| 1871 - 1022 páginas
...persons belonging to other States and countries, which would tend to the great increase of the colored population of the State, and thereby to the injury of the people: Therefore, " Be i< tnacttd. Arc., That no person shall set up or establish in this State any school,... | |
| George Washington Williams - 1882 - 1148 páginas
...persons belonging to other States and countries, which would tend to the great increase of the colored population of the State, and thereby to the injury of the people : therefore, " ' Be it enacted, etc., That no person shall set up or establish in this State any school,... | |
| 1893 - 608 páginas
...persons belonging to other States and countries, which would tend to the great increase of the colored population of the State and thereby to the injury of the people," any person establishing such a school without the consent in writing of the selectmen and civil authority... | |
| William Farrand Felch, George C. Atwell, H. Phelps Arms, Francis Trevelyan Miller - 1899 - 920 páginas
...relation inconsistent with a state of slavery. The master by his consent had agreed to abandon his rights to him as a slave." Notwithstanding the beneficent...Prudence Crandall opened a young ladies' school in the small town of Canterbury. She had taught with marked success in other places, and the leading citizens... | |
| 1901 - 736 páginas
...in the Preamble to the Act, namely : ' ' That they would tend to the great increase of the colored "population of the State, and thereby to the injury of the ' ' people. ' ' Substantially the same reason which was given for the suppression of the slave trade. In Connecticut,... | |
| William Chauncey Fowler - 1901 - 88 páginas
...the Preamble to the Act, namely : ' ' That they would tend to the great increase of the colored ' ' population of the State, and thereby to the injury of the ' ' people. ' ' Substantially the same reason which was given for the suppression of the slave trade. In Connecticut,... | |
| Charleston (S.C.) - 1901 - 580 páginas
...given in the Preamble to the Act, namely : " That they would tend to the great increase of the colored "population of the State, and thereby to the injury of the "people." Substantially the same reason which was given for the suppression of the slave trade. In Connecticut,... | |
| Edward Warren Capen - 1905 - 536 páginas
...colored persons from other states and countries, " which would tend to the great increase of the colored population of the state, and thereby to the injury of the people." 1 SUMMARY These laws may be summarized briefly as follows : A foreigner or one without a settlement... | |
| Elbert William Robinson Ewing - 1908 - 240 páginas
...alleged .grounds of the law were that such institutions tended "to the great increase of the colored population of the State, and thereby to the injury of the people." In October of the same year a case raising the question of the validity of this law came before Hon.... | |
| Beverley Bland Munford - 1909 - 382 páginas
...by declaring that the establishment of such schools "would tend to the great increase of the colored population of the state, and thereby to the injury of the people, &c." The negro populations of Vermont and New Hampshire had actually decreased in the half century... | |
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