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         Calhoun John C:     more books (41)
  1. Life of John C. Calhoun, presenting a condensed history of political events from 1811 to 1843 by R M. T. 1809-1887 Hunter, John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, 2010-06-24
  2. Speeches of John C. Calhoun. Delivered in the Congress of the United States from 1811 to the present time by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, 2010-06-25
  3. Speeches of Mr. Calhoun, of South Carolina, on the ten regiment bill; and in reply to Mr. Davis, of Mississippi, and Mr. Cass by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, 2010-08-08
  4. The prophet Joseph Smith's views on the powers and policy of the government of the United States: to which is appended the correspondence between the Prophet ... candidates for the presidency of the Uni by Joseph Smith, John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, et all 2010-08-12
  5. Onslow in reply to Patrick Henry. Originally published in the National intelligencer by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, 2010-06-24
  6. Mr. Calhoun's address to the people of the southern states by John C. (John Caldwell) Calhoun 1782-1850, 1849-12-31
  7. The works of John C. Calhoun by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, Richard K. 1800-1864 Crallé, 2010-09-11
  8. Correspondence between Gen. Andrew Jackson and John C. Calhoun ... on the subject of the course of the latter, in the deliberations of the cabinet of Mr. Monroe, on the occurrences in the Seminole War by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, Andrew Jackson, 2010-08-18
  9. A letter to the Honorable John C. Calhoun, vice-president of the United States, Robert Y. Hayne, senator of the United States, George M'Duffie, of the ... Jr. Governor of the State of South Ca by Thomas Smith Grimké, John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, 2010-08-02
  10. Speech of Mr. Calhoun, of South Carolina, on the Sub-treasury bill: delivered in the Senate ... February 15, 1838 by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, 2010-09-04
  11. The works of .. by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, 2010-08-09
  12. A disquisition on government, and A discourse on the Constitution and government of the United States by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, Richard K. 1800-1864 Cralle, 2010-07-30
  13. The works by John C. 1782-1850 Calhoun, Richard K. 1800-1864 Crallé, 2010-09-11
  14. Letter addressed to the Hon. John C. Calhoun, on the law relating to slaves, free negroes, and mulattoes by John C. (John Caldwell) Calhoun 1782-1850, 1845-12-31

61. John CalhounBiography
John C. Calhoun (17821850). John Caldwell Calhoun was secretary of war,vice-president, senator, secretary of state, and a political philosopher.
http://web2.ccpl.org/prvEmployees/HTML/scienceproject/OnlineExhibits/ncw/Calhoun
JOHN C. CALHOUN
John Caldwell Calhoun was secretary of war, vice-president, senator, secretary of state, and a political philosopher. He was born near Abbeville, S.C., on March 18, 1782, the son of a slave-holding upcountry farmer. At the age of fourteen, he attended Moses Waddell's Log College in Georgia, entered the junior class at Yale College, graduating in 1804. Calhoun next studied law at Tapping Reeve's school in Litchfield, Conn., and joined Henry W. DeSaussure's law office in Charleston. In 1807 he was admitted to the bar and proceeded to open a law office at Abbeville. Calhoun's first entered politics as a member of the South Carolina Legislature, serving a three year term from 1809 to 1811. He next joined Congress in 1811 as a War Hawk (a young nationalist who urged war with England to vindicate American honor). President James Monroe appointed him Secretary of War in 1817 and with the President's Cabinet he was a staunch supporter of the full use of federal power to nurture American industry through a protective tariff. The Secretary also promoted commerce through the Bank of the United states, and federal financial assistance for the construction of roads, canals and harbor projects. Calhoun attempted to succeed James Monroe as President in 1824, but withdrew when he was offered the opportunity to serve as John Quincy Adams' Vice President. His views on federal power changed as South Carolineans became increasingly dependent on slavery for the cultivation of cotton. He no longer believed the South's interests could be served by an active federal government fostering commerce and industry, and in 1828 secretly authored the South Carolina Exposition and Protest which asserted a state had the power of Nullification over any federal law it deemed unconstitutional.

