Van Rensselaer considers the religious and political implications of slavery and emancipation and considers solutions to the problems of slavery, including African colonization.
Thomas Cooper, the famous doctor, judge, economist, educator, and polemicist, outlines his long-time materialist beliefs and their relationship to society's dominant spiritual and Christian views.
Publishing a collection of letters to his friend David Clarkson of New York, Virginian Edward Pollard advocates for slavery through his descriptions of Southern life.
Considered one of the best regimental histories of the civil war, Chamberlin records the actions and characters of his regiment, the 150th Pennsylvania Volunteers.
Compiled and edited by John Bassett Moore, this twelve-volume set of the collected letters and speeches of James Buchanan, spanning his entire political career, includes both personal and professional documents.
This pamphlet gives accounts of the negative views toward slavery of the Protestant Episcopal Church, Methodist Episcopal Church, Old School Presbyterian Church, Baptist Churches, New School Presbyterian Church, Lutheran Church, United Presbyterian...