LEE AND SHEPARD.
Statesman Edition.
Limited to One Thousand Copies.
| Page |
| [Be True to the Declaration of Independence. Letter to a Public Meeting in Ohio, on the Anniversary of the Ordinance of Freedom, July 6, 1849] | 1 |
| [Where Liberty is, there is my Party. Speech on calling the Free-Soil State Convention to Order, at Worcester, September 12, 1849] | 4 |
| [The Free-Soil Party Explained and Vindicated. Address to the People of Massachusetts, reported to and adopted by the Free-Soil State Convention at Worcester, September 12, 1849] | 6 |
| [Washington an Abolitionist. Letter to the Boston Daily Atlas, September 27, 1849] | 46 |
| [Equality before the Law: Unconstitutionality of Separate Colored Schools in Massachusetts. Argument before the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in the Case of Sarah C. Roberts v. The City of Boston, December 4, 1849] | 51 |
| [Character and History of the Law School of Harvard University. Report of the Committee of Overseers, February 7, 1850] | 101 |
| [Stipulated Arbitration, or a Congress of Nations, with Disarmament. Address to the People of the United States, February 22, 1850] | 117 |
| [Our Immediate Antislavery Duties. Speech at a Free-Soil Meeting at Faneuil Hall, November 6, 1850] | 122 |
| [Acceptance of the Office of Senator of the United States. Letter to the Legislature of Massachusetts, May 14, 1851] | 149 |
| [The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States our Two Title-Deeds. Letter to the Mayor of Boston, for July 4, 1851] | 165 |
| [Position of the American Lawyer. Letter to the Secretary of the Story Association, July 15, 1851] | 166 |
| [Sympathy with the Rights of Man Everywhere. Letter to a meeting at Faneuil Hall, October 27, 1851] | 168 |
| [Welcome to Kossuth. Speech in the Senate, December 10, 1851] | 171 |
| [Our Country on the Side of Freedom, without Belligerent Intervention. Letter to a Philadelphia Committee, December 23, 1851] | 180 |
| [Clemency to Political Offenders. Letter to an Irish Festival at Washington, January 22, 1852] | 181 |
| [Justice to the Land States, and Policy of Roads. Speeches in the Senate, on the Iowa Railroad Bill, January 27, February 17, and March 16, 1852] | 182 |
| [J. Fenimore Cooper, the Novelist. Letter to the Rev. Rufus W. Griswold, February 22, 1852] | 213 |
| [Cheap Ocean Postage. Speech in the Senate, on a Resolution in Relation to Cheap Ocean Postage, March 8, 1852] | 215 |
| [Pardoning Power of the President. Opinion submitted to the President, May 14, 1852, on the Application for the Pardon of Drayton and Sayres, incarcerated at Washington for helping the Escape of Slaves] | 219 |
| [Presentation of a Memorial against the Fugitive Slave Bill. Remarks in the Senate, May 26, 1852] | 234 |
| [The National Flag the Emblem of Union for Freedom. Letter to the Boston Committee for the Celebration of the 4th of July, 1852] | 238 |
| [Union against the Sectionalism of Slavery. Letter to a Free-Soil Convention at Worcester, July 6, 1852] | 240 |
| ["Strike, but Hear:" Attempt to discuss the Fugitive Slave Bill. Remarks in the Senate, on taking up the Resolution instructing the Committee on the Judiciary to report a Bill for Immediate Repeal of the Fugitive Slave Act, July 27 and 28, 1852] | 243 |
| [Tribute to Robert Rantoul, Jr. Speech in the Senate, on the Death of Hon. Robert Rantoul, Jr., August 9, 1852] | 246 |
| [Authorship of the Ordinance of Freedom in the Northwest Territory. Letter to Hon. Edward Coles, August 23, 1852] | 253 |
| [Freedom National, Slavery Sectional. Speech in the Senate, on a Motion to repeal the Fugitive Slave Act, August 26, 1852] | 257 |