62. John CalhounConservingMonument
The present statue of John C. Calhoun (17821850), one of South Carolina s mostillustrious citizens, overlooks one of Charleston s busiest streets.
http://web2.ccpl.org/prvEmployees/HTML/scienceproject/OnlineExhibits/ncw/Calhoun
CONSERVATION TREATMENT FOR THE JOHN C. CALHOUN MONUMENT
MARION SQUARE, CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA
History of the Monument
The present statue of John C. Calhoun (1782-1850), one of South Carolina's most illustrious citizens, overlooks one of Charleston's busiest streets. For over one hundred years the Carolina statesman has faced the street that bears his name on Marion Square, formerly Citadel Square, between Meeting and King Streets. Charleston's Ladies' Calhoun Monument Association is credited with raising $27,000 to erect the first statue of Calhoun executed by A.E. Harnish, a 19th Century Philadelphia artist. Later, a counterpart Charleston gentleman's association raised an additional $16,000 for a bronze statue mounted on a Carolina granite pedestal, surrounded by four allegorical figures-Truth, Justice, the Constitution and History-although only one the allegorical figures was actually added. The cornerstone of the monument, laid in Citadel Square on June 28, 1858, contained several items in the hole beneath the cornerstonea cannon ball recovered from the harbor and used during the Battle of Fort Moultrie), a case containing a banner carried by seamen in Calhoun's funeral procession, $100 in Continental money, a lock of Calhoun's hair, lists of names of government officials, and the last speech which Calhoun delivered in the U.S. Senate. The unfinished monument was unveiled on April 26, 1887, and Charleston's residents quickly dubbed the statue, "Calhoun and his wife." The ladies association from the beginning were dissatisfied with the final result. Calhoun's pose and his Prince Albert

63. Calhoun Bio: The Online Library Of Liberty
John C. Calhoun (17821850). Updated October 9, 2004 Union and Liberty ThePolitical Philosophy of John C. Calhoun
http://oll.libertyfund.org/Intros/Calhoun.php
var ol_fgcolor = "#FEFFC6"; THE ONLINE LIBRARY OF LIBERTY
John C. Calhoun (1782-1850) Updated: October 9, 2004 ELECTRONIC TEXTS ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Electronic Texts
Book Title (ToC) Date HTML Econlib HTML Facs. PDF E-Book (PDF) Online Catalog A Discourse on the Constitution and Government of the United States 525 KB in stock A Disquisition on Government ... in stock Essay Title Source (ToC) HTML PDF
About the Author
Calhoun is one of the most important American politicians and political theorists in the first half of the 19th century. He served as a member of the House of Representatives, Secretary of War, Vice-President, and Senator. In his writings he was concerned with states rights, tariff policy, limits to federal power and majority rule, and slavery. For more information see the Editor's Foreword to the Liberty Fund edition of Union and Liberty: The Political Philosophy of John C. Calhoun, ed. Ross M. Lence (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 1992)

64. Calhoun Bio: The Online Library Of Liberty
John C. Calhoun (17821850) see the Editor s Foreword to the Liberty Fundedition of Union and Liberty The Political Philosophy of John C. Calhoun, ed.
http://oll.libertyfund.org/Home3/Author.php?recordID=0063

65. Calhoun - The Man
John C. Calhoun – The Cast Iron Man Biography. John Caldwell Calhoun, (17821850),kal-hoon , American statesman and political philosopher.
http://www.ssbn630.org/misc/CalhounTheMan/Jccjohnc.htm
USS John C. Calhoun (SSBN-630) Veterans Association
JOHN CALDWELL CALHOUN
"THE CAST IRON MAN"
"I hold the duties of life to be greater than life itself, and that in performing them, even against hope, our labor is not lost. I regard this life very much as a struggle against evil, and that to him who acts on proper principal, the reward is on the struggle more than in victory itself." This compilation was obtained through the sources shown on the last page.
Steve Richey (ET 63-68 Blue)
JOHN C. CALHOUN – The Cast Iron Man
Biography
John Caldwell Calhoun, (1782-1850), kal-hoon', American statesman and political philosopher. From 1811 until his death he served in the federal government, successively as congressman, secretary of war, vice president, senator, secretary of state, and again as senator. Always he was at the heart of the issues of his time, notably the nullification crisis and the conflict over slavery. Loyal to his nation, to his state of South Carolina, and, above all, to his principles, he sought to preserve the union while advancing Southern interests. To understand John C. Calhoun, it becomes necessary to understand the times in which he lived and where his loyalties, convictions and principles lay. John C. Calhoun’s father was Patrick Calhoun Jr. Patrick was born on the 11th of June 1727 in Donegal County, Ireland, and died on the 15 of January, 1796 in Abbeville District of South Carolina.

