References.—General Works: see Chapter XVIII.
Special Works: same as for Chapter XX., except the two books mentioned last. See also lives of leading abolitionists,—Birney, Wendell Phillips, etc., especially the biography of William Lloyd Garrison, written by his children, and A. H. Stephens, War Between the States; Jefferson Davis, The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government.
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[158]
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Born in Boston, 1811; died, 1884. Graduated at Harvard 1831; became a
lawyer, but from 1837 gave his chief energies to the abolition movement; was
the most eloquent and effective advocate of the cause until the outbreak
of the war; ardent advocate of temperance reform and of woman suffrage;
sided with the Greenback party.
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[159]
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The former Adams men and the adherents of Clay, who shortly after this
time took the name of the patriotic party in the Revolution and called themselves
“Whigs.”
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[160]
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Before taking the name “Whig,” the party that favored protection, internal
improvements, and liberal construction of the Constitution generally, took
part of the name of the Democratic-Republican party that was in power from
Jefferson to Jackson, and called themselves National Republicans. The Jackson
men, on the other hand, took the first half of the name, which was distinctly
appropriate to them. The Democratic party thus formed has been in
existence ever since, with considerable changes, however. The Whigs, as will
be seen, are represented to-day by the Republican party.
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[161]
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This party was formed against the Free Masons, chiefly in consequence of
the report, not confirmed, of the killing in 1826 of a man named William Morgan,
who had exposed certain secrets of the order.
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[162]
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By law the Secretary had to give the order, and Jackson compelled the
resignation of Mr. Duane, who would not give it.
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[163]
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Sometimes men would start a bank in a small town, fail there, and then
move to another town not far off and play the same trick. A contemporaneous
invention, the telegraph, was destined to do much for the detection and apprehension
of such rogues.
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[164]
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Jackson’s vigorous policy toward France almost brought on a war with
that country.
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