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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Lydia Maria Child, Letters of Lydia Maria Child (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier, Wendell Phillips, Harriet Winslow Sewall). Search the whole document.
Found 38 total hits in 18 results.
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 154
To Mrs. S. B. Shaw. Wayland, 1873.
As for the poor Indians, would to heaven they had education and newspapers to tell their side of the story!
The pages you inclosed scarcely give a glimpse of the real facts that caused the Seminole war. The Seminoles were adopting civilized modes of life.
They were devoting themselves to agriculture, and had established a friendly relation with their neighbors.
But the slave-holders of Georgia wanted to drive them out, because they coveted their lands, and still more because their slaves were prone to take refuge with them.
This had been going on for generations, and the fugitives had largely intermarried with the Indians.
The slave-holders not only claimed their slaves that had escaped, but their children and grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren, on the ground that the child follows the condition of the mother.
It was to satisfy them that Jackson got up the war. It was not Osceola's wife and children only that were seized and carr
Wayland (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 154
To Mrs. S. B. Shaw. Wayland, 1873.
As for the poor Indians, would to heaven they had education and newspapers to tell their side of the story!
The pages you inclosed scarcely give a glimpse of the real facts that caused the Seminole war. The Seminoles were adopting civilized modes of life.
They were devoting themselves to agriculture, and had established a friendly relation with their neighbors.
But the slave-holders of Georgia wanted to drive them out, because they coveted their lands, and still more because their slaves were prone to take refuge with them.
This had been going on for generations, and the fugitives had largely intermarried with the Indians.
The slave-holders not only claimed their slaves that had escaped, but their children and grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren, on the ground that the child follows the condition of the mother.
It was to satisfy them that Jackson got up the war. It was not Osceola's wife and children only that were seized and carr
United States (United States) (search for this): chapter 154
France (France) (search for this): chapter 154
Osceola, Mo. (Missouri, United States) (search for this): chapter 154
Osceola (search for this): chapter 154
Richard Grant (search for this): chapter 154
Stanley (search for this): chapter 154
Jack (search for this): chapter 154
Philip Sheridan (search for this): chapter 154