The Journal of Negro History, Volume 3, 1918. Various
I, 424-426.
38
Bancroft, "
39
Bancroft, "
40
41
These Documents were collected by Miss D. L. Beasley and M. N. Work.
42
43
44
This paper is from the collection of 105 in the Court House at Eureka. Austin Wiley, whose name appears in the document, was later appointed Superintendent of Indian Affairs for California; and during his term of office did much to bring to a satisfactory termination the trouble then existing between the settlers and the natives.
45
46
These are freedom papers as recorded in the California County Court records, and as they have been found by the California Archivist, Mr. Owen Coy.
47
This court record was obtained by Mr. W. N. Work.
48
Ford edition of
49
"
50
"This clause," says Jefferson, in his Autobiography (I, p. 19), "was struck out in complaisance to South Carolina and Georgia, who had never attempted to restrain the importation of slaves, and who, on the contrary, still wished to continue it. Our northern brethren, also, I believe, felt a little tender under those censures; for though their people had very few slaves themselves, yet they had been pretty considerable carriers of them to others."
51
"Their amalgamation with the other color," said he, "produces a degradation to which no lover of excellence in the human character can innocently consent."—Ford edition of
52
Ford edition of
53
54
Ford edition of
55
56
Ford edition of
57
Ford edition of
58
Transcriber's Note: Missing footnote text in original.
59
60
Ford edition of
61
To General Chastellux, who had proposed to publish in a French scientific paper certain extracts from Jefferson's Notes on Virginia, he wrote the following in 1785:
The strictures on slavery (in the Notes on Virginia) … I do not wish to have made public, at least till I know whether their publication would do most harm or good. It is possible, that in my own country, these strictures might produce an irritation, which would indispose the people towards (one of) the two great objects I have in view; that is, the emancipation of their slaves.—Ford edition of the Writings of Jefferson, III, p. 71.
62
Ford edition of
63
64
Ford edition of
65
Ford edition of
66
67
Transcriber's Note: Missing footnote text in original.
68
Transcriber's Note: Missing footnote text in original.
69
Ford edition of
70
Ford edition of
71
Transcriber's Note: Missing footnote text in original.
72
Transcriber's Note: Missing footnote text in original.
73
74
Ford edition of
75
76
77
Ford edition of
78
79
80
Ford edition of
81
82
Ford edition of
83
84
85
Ford edition of
86
87
Ford edition of
88
89
Ford edition of
90
91
92
93
94
Ford edition of
95
Ford edition of
96
Ford edition of
97
98
99
100
101
Ford edition of
102
103
104
105
106
Ford edition of
107
This