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THE AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE

... French settlements, where the resp ; principles of liberty and the rights of xiien are Bo much less regarded. The American pro-slavery 0 e papers, headed by the unprincipled New York1 Iierald, Eec are pointing to this new device of the old oppressors mee of ...

Published: Saturday 18 July 1857
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 911 | Page: 4 | Tags: Commerce 

THE PROVISIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE MANCHESTER TRADES PROTECTION SOCIETY TO THE TRADES OF THE UNITED KINGDOM

... turn it to your salvation, if you please. The means to gain your own elevation, and to emancipate your brethren from the slavery under which you have grown, are in your own bands; for with all your poverty you have thirty millions of pounds in the Savings ...

PRICES OF SHARES IN LEEDS

... zoolous on behalf of slavery t ., to as be used to be, a charge which ha indignantly denies. In I f of a speech made by him at St. Louis, this last summer, he t king gives us his view of the attitude of the north, in rergard to f L his slavery. He tells us that ...

Published: Saturday 23 October 1852
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 2687 | Page: 8 | Tags: Commerce 

THE PROVISIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE MANCHESTER TRADES PROTECTION SOCIETY TO THE TRADES OF THE UNITED KINGDOM

... turn it to your salvation, if -you please. The means to gain your own elevation, and to emancipite your brethren from the slavery under which you have grown, are in your own bands; for with all your poverty you have thirty millions of pounds in the Savings ...

ATTEMPTS TO REVIVE THE SLAVE TRADE

... since the great work of emancipation, our own '1 Pt West India planters have at times endeavoured to set be is up a modified slavery, and to bring the resident free di ar negroes more under their control, by schemes of what la te they call free immigration ...

Published: Thursday 02 July 1857
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1137 | Page: 2 | Tags: Commerce 

RICHARD OASTLER ON FREE-TRADE

... hive. I Most likely those veri.ees would be the first to sting me, so fondly do our English working men I hug the chains of slavery and poverty, unaer the charmed word-freedom of aneson, Free Trade; failing to preceivo, that without regulation-Pro- tection-there ...

GOOLE SHIPPING LIST

... when we remember that Tom owned a swift pair of leg, and the it was not impos- sible for him to cross the Ohi6 river !-Anti-Slavery Pilot. .VAIUE OF COAL-TAR PAINT IN GARDENS,-A gardener having occasion to newly paint the woodwork in the Interior of his ...

Published: Tuesday 12 July 1859
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 626 | Page: 1 | Tags: Commerce 

THE LEEDS MERCURY

... numbers by natural increase. tin Ad We allude chiefly to the island of Cuba. At the rec e annual mneeting of the London Anti-Slavery Society, api x- held at Freemason's Tavern, in May last, LORD his !Y B1)ROUGHAM in the chair, MR. T. H. GLADSTONE, a Ev y ...

Published: Thursday 18 November 1858
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 770 | Page: 2 | Tags: Commerce 

THE FREE TRADE CONGRESS AT BRUSSELS

... or compromise, was made, that slavery stools1 never exist north of 36, .30' masrth lattitude. For thirty years this lagreement bad been aclhored to. It was gsa vitally repea, ed. Brute force -waseplydt establish slavery ili Kanlsas, the northern portion ...

Published: Saturday 27 September 1856
Newspaper: Leeds Mercury
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 8186 | Page: 5 | Tags: Commerce 

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF UNITED TRADES

... escmpi from slavery he has earned m. a subsistence by exhibiting, in the free staties 'of n-Armerica, a panorama of some of the appaLlimg' by scenes resulting from the existence of slavery. He' to also delivered lectures agaiiist slavery, and thiiri ur ...

Trades' Intelligence

... and admiration of the world ?? So much for their general attributes. Then if we descend to particulars, we are told that slavery is as exotic that cannot root in the free soil of l3ritain: that for a slave to plant but his foot upon Britii soil his manacles ...

Trades' Intelligence

... and admiration of the world ?? So much for their general attributes. Then if we descend to particulars, we are told that slavery is an exotic that cannot root in the free soil of Britain; that for a slave to plant but his foot upon British soil his manacles ...