Footnote 78: [(return)]
See J.R. Giddings: The Exiles of Florida, 63-66; also speech in House of Representatives February 9, 1841.

Footnote 79: [(return)]
Sprague, 19.

Footnote 80: [(return)]
The correspondence is readily accessible in Sprague, 30-37.

Footnote 81: [(return)]
Hodge's Handbook of American Indians, II, 159.

Footnote 82: [(return)]
Joshua R. Giddings, of Ohio. His exhaustive speech on the Florida War was made February 9, 1841.

Footnote 83: [(return)]
This highly important incident, which was really the spark that started the war, is absolutely ignored even by such well informed writers as Drake and Sprague. Drake simply gives the impression that the quarrel between Osceola and Thompson was over the old matter of emigration, saying (413), "Remonstrance soon grew into altercation, which ended in a ruse de guerre, by which Osceola was made prisoner by the agent, and put in irons, in which situation he was kept one night and part of two days." The story is told by McMaster, however. Also note M.M. Cohen as quoted in Quarterly Anti-Slavery Magazine, Vol. II, p. 419 (July, 1837).

Footnote 84: [(return)]
Accessible in Drake, 416-418.

Footnote 85: [(return)]
This correspondence, and much more bearing on the point, may be found in House Document 327 of the Second Session of the Twenty-fifth Congress.

CHAPTER VI

EARLY APPROACH TO THE NEGRO PROBLEM