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=----.= Letters of Lydia Maria Child. Boston, 1883.
=Clarke, James Freeman.= Antislavery Days. New York, 1884.
=Clarke, Lewis and Milton=, Narrative of the Sufferings of, among the Slaveholders of Kentucky. Boston, 1848. pp. 144.
=Cobb, T. R.= Historical Sketch of Slavery. Philadelphia, 1836.
=Coffin, L.= (President of Underground Railroad). Reminiscences of a Lifetime spent in Behalf of the Slave. Cincinnati, 1876.
=Const.i.tutional Provision, The=, respecting Fugitives from Justice, and the Act of Congress, Sept. 18, 1850. Boston, 1852.
=Cooley, Thomas M.= The General Principles of Const.i.tutional Law in the United States of America. Boston, 1880. pp. 376.
=Daggs (Ruel)= _vs._ =Elihu Frazier et als.= Fugitive Slave Case, Southern Division of Iowa. Burlington, 1850. pp. 40.
=Deane, Charles, and Moore.= Slavery in Ma.s.sachusetts. Connecticut, 1877.
=Desty, Robert.= Const.i.tution of the United States, with Notes by Robert Desty, etc. San Francisco, 1887.
=Dougla.s.s, Frederick.= Narrative of his Life. Written by himself.
Boston, 1845.
=----.= Life and Times of Frederick Dougla.s.s. Hartford, 1881-82.
=Drayton, Daniel.= Personal Memoirs of, for four years and four months (a prisoner for charity's sake in Was.h.i.+ngton Jail), including Narrative of Voyage and Capture of Schooner Pearl. New York, 1855.
=Drew, Benjamin.= North Side View of Slavery, or Narrative of a Refugee in Canada, with an Account of the History of the Colored Population in Upper Canada. Boston, 1856.
=Eliot, W. G.= The Story of Archer Alexander from Slavery to Freedom.
Boston, 1885.
=Elliott, Chas. W.= The New England History, from the Discovery of the Continent by the Northmen, A. D. 986, to the Period when the Colonies declared their Independence, A. D. 1776. 2 vols. New York, 1857.
=Friend, By A.= The Experiences of Thomas Jones, who was for forty-three years a Slave. Boston, 1850.
=Frothingham, O. B.= Life of Gerrit Smith. A Biography. New York, 1878.
pp. 381.
=Fugitive Slave Bill= enacted by U. S. Congress, and approved by President Fillmore, Sept. 8, 1850. Boston, 1854. pp. 7.
=Fugitive Slaves.= In Democratic Review, XXVIII. 57 (April, 1851).
=Furness, W. H.= The Moving Power. A Discourse delivered in the First Congregational Unitarian Church in Philadelphia, Feb. 9, 1851, after the occurrence of a Fugitive Slave Case. Philadelphia, 1851.
=Garrison, Wendell Phillips=, and =Garrison, Francis Jackson.= William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879: the Story of his Life, told by his Children [Wendell Phillips Garrison and Francis Jackson Garrison]. 4 vols., 8vo.
New York, 1885.
=Giddings, J. R.= The Exiles of Florida, or Crimes committed by our Government against Maroons who fled from South Carolina, etc. Columbus, O., 1858.
=Goodell, William.= Views of American Const.i.tutional Law in its Bearings upon American Slavery. 2d ed. Utica, N. Y., 1845.
=Goodloe, D. R.= The Southern Platform, or Manual of Southern Sentiments on the Subject of Slavery. Boston, 1858.
=Gray, A. F.= (?) Letter to W. H. Seward touching the Surrender of certain Fugitives from Justice. New York, 1841.
=Great Britain.= British Doc.u.ments, Parliament of Great Britain, Correspondence respecting Case of Fugitive Slave Anderson. London, 1861.
=Greeley, Horace.= The American Conflict; a History of the Great Rebellion, 1860-65; its moral and political Phases, with the Drift and Progress of America respecting Human Slavery from 1776. 2 vols., 8vo.
Hartford, 1864.
=Green, William= (formerly a slave), Narrative of Events in the Life of.
Written by himself. Springfield, 1853. pp. 23.
=Hawkins, W. G.= Lunsford Lane, or Another Helper from North Carolina.
Boston, 1863.
=Helper, H. R.= The Impending Crisis in the South, and How to Meet it.
New York, 1860. pp. 420.
=Henson, Josiah.= Life of J. Henson, formerly a Slave, now an Inhabitant of Canada, as narrated by himself.
=Hildreth, R.= The Slave, or Memoirs of Archy Moore. Boston, 1840.
=Hopper, I. T.= Thomas Cooper. New York, 1837.
=Hossack, John.= Speech of John Hossack, convicted of Violation of the Fugitive Slave Law, before Judge Drummond of the United States District Court, Chicago, Ill. New York, 1860. pp. 12.
=Howe, S. G.= Refugees from the South in Canada West. Report to Freedman's Inquiry Committee. Boston, 1864.
=Hurd, J. C.= The Law of Freedom and Bondage. 2 vols. New York, 1858, 1862.
=----.= Topics of Jurisprudence connected with the Condition of Freedom and Bondage. New York, 1856. pp. ix, 113.
=Hurd, R. C.= Treatise on the Right of Personal Liberty, and on the Writ of Habeas Corpus, and Practice connected with it, with a View of the Law of Extradition of Fugitives. Albany, 1858.
=Joliffe, John.= In the Matter of George Gordon's Pet.i.tion for Pardon.
John Joliffe's Argument for Pet.i.tioner. Cincinnati, 1862.
=Kane, Judge.= District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. United States of America, ex relatione Wheeler, _vs._ Williamson. Opinion of Judge Kane, Oct. 12, 1855.
Philadelphia, 1855. pp. 20.
=Kemble, Frances Anne.= Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1836-39. New York, 1863.
=Kent, J.= Commentaries on American Law. 4 vols. Boston, 1884.
=Kidnapping.= _African Observer_, May, 1837.
=Kingsbury, Harmon.= The Fugitive Slave Bill, its History and Unconst.i.tutionality: with an Account of the Seizure and Enslavement of James Hamlet and his subsequent Restoration to Liberty (with Appendix).
New York, 1850.