[294] Quarterly Anti-Slavery Magazine, Vol. II., p. 409, July, 1837.
[295] (Ingraham): The Southwest, Vol. II., p. 245.
[296] Andrews: Slavery and the Domestic Slave Trade, pp. 136, 150.
Note:—It is interesting to compare Featherstonhaugh's characterization of Armfield, which is: "I looked steadily at the fellow, and recollecting him, found no longer any difficulty in accounting for such a compound of everything vulgar and revolting and totally without education. I had now a key to his manner and the expression of his countenance."—Featherstonhaugh: Excursion Through the Slave States, Vol. I., p. 167.
[297] Andrews: Sl. and Domestic Sl. Trade, p. 150.
[298] Featherstonhaugh: Excursion Through the Slave States, Vol. I., p. 128.
[299] Finch: Travels in the U.S. and Canada, p. 241.
[300] Adams: Southern View of Slavery, p. 77.