Emil C

21%
Flag icon
In a famous campaign speech of 1858, William H. Seward derided the southern doctrine that “labor in every society, by whomsoever performed, is necessarily unintellectual, groveling, and base.” The idea had produced the backwardness of the South, said Seward, the illiteracy of its masses, the dependent colonial status of its economy. In contrast “the free-labor system educates all alike, and by opening all the fields of industrial employment to … all classes of men … brings into the highest possible activity all the physical, moral and social energies of the whole State.” A collision between ...more
Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era
Rate this book
Clear rating