feb. 15, Mar. 2, 1819) 13. Thomas Jefferson to John Holmes ('A fire bell in the night') (Apr. 22, 1820) 14. State v. Mann (1829) 15. Walker's Appeal (Sept. 28, 1829) 16. North Carolina, An Act to Prevent the Circulation of Seditious Publications (1830) 17. American Anti-Slavery Society, Declaration of Sentiments (Dec. 6, 1833) 18. Letter of Postmaster General Amos Kendall Regarding the Delivery of Anti-Slavery Literature, Richmond Whig (Aug. 11, 1835) 19. South Carolina, Resolutions on Abolitionist Propaganda (Dec. 16, 1835) 20. Commonwealth v. Aves (1836) 21. US House of Representatives, The 'Gag' Rules (May 26, 1836) 22. Prigg v. Pennsylvania (1842) 23. Liberty Party Platform (Aug. 30, 1843) 24. Wendell Phillips, The Constitution: A Pro-slavery Compact (1844) 25. South Carolina, Resolutions Relating to the Exclusion of Samuel Hoar, Charleston Courier (Dec. 7, 1844) 26. Lysander Spooner, The Unconstitutionality of Slavery (1845) 27. Pennsylvania, Personal Liberty Act (Mar. 3, 1847) 28. Free Soil Party Platform (Aug. 9–10, 1848) 29. Joel Tiffany, A Treatise on the Unconstitutionality of American Slavery (1849) 30. Fugitive Slave Act (Sept. 18, 1850) 31. John C. Calhoun, A Discourse on the Constitution (II) (1851) 32. 'No Union with Slaveholders, ' Liberator (July 7, 1854) 33. Massachusetts, Personal Liberty Act (May 21, 1855) 34. Dred Scott v. Sandford (1856) 35. Susan B. Anthony, Make the Slave's Case Our Own (1859) 36. In re Booth (1854) 37. Ableman v. Booth (1859) 38. Wisconsin, Resolutions in Defiance of Ableman v. Booth (Mar. 19, 1859) 39. Lemmon v. People (1860) 40. Frederick Douglass, The Constitution of the United States: Is It Pro-slavery or Anti-slavery? (Mar. 26, 1860) D. Secession and Civil War Introduction to Part 1D 1. Abraham Lincoln, Address at the Cooper Institute (Feb. 27, 1860) 2. Republican Party Platform (May 17, 1860) 3. Democratic Party Platform (June 18, 1860) 4. President James Buchanan, Fourth Annual Message, New York Herald (Dec. 5, 1860) 5. South Carolina, Declaration of the Causes Which Justify Secession (Dec. 24, 1860) 6. US Senate, Speech of Judah P. Benjamin Defending the Secession of South Carolina (Dec. 31, 1860) 7. US Congress, The 'Corwin Amendment' (Mar. 2, 1861) 8. Abraham Lincoln, First Inaugural Address (Mar. 4, 1861) 9. Constitution of the Confederate States of America (Mar. 11, 1861) 10. Abraham Lincoln, Message to Congress in Special Session (July 4, 1861) 11. District of Columbia, Compensated Emancipation Act (Apr. 16, 1862) 12. Abraham Lincoln to Horace Greeley (Aug. 22, 1862) 13. Attorney General Edward Bates, on Citizenship (Nov. 29, 1862) 14. Abraham Lincoln, Emancipation Proclamation (Jan. 1, 1863) 15. Abraham Lincoln, Address at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania (Nov. 19, 1863) 16. Abraham Lincoln to Albert G. Hodges (Apr. 4, 1864) 17. Republican (Union) Party Platform (June 7, 1864) 18. Abraham Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address (Mar. 4, 1865) 19. 'Union Victory! Peace! The Correspondence between Grant and Lee, ' New York Times (Apr. 10, 1865) Part 2. The Thirteenth Amendment A. Drafting Introduction to Part 2A 1. The Thirty-Eighth Congress, Membership (1863–1865) 2. US House of Representatives, Proposed Abolition Amendments (Ashley, Wilson) and Abolition Bill (Lovejoy) (Dec. 14, 1863) 3. US Senate, Proposed Abolition Amendment (Henderson) (Jan. 11, 1864) 4. Women's Loyal National League, Petition for a Law Abolishing Slavery (Jan. 25, 1864) 5. US Senate, Proposed Abolition Amendment (Sumner); Debates (Feb. 8, 1864) 6. US Senate, Notice of Two-Sectioned Abolition Amendment (Trumbull) (Feb. 10, 1864) 7. US Senate, Notice of Amended Proposal (S. No. 16) (Trumbull); Notice of Abolition Amendment (Sumner) (Feb. 17, 1864) 8. US House of