Excerpt from The Southern States of the American Union: Considered in Their Relations to the Constitution of the United States and to the Resulting Union
The tax on tea - Action of Boston, Charleston, Philadelphia, and Annapolis - Port of Boston closed - Refusal to allow tea to be sold - Preparation for resistance - Virginia invites a Congress - Resolute acceptance of the Colonies - Functions of the Congress - Declaration of Independence, validity and significance of - Fallacy that all men are created equal - Colonies reorganized the civil corporations into distinct commonwealths - Patriotic sacrifices of the Southern States - Favored by the mother country - Partisan war - Statistics of soldiers furnished - Western campaigns and settlements; Fuller statement of the character and functions of the Continental Congress - Exerted no sovereign power, was not strictly a legislative body, made no claim of intercolonial control; Articles of Confederation - A more powerful union needed - Surrender of the Northwest Territory by Virginia - The Convention of 1787 - Ratification of the Constitution by conventions in the several States - Navigation of the Mississippi - What the South did to establish the Government - Magnanimity in surrendering the taxing power - Washington, the illustrious Southerner; Evolution of the two great political parties - Radical differences between them - Real nature of the Federal Union - Meaning of "We, the people" - Hamilton's effort to assimilate the new Government to the British system - Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions of 1798-99
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