Front cover image for A necessary evil? : slavery and the debate over the Constitution

A necessary evil? : slavery and the debate over the Constitution

By the early decades of the nineteenth century, Americans wondered, if slavery had become a necessary evil - economically essential but morally reprehensible. A Necessary Evil? is divided into seven chapters: the first establishes the background forecord of in the new nation and sets the stage for the debate while the second chapter records the arguments over slavery from the Constitutional Convention. Chapters three, four, and five turn to the New England, Middle, and Southern states respectively and present the complete record of slavery and the ratification debate in these regions. The next chapter demonstrates the peculiar institution's newly sanctioned role in the young republic and how abolitionists sought to reverse this growing consensus. Finally, the last chapter looks at slavery from the perspective of three of the most influential Americans, Washington, Jefferson, and Madison, to show the complexity and inner turmoil that surrounded slavery
Print Book, English, 1995
Madison House, Madison, WI, 1995
History
xi, 289 pages ; 24 cm.
9780945612162, 9780945612339, 0945612168, 0945612338
32092358
Laying slavery's foundations
The Constitutional Convention and slavery
New England debates slavery and the Constitution
The Middle States debate slavery and the Constitution
The South debates slavery and the Constitution
Slavery and the new nation
Slavery and the Founders : three perspectives
"Published for the Center for the Study of the American Constitution."