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To: Ronly Bonly Jones

Northerners were heavily invested in the rum and slave trade in the 18th Century. Slavery was legal in the northern colonies until 1774, when RI became the first to free its slaves. Slavery continued in DE and MD until 1865.

Northerners were the first to consider secession, at a convention in Hartford, CT, in late 1814, to protest the already ending War of 1812 and the decline in the fortunes of the Federalist Party.

Secession was considered constitutional until the force of arms stamped it out.

Lincoln's notion that the union preceded the Constitution is is without historical foundation, but it has been accepted to justify the war. My understanding is that the South paid 2/3 of the tariff receipts prior to 1860, and that was Lincoln's principal motivation to prevent secession.


72 posted on 06/14/2004 3:14:17 PM PDT by Theodore R.
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To: Theodore R.

My understanding is that the South paid 2/3 of the tariff receipts prior to 1860, and that was Lincoln's principal motivation to prevent secession>>

Is your understanding that the earth is flat too?

Utterly contemptible.


74 posted on 06/14/2004 3:18:55 PM PDT by Ronly Bonly Jones (truth is truth)
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To: Theodore R.
Secession was considered constitutional until the force of arms stamped it out.

By some, perhaps, but not by all. And certainly not in the unilateral manner practiced by the southern states.

My understanding is that the South paid 2/3 of the tariff receipts prior to 1860...

You have some figures to back that up?

110 posted on 06/15/2004 6:52:23 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur (Jefferson Davis - the first 'selected, not elected' president.)
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