Wally Hartshorn

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Beginning in 1835, many of these abolition societies—composed, in many cases, primarily of churchly white women who saw slavery as an affront to morality—sent petitions to Congress, asking representatives to ban slavery in the federally administered District of Columbia. Southern congressmen reacted with fury, insisting that the petitions could not be read into the public record.
The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism
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