Alphonso Taft, Brady image

Scanned by
Library of Congress
Notes
Cropped, sized, and prepared for use here by John Osborne, Dickinson College, August 11, 2008.
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
Taft, Judge Alphonso (Sec of War 1876)
Source citation
Brady-Handy Photograph Collection, Library of Congress

Jordan Edgar Cravens, detail

Scanned by
Library of Congress
Notes
Cropped, sized, and prepared for use here by John Osborne, Dickinson College, August 11, 2008.
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
Cravens, Hon. Jordan Edgar of Arkansas Entered the Confederate Army in 1861 as a private, Col. in 1862
Source citation
Brady-Handy Photograph Collection, Library of Congress

Jordan Edgar Cravens

Scanned by
Library of Congress
Notes
Cropped, sized, and prepared for use here by John Osborne, Dickinson College, August 11, 2008.
Image type
photograph
Use in Day View?
No
Permission to use?
Public
Original caption
Cravens, Hon. Jordan Edgar of Arkansas Entered the Confederate Army in 1861 as a private, Col. in 1862
Source citation
Brady-Handy Photograph Collection, Library of Congress

A House Divided: Slavery and Emancipation in Delaware, 1638-1865

Citation:
Patience Essah, A House Divided: Slavery and Emancipation in Delaware, 1638-1865 (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1996), 166.
Body Summary:
The Republican position as defined by Fisher promised benefit including financial gain, an end to the Civil War, and removal of all free blacks through colonization. Contrary to Democratic assertions regarding the high cost of emancipation, Fisher believed that abolition of slavery would save the national government the expense of the Civil War. It cost less to support compensated emancipation in Delaware, argued Fisher, than the expenditure for half a day of warfare. Were the national government to provide Delaware what it cost to fund the war for half a day, it “will not only pay for all the slaves at full prices, but will leave a margin to provide a fund for the removal…not only of the freed slaves, but the entire negro population, and colonize them in any country provided for them by the General Government.”

George Lloyd Magruder (Year Book of Clan Gregor Society, 1911)

Reference
Mary Blanch Magruder, "Dr. George Lloyd Magruder," Year Book of the Clan Gregor Society (Charlottesville, Va: Mitchie Co., 1911), 79.
DR. GEORGE LLOYD MAGRUDER. by Miss MARY BLANCHE MAGRUDER.
GEORGE LLOYD MAGRUDER was born in Washington, D. C., November 1, 1848, and died in the same city January 28, 1914. He was the son of Thomas Contee and Elizabeth Olivia (Morgan) Magruder.
Dr. Magruder graduated from Gonzaga College, Washington, D. C., and from the Medical School of the Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., in which city he practised his profession until his death.
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