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AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE 1823 COLONIZATION SOCIETY AFRICA
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AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE 1823 COLONIZATION SOCIETY AFRICA
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PLEASE NOTE THAT WE OFFER ONLY GENUINE ITEMS OF HISTORICAL QUALITY . We do not offer reproductions nor copies. This statement we stand behind for the life of the item. ~~why do we begin our auctions so low??~~It is because this is an auction, not a catalog. However, we do reserve the right to end an auction early if t is no action on an item prior to the auction end. Within the rules of Ebay. So, please bid if interested and it will stay. Visit our M E page if you get the chance, get to know us and our critters. Also, read our terms of sale below. Thanks for bidding on this item . IMPORTANT NOTE : WE NEVER OFFER SECOND CHANCE OFFERS., IF YOU GET ONE FROM US IT IS A SCAM. REPORT THIS TO EBAY. ~~The post office has raised their rates AGAIN., as well we know. Note that overseas rates have also changed and very complicated. Those wishing to bid from overseas, please ask first prior to bidding only because of the higher postage rates. We ship to Japan and Australia and a few other countries in Asia., UK and Europe is fine and Scandanavia and Isarel is fine, although NO OTHER Middle East countries qualify. We have only gradually raised our shipping fee., please check this out prior to bidding. We must keep to these new rates., we are professional at packing and use top quality materials and care. [See our feedbacks]. Thanks to all for understanding and your support. WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING: SIX HISTORIC ISSUES OF THE FAMOUS NILES WEEKLY REGISTER The Niles family edited and published the Weekly Register until 1836, making it into one of the most widely-circulated magazines in the United States and himself into one of the most influential journalists of his day. Devoted primarily to politics, Niles' Weekly Register is considered an important source for the history of the period. Printed totally of news and no advertisements., printed in double column pages for maximum information., 16 pages. And, in very fine clean condition, no odors. THE AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE AND ITS SUPPRESSION ., Six issues of the famous Niles weekly Register, picked for their news on the slave trade. Dated 1817-1831. An issue dated 1831 has a good section detailing the population of slaves in Virginia., the comparison from 1820 to 1831 and the increase in the number of slaves., also the number of colored persons who are free persons. A large section dated 1817, an resolution spoken before the House of Representatives regarding people of color and their colonization back to Africa. Also Acts and Laws of Congress with one being a resolution to allow the Mississippi Territory to be admitted to the Union. ~~A very large section titled THE CALHOUN CORRESPONDENCE., about John C. Calhoun and President Andrew Jackson. Done in very small typeface for maximum information., dated 1831 with news of the Colonization of the free blacks., also a printed letter from Thomas Jefferson on his ideas of a colony in Africa to be set up for free blacks in America. A grand STATES RIGHTS dance will come about with important attendance., held by the officials of South Carolina. Also a law passed that nullifies all agreements between the Indians of Georgia and the white man. News concerning British vessels of war stopping slave ships on the open seas., one being a French slave ship with over 500 souls on board, they were stowed in bulk and naked. Horror conditions.., News about one slave ship stopping to sell their slaves, found no buyers, they killed all their slaves in cold blood. ~~~News dated in an issue 1823 tells of hanging a number of pirates and the sight they presented., A section with a column headline FREE PEOPLE OF COLOR., dated at Charleston, S.C. 1823., about free blacks serving on board ships as cooks, stewards. The dangers that they could be taken for slaves and sold. Also an issue dated 1823 has a large section on the slave trade and the French government., trying to get the French to help stop the slave trade. The French having colonies in Africa. The British Duke of Wellington was beh...
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