| M.K. Bacchus - 1990 - 433 pàgines
...the loss of their property (ie, the slaves) to the amount of £20 million, while the second stated that, "provision should be made for promoting the Industry and securing the good Conduct of the Persons soon to be manumitted."1 It was on the basis of the second provision that the Negro Education... | |
| Charles Edmund Carrington - 1950 - 584 pàgines
...with the colonies if the sugar-plantations were ruined. It was expedient, in the words of the Act, 'that provision should be made for promoting the industry and securing the good conduct of the persons to be manumitted'. Slaves of working age were therefore to be retained as indentured apprentices... | |
| Charles Carrington - 1950 - 682 pàgines
...with the colonies if the sugar-plantations were ruined. It was expedient, in the words of the Act, ' that provision should be made for promoting the industry and securing the good conduct of the persons to be manumitted'. Slaves of working age were therefore to be retained as indentured apprentices... | |
| Thomas Brackett Reed, Rossiter Johnson, Justin McCarthy, Albert Ellery Bergh - 1903 - 524 pàgines
...nothing but necessity would justify it? — " Whereas, it is expedient that provision should be made, promoting the industry and securing the good conduct of the manumitted slaves." Those are the avowed reasons for the measure, those its only defense. All men confessed that were it... | |
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