66. PS: Political Science & Politics : John C. Calhoun, Lani Guinier, And Minority R
Current Article John C. Calhoun, Lani Guinier, and minority rights. back tothe process of government advocated by John C. Calhoun (17821850).
http://static.highbeam.com/p/pspoliticalscienceamppolitics/june011995/johnccalho
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    • Current Article: John C. Calhoun, Lani Guinier, and minority rights.
    Start P June 01, 1995 John C. Calhoun, Lani Guinier, and minority rights.
    John C. Calhoun, Lani Guinier, and minority rights.
    Safford, John L.
    June 01, 1995
    Early in the first year of his presidency, Bill Clinton floated the name of Lani Guinier to be the Justice Department's chief civil-rights lawyer. Although Guinier never made it to Senate confirmation hearings, she was well qualified by education and professional training. Moreover, as a black Jewish female, it was evident to her that majoritarian democracy is often less than fair - and she was forthright about wishing to correct it by democratic means.
    Ironically, the minority veto, one of the alleged means by which Guinier wished to assure fairness, harkened back to the process of government advocated by John C. Calhoun (1782-1850). For Calhoun, constitutionalism or limited government was justified by epistemological nominalism, and was ensured by the concurrent majority and nullification.
    Like that of Aristotle, James Madison, and Karl Marx, Calhoun's political philosophy was based on class analysis. Indeed, the historian of American thought, Richard

67. Vice Presidents
John C. Calhoun (17821850) Democratic Republican Served under John QuincyAdams, 1825-1829. John C. Calhoun (1782-1850) Democrat Served under Andrew
http://www.usahistory.com/presidents/vicepres.htm
United States History
Vice Presidents of the United States
Return to home page

Return to presidents page

John Adams (1755-1826) -Federalist Served under George Washington, 1789-1797. Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) -Democratic Republican Served under John Adams, 1797-1801.
Aaron Burr (1756-1836) -Democratic Republican Served under Thomas Jefferson, 1801-1805.
George Clinton (1739-1812) -Democratic Republican Served under Thomas Jefferson, 1805-1809.
Elbridge Gerry (1744-1814) -Democratic Republican Served under James Madison, 1813-1814.
Daniel D. Tompkins (1774-1825) -Democratic Republican Served under James Madison, 1813-1814.
John C. Calhoun (1782-1850) Democratic Republican Served under John Quincy Adams, 1825-1829.
John C. Calhoun (1782-1850) Democrat Served under Andrew Jackson, 1829-1832. Martin Van Buren (1782-1862) Democrat Served under Andrew Jackson, 1833-1837. Richard M. Johnson (1780-1850) Democrat Served under Martin Van Buren, 1837-1841. John Tyler (1790-1852) Whig Served under William H. Har son, 3/4/1841-4/4/1841. George M. Dallas (1792-1864) Democrat Served under James K. Polk 1845-1849.

68. Elms And Magnolias: The 19th Century
John C. Calhoun (17821850) b. Abbeville District, South Carolina, Class of 1804 John C. Calhoun to Jedediah Morse, February 7, 1820
http://www.library.yale.edu/mssa/elms/19th.htm
E lms and M agnolias T he th C entury
Calliopean Society
Secession at Yale

The Southern Club at Yale
C alliopean S ociety
The Catalogue of Members of the Calliopean Society , a Yale literary society, formed in 1819. The society was formed when a "Southern" party within the Linonia Society broke away because of the election of a Northern president within the society. Until its dissolution in 1853, the Calliopean Society was composed of students from the Southern States.
J ohn C C alhoun C assius C lay
John C. Calhoun (1782-1850)
b. Abbeville District, South Carolina, Class of 1804

