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32. Escaped Slaves:
Gratitude of Underground Railroad Passengers, 1854-1856
33. Commonwealth of Massachusetts:
A Personal-Liberty Act, 1855.
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"A House Divided against Itself cannot Stand," 1858
45. Senator William Henry Seward:
The Irrepressible Conflict," 1858.
46. Senator Benjamin Franklin Wade:
"Niggers to the Niggerless," 1859
47. Colonel Robert Edward Lee:
Capture of the Engine-House, 1859
48. John Brown:
Why John Brown Broke the Laws, 1859
PART IV
CAUSES OF CIVIL WAR
CHAPTER VIII- ELECTION OF 1860
49. Murat Halstead:
Split in the Democratic Party, 1860
No Extension of Slavery, 1860-1861
67. Secretary John Adams Dix:
"If Any One Attempts to Haul down the American Flag," 1861
68. Delegate Lucius Eugene Chittenden :
Last Effort at Compromise, 1861
69. Senator John Jordan Crittenden:
Explanation of the Crittenden Compromise, 1861.
CHAPTER XII-CRISIS OF FORT SUMTER
70. Members of the Cabinet:
Shall Sumter be Relieved? 1861
71. Secretary Leroy Pope Walker, Brigadier-General Pierre Gustave Toutant
Beauregard, and Major Robert Anderson:
Breaking of the Storm, 1861.
72. Major John Gray Foster and Major Robert Anderson :
Surrender of Fort Sumter, 1861
73. Mrs. Mary Ashton Livermore:
Rising of the People, 1861
74. Richard Grant White:
"It Came to Pass that there was War," 1861.
PART V
CONDITIONS OF WAR
CHAPTER XIII-THE NORTHERN PEOPLE
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97. Secretary William Henry Seward and President Abraham Lincoln: