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"The book starts off a little slow. It bombards the reader with a ton of facts that are background, but doesn't formulate the world enough to conceptualize how the events interact.
After about 10% of the book, it improves. Still a lot of details, but once the world of NYC starts to come into focus, it does improve.
Still, the level of detail obfuscates the enjoyability of the story." — Mar 19, 2024 02:25PM
"The book starts off a little slow. It bombards the reader with a ton of facts that are background, but doesn't formulate the world enough to conceptualize how the events interact.
After about 10% of the book, it improves. Still a lot of details, but once the world of NYC starts to come into focus, it does improve.
Still, the level of detail obfuscates the enjoyability of the story." — Mar 19, 2024 02:25PM
their establishments as they pleased. By law, business owners and members of organizations and clubs could exclude any person
Petra X liked this

“In 1804, through intelligence reports obtained by Salcedo, Charles IV, the king of Spain learned that the US government planned to acquire parts of Texas.113 Spanish spies in New Orleans reported that US agents proposed to gain permission to enter Texas under the pretense of capturing runaway slaves. Their actual plan was to convince Caddo and Comanche groups to form military alliances and attack Spanish settlements.”
― The Mexican American Experience in Texas: Citizenship, Segregation, and the Struggle for Equality
― The Mexican American Experience in Texas: Citizenship, Segregation, and the Struggle for Equality
“Wright rose to the challenge and defended himself and Ruggles against Morse’s attacks. In what would later be termed the “higher law” argument that justice and morality superseded the Constitution’s compromise over the return of runaways, Wright maintained that he would continue to call out Boudinot and other members of the New York Kidnapping Club. With God and Christian faith on his side, Wright declared, he would continue to speak out against the kidnapping of free Blacks as well as the return of runaways. “It was enough for me,” Wright responded to Morse, “to know that in the City of New York men, women and children had been arrested and thrown into miserable dungeons, for no offense—but merely because they were claimed as PROPERTY.” Wright reminded Morse and other conservatives that neither the Constitution nor Wall Street’s business ties with southern cotton would trump the immorality of slavery and kidnapping.”
― The Kidnapping Club: Wall Street, Slavery, and Resistance on the Eve of the Civil War
― The Kidnapping Club: Wall Street, Slavery, and Resistance on the Eve of the Civil War
“Justice Josiah Hoffman wrote the opinion for the supreme court, an opinion that proved every bit as favorable to the South as Riker, Wells, and others had hoped. The court declared that the requirement of a jury trial violated the US Constitution because “the legal rights of the Southern Slaveholder are so clearly defined, as at once to mark him, who in any way impede their exercise, as a violator of the public space.”
― The Kidnapping Club: Wall Street, Slavery, and Resistance on the Eve of the Civil War
― The Kidnapping Club: Wall Street, Slavery, and Resistance on the Eve of the Civil War
“A court hearing held in the city of Monterey in 1820 illustrates what was required of escaped slaves hoping to stay in Mexico. To be emancipated and allowed to become immigrants, they had to demonstrate good character and convince a judge or audiencia that they had suffered intolerable cruelty at the hands of their masters. The Monterey hearing dealt with five emancipated African Americans who were given asylum in Texas but were later charged with being part of a band of thieves and stealing a horse. If found guilty, they were to be extradited to the United States.”
― The Mexican American Experience in Texas: Citizenship, Segregation, and the Struggle for Equality
― The Mexican American Experience in Texas: Citizenship, Segregation, and the Struggle for Equality
“If the US claim was correct, it would mean the loss of over 84,000 acres for Texas. Associated with the border dispute were grievances raised against Nemesio de Salcedo y Salcedo, the commander general of the Internal Provinces, who refused to allow US agents to enter Texas in search of runaway slaves. US officials charged that the commander’s interpretation of international-border policy was wrong. Salcedo had informed them that upon entering Texas, slaves gained their freedom and that this policy did not violate international law or the property rights of US slave owners. US official disagreed because Spain’s laws were encouraging slaves from Louisiana and the Carolinas to run away and seek refuge in Texas.”
― The Mexican American Experience in Texas: Citizenship, Segregation, and the Struggle for Equality
― The Mexican American Experience in Texas: Citizenship, Segregation, and the Struggle for Equality

This group is for anyone who enjoys Non Fiction. Genres discussed here include Histories, Autobiographies, Biographies, Memoirs, Science and Technolog ...more

A group to read the General Nonfiction, Biography/Autobiography, and History Books that won or were a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.

Focuses on books, discussions, comments, reviews, and questions on the American Revolution. Just kidding.

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This group is for anyone who loves to read about American history, whether fiction or nonfiction -- US citizen or not! The goal of this group is to bu ...more
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