Representatives, Speech of James Wilson (R-IA) Introducing Abolition Amendment (Mar. 19, 1864) 9. US Senate, Speech of Lyman Trumbull (R-IL) Reporting Amended Version of Abolition Amendment (Mar. 28, 1864) 10. US Senate, Speech of Henry Wilson (R-MA) (Mar. 28, 1864) 11. US Senate, Speech of Garrett Davis (U-KY) (Mar. 30, 1864) 12. US Senate, Debate on Abolition Amendment (Mar. 31, 1864) 13. US Senate, Speech of Reverdy Johnson (D-MD) (Apr. 5, 1864) 14. US Senate, Abolition Amendment, Amended Language Approved for Debate (Apr. 6, 1864) 15. US Senate, Debate on Abolition Amendment (Apr. 7, 1864) 16. US Senate, Debate and Passage of Abolition Amendment (Apr. 8, 1864) 17. Radical Democracy Party Platform, Cleveland, Ohio (May 31, 1864) 18. US House of Representatives, Debates on Abolition Amendment (May 31, 1864) 19. National Union (Republican) Party Convention, Baltimore, Maryland (June 7, 1864) 20. Abraham Lincoln, Letter to the National Union Convention (June 9, 1864) 21. US House of Representatives, Debates and Failed Vote on Abolition Amendment (June 14–15, 1864) 22. 'Rejection of the Anti-Slavery Constitutional Amendment, ' New York Times (June 17, 1864) 23. 'The Great Victory: Lincoln Triumphantly Re-elected!, ' Washington Reporter (Nov. 9, 1864) 24. Frederick Douglass, 'The Final Test of Self-Government' (Nov. 13, 1864) 25. Abraham Lincoln, Annual Message to Congress (Dec. 6, 1864) 26. US House of Representatives, Debates on Abolition Amendment (Jan. 6–12, 1865) 27. 'Fernando Wood and the Peace Rumors, ' Reaction to Speech of Samuel Cox (D-OH), New York Herald (Jan. 13, 1865) 28. Missouri, 'Emancipation Ordinance Adopted Almost Unanimously, ' New York Daily Tribune (Jan. 12, 1865) 29. US House of Representatives, Debates on Abolition Amendment (Jan. 13, 1865) 30. Tennessee, 'Slavery Declared Forever Abolished, ' New York Times (Jan. 15, 1865) 31. US House of Representatives, Debates and Passage of Abolition Amendment (Jan. 28–31, 1865) 32. 'Exciting Scene in the House of Representatives, Jan. 31, 1865, ' Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper (Feb. 8, 1865) 33. US Senate, Notice of House Vote and Presidential Signature (Feb. 1, 1865) B. Ratification Introduction to Part 2B 1. 'The Constitutional Abolition of Slavery—The Great Measure of the Age, ' New York Herald (Feb. 2, 1865) 2. 'Speech of Mr. Lincoln on the Constitutional Amendment, ' New York Herald (Feb. 3, 1865) 3. New York, Governor Fenton's Message, Speeches and Vote on the Abolition Amendment, Albany Evening Journal (Feb. 1–4, 1865) 4. 'The Great Amendment; Progress of Ratification, ' New York Tribune (Feb. 4, 1865) 5. 'Dr. Lieber's Letter to Senator E. D. Morgan on the Amendment of the Constitution Extinguishing Slavery, ' New York Tribune (Feb. 4, 1865) 6. Massachusetts, Unanimous Ratification of Abolition Amendment, Salem Register (Feb. 6, 1865) 7. Charles Sumner, Resolutions Regarding the Number of States Necessary for Ratification, New York Tribune (Feb. 6, 1865) 8. 'Is the Union Destroyed?' (On Sumner's Resolutions), New York Times (Feb. 6, 1865) 9. Virginia, News of Ratification, Press (Feb. 9, 1865) 10. Delaware, Governor William Can … (more)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 1
- Volume:
- 1
- Issue Sort Value:
- 0000-0001-0000-0000
- Publisher Details:
- Chicago : The University of Chicago Press
- Publication Date:
- 2021
- Extent:
- 1 online resource
- Subjects:
- 342.7303909034
Constitutional amendments -- United States -- History -- 19th century -- Sources
Constitutional history -- United States -- Sources
History -- Sources - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9780226688817
- Related ISBNs:
- 9780226688787
- Notes:
- Note: Includes bibliographical references and index.
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