About This Book
The author compiles economic comparisons and statistics to argue that slavery has depressed agricultural output, wealth, and social progress in the southern states while concentrating advantage in a narrow oligarchy. He proposes a practical political program for ending slavery largely without direct compensation, urges non‑slaveholding whites to pursue their economic interests, and outlines electoral and legislative steps for reform. The text assembles testimony from Southern and Northern public figures, European thinkers, church authorities, and biblical passages to bolster its claims. It also surveys measures of education, infrastructure, manufactures, and public welfare to contrast the outcomes of free and slave labor.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
1 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks
American Beer: Glimpses of Its History and Description of Its Manufacture
by G. Thomann
The Life of Kit Carson: Hunter, Trapper, Guide, Indian Agent and Colonel U.S.A.
by Edward Sylvester Ellis
Fields, factories and workshops
by kniaz Petr Alekseevich Kropotkin
The Struggle for Imperial Unity: Recollections & Experiences
by George T. Denison
Tobacco in Colonial Virginia / "The Sovereign Remedy"
by G. Melvin Herndon
Building a State in Apache Land
by Charles D. Poston
