Wrong of Slavery, the Right of Emancipation, and the Future of the African Race in the United States
(0 User reviews)
169
1864
English
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part 1, chapter 1: As A Labor System
- Part 1, chapter 2: Enslavement of Indians
- Part 1, chapter 3: Substitution of the African for the Indian
- Part 1, chapter 4: Number of Slaves shipped from Africa
- Part 1, chapter 5: How Slaves were obtained in Africa
- Part 1, chapter 6: How Slaves were transported from Africa
- Part 1, chapter 7: What became of the Imported Slaves
- Part 1, chapter 8: Strangely contrasting Fate of the Two diverging Streams
- Part 1, chapter 9: Touching the Causes of certain Marvellous Results
- Part 1, chapter 10: Was there a Failure and a Success?
- Part 1, chapter 11: The Great Lesson
- Part 2, chapter 1: A Mixed Question of Constitutional and International Law
- Part 2, chapter 2: Constitutional Aspect of what is called Slave-Property
- Part 2, chapter 3, section 1: The Constitutionality of Emancipation in the Insurrectionary States
- Part 2, chapter 3, section 2: The Constitutionality of Emancipation in the Insurrectionary States
- Part 2, chapter 4: The Constitutionality of Emancipation in the Loyal Slave States
- Part 3, chapter 1: Forebodings Regarding the Fate of the Negro
- Part 3, chapter 2: Do we need the Aid of the Negro as a Loyal Citizen?
- Part 3, chapter 3: Can the Negro, as Freedman, maintain himself?
- Part 3, chapter 4: The Emancipated Negro will make the South his Home
- Part 3, chapter 5: Amalgamation
- Part 3, chapter 6: Reciprocal Social Influence of the Races on each other
- Part 3, chapter 7: Importance, Nationally, that the Negro be treated with Justice
- Part 3, chapter 8: The Freedman needs mere Temporary Aid and Supervision
- Part 3, chapter 9: The Sum of our Duty towards the Negro Race
- Appendix
"The Wrong of Slavery" is a work written by Robert Dale Owen based largely off of the work of the Freedmen's Inquiry Commission where he served. It traces the early beginnings of the slave trade from its English beginning to the United States Civil War. It puts a focus on the barbarism of the slave trade from capture and transportation to the arrival in the Americas, the extreme cruelties that took place in the West Indies and South America, facts about slavery in the United States, and the advantages of a freed black population to the South. (Summary by mleigh)
There are no reviews for this eBook.
There are no comments for this eBook.
You must log in to post a comment.
Log in