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Full Description
In this book, Kenneth Morgan provides the most comprehensive account of the abolition of the slave trade to the United States since W. E. B. Du Bois's 1896 The Suppression of the African Slave Trade to the United States of America, 1638-1970. Utilizing a wider range of resources and exploring the economic, social, moral, and political considerations, Morgan creates a multi-layered account that explains why abolition was a protracted affair that proceeded by degrees over nearly half a century. He appraises the role of abolitionist individuals, groups, and societies in bringing abolition to the forefront of public discussion across North America, and the decisive role of the US constitution and the constitutional convention that eventually led to proscription in 1808, which made abolition constitutionally possible.
Contents
List of tables; List of abbreviations; Preface; Introduction: 1. Colonial restrictions on the slave trade, 1700-1774; 2. The slave trade and revolutionary North America, 1774-1787; 3. The US constitution, the debates over ratification, and the slave trade, 1787-1788; 4. Opposition to the slave trade in the early national period, 1789-1802; 5. Final controversies over the US slave trade, 1803-1807; Epilogue; Bibliography.