The Wolf by the Ears: Thomas Jefferson and Slavery |
Contents
Slavery and the Declaration of Independence | 1 |
Slavery and the Rights of Man | 12 |
Slavery and the Revolution in Virginia | 19 |
Copyright | |
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abolition of slavery Adams African Alexander Hamilton American antislavery Bergh 16 black slaves Boorstin Boyd Britain British Brodie Callender Callender's citizens colonial Congress Constitution D. B. Davis debts Declaration of Independence Domingo effect eighteenth century emancipation Enlightenment equality farmers fear federal government Federalist France free blacks freedom French George Haiti happiness History human Indians inferiority institution James Madison Jeffer Jefferson believed Jeffersonian Republicans John Adams John Marshall land legislature liberty Lipscomb and Bergh Louisiana Louisiana Purchase Madison Hemings Malone mankind Maria Cosway masters McColley ment miscegenation Missouri Monticello moral sense mulatto Negro never Northern Northwest Posts Notes on Virginia numbers opinion orangutan P. L. Ford plantation political president race racial Revolution romantic friendship Sally Hemings seemed slave trade slaveowners social society South Southern Supreme Court territories Thomas Jefferson tion Toussaint L'Ouverture treaty Union United virtue white Americans wholly women