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Collection Reference Number GLC09133
From Archive Folder Documents Relating to 1857 
Title Henry Ward Beecher to unknown regarding slavery
Date 12 February 1857
Author Beecher, Henry Ward (1813-1887)  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description "I believe that there were never so many thinking upon the subject, never were thoughts more nearly right on the great question of Liberty. I do not disesteem the political & Commercial aspects of Slavery. Its evils in these regards are greater than any of us imargine. But it is the Moral Condition of the slave & the effect of the system upon the Conscience of the Nation, that I chiefly feel & deprecate. One thing is certain. Let the friends of freedom, those who have no honors to seek, no offices to crave, no ambition to mislead them, let such become if possible more undoubtedly determined to press this reform by every legitimate means, and twenty Compromises upheld by a hundred times as many debauched statesman will not be able to long resist the current of things." He wrote this just before the inauguration of James Buchanan, who defeated the abolitionist Republican nominee James Fremont.
Subjects Missouri Compromise  African American History  Abolition  Reform Movement  Slavery  
People Beecher, Henry Ward (1813-1887)  
Theme Slavery & Abolition; African Americans
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859