Calhoun served as Congressman, Secretary of War, Vice-President, Secretary of State, and Senator during his long tenure in U.S. politics. He is credited for having "influenced the political history of the United States more than any other graduate in the first two centuries of Yale's history." His state rights philosophy was central to the formation of the Southern Confederacy.
John C. Calhoun to Jedediah Morse, February 7, 1820
As Secretary of War, Calhoun authorized Reverend Morse to enter the territories occupied by Native Americans and serve as a missionary and observer. Morse would later be given $10,000 to fund his work among the tribes.
Augustus Baldwin Longstreet (1790-1870)
b. in Augusta, Georgia, Class of 1813

69. Daniel Webster The Ashburton Treaty
Calhoun, John C. (John Caldwell), 17821850. Statesmen United States Biography.United States Politics and government 1815-1861. E339 .
http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/classes/diplo/websterashburton.html

70. Calhoun County, Illinois, USA
Named for John C. Calhoun. John Caldwell Calhoun 17821850 was a lawyer,statesman, and champion of Southern rights. He served as a US Representative and
http://www.outfitters.com/illinois/calhoun/
Calhoun County, Illinois, USA
The Kingdom of Calhoun (or Calhoun County, Illinois, USA) is a long peninsula between the Mississippi & Illinois Rivers. Much of the Kingdom of Calhoun is virtually an island between two great rivers. The northern border to the "mainland" is less than 17 miles wide. The only other connections are the lone bridge from Hardin to East Hardin, Illinois, and four ferry routes.
Named for John C. Calhoun
John Caldwell Calhoun [1782-1850] was a lawyer, statesman, and champion of Southern rights. He served as a US Representative and a US Senator from South Carolina, Secretary of War under President Monroe, Vice-President of the United States[1825-1832] under US Presidents John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, and Secretary of State under US President John Tyler. Calhoun is recognized as the "Father of Nullification" [States Rights], a political idea that any state could nullify any federal law that the state felt was unconstitutional. The idea surfaced from 1798-1802, but was not tested until 1832, when passage of a tariff law aroused the anger of Southerners and John C. Calhoun. President Jackson opposed the idea of nullification, and the controversy contributed to Calhoun's resignation from the US Vice Presidency in 1832. Calhoun did not leave politics. From his position in the US Senate, he was a powerful spokesman in support of slavery and the rights of the Southern states. Although he died ten years before the outset of the Civil War, Calhoun's name is intertwined in most discussions of the causes of the war.

71. Chapter Orators And Statesman Of Index By Simonds History Of American Literature
Representing the South in the arena of political debate were John C.Calhoun (17821850) and Henry Clay (1777-1852); while the names of Rufus Choate
http://www.bibliomania.com/2/3/270/1820/21944/1.html
Orators and Statesman
II. ORATORS AND STATESMAN
Daniel Webster, 1782-1852.
His Life.
Among the men conspicuous in public life, who by reason of their argumentative skill and the power of their eloquence were the nation's leaders during the critical years of the century, the first to be mentioned is Daniel Webster. No more commanding personality has ever moved among American statesmen. His portrait after those of Washington and Lincoln is the most familiar of those in our national gallery. So impressive was he in presence, so leonine in feature, that his personal appearance struck every listener with awe. "That amorphous, crag-like face; the dull black eyes under the precipice of brows, like dull anthracite furnaces needing only to be blown ; the mastiff mouth, accurately closed" this is the way in which Carlyle described his picture. He was an acute reasoner as well as an eloquent speaker. His famous arguments in the Dartmouth College case (1818) and in the White murder case at Salem (1830) are models of logical structure. His orations at the two hundredth anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims (1820), at the laying of the corner-stone of Bunker Hill Monument (1825), and at the completion of the monument (1843) are noted examples of his eloquence. It was his self-appointed task to guard the integrity of the Constitution; and it was this idea which inspired the best known of all his great addresses, the Reply to Hayne , delivered in the United States Senate in 1830. It was his devotion to the Union and the preservation of national unity which led to his support of compromise measures when the separation of South and North seemed imminent; and it was this which brought forth the speech on the seventh of March, 1850, the speech which aroused the indignation of the anti-slavery party in New England and drew from Whittier that scathing utterance of disappointment and grief, the poem

72. AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY: America's Coming Of Age
John C. Calhoun (17821850). John C. Calhoun (picture) was a statesman andpolitical philosopher. He was vice-president (1825-32) of the United States and a
http://radicalacademy.com/amphilosophy3.htm
Adventures in Philosophy AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY Select a Category... Ancient Philosophy Medieval Philosophy Modern Philosophy Recent Philosophy American Philosophy Islamic Philosophy Jewish Philosophy Political Philosophy Eastern Philosophy American Philosophy Index Academy Resources Glossary of Philosophical Terms Philosophy Search Engine Timeline of Philosophy A Timeline of American Philosophy ... Books about Religion in The Radical Academy Bookstore Shop Amazon Stores in the Radical Academy Bookstore
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for Powell's Books FREE newsletter and you may win $100 worth of books. Select: Introduction: The Abolitionists Henry Ward Beecher John C. Calhoun
Joseph Alden
... Robert Green Ingersoll AMERICA'S COMING OF AGE INTRODUCTION The Abolitionists: During the Civil War, as the organized movement dissolved, many individual abolitionists pushed Abraham Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation (1863). After the war they still lobbied for constitutional amendments and civil rights laws to protect the newly emancipated slaves. Others raised funds to support black education programs in the old slave states and served in the South as teachers, ministers, and political reformers. The intensity of effort ended, however, with the passage in 1865 of the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery, the goal for which the abolitionists had fought.

73. Calhoun And Popular Rule: The Political Theory Of The Disquisition And Discourse
Although John C. Calhoun (17821850) remains one of the major figures in Americanpolitical thought, many of his critics have tried to discredit him as
http://www.umsystem.edu/upress/fall2004/cheek.htm
UNIVERSITY OF M ISSOURI PRESS

Calhoun and Popular Rule
The Political Theory of the
Disquisition
and Discourse
H. Lee Cheek, Jr.
ISBN 0-8262-1548-3
216 pages
6 x 9
bibliography, index, 2004
$19.95s paper
"Definitive." Clyde Wilson, Editor, The Papers of John C. Calhoun "In sum, this is a rich and well-argued book. It not only forces its thoughtful readers into a serious reconsideration about the political thought and theory of John C. Calhoun, but, at its best, forces them to reconsider the nature, purpose, and future prospects of the American regime." American Political Science Review "Perhaps even the best single study of Calhoun's political thought." Civil War History "Though it is largely unrealized today, John C. Calhoun may have been our nation's foremost theoretical defender of communal interests and cultural diversity. Cheek's book goes a long way toward reminding us why Calhoun's portrait still hangs with the likes of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster in the United States Senate." Perspectives on Political Science Calhoun and Popular Rule makes a substantial contribution to understanding Calhoun's `reflective journey' and the value of popular rule then and now."

74. WHMC-Columbia--Daniel Dunklin, Papers, 1815-1877 (C97)--INVENTORY
of Senator Thomas Hart Benton, and was an ardent supporter of John C. Calhoun . Bull, John; Burnette, Micajah; Calhoun, John Caldwell (17821850)
http://www.umsystem.edu/whmc/invent/0097.html
Daniel Dunklin (1790-1844), Papers, 1815-1877 (C97)
.6 linear feet
INTRODUCTION
The correspondence, financial, and miscellaneous papers of the fifth governor of Missouri. The correspondence is especially rich in the discussion of Missouri elections and of the leading political issues in Missouri and in the United States from 1829 to 1835.
DONOR INFORMATION
The Daniel Dunklin Papers were deposited with the University of Missouri by Charles Holman on 27 February 1957, 9 April 1957, and 8 August 1957 (Accession No. 3314). Additions were made by Samuel Richeson c. 13 January 1956 (Accession No. 3257), by Wesley Duncan on 18 March 1957 (Accession No. 3312), by Mrs. Fred L. Young on 14 September 1957 (Accession No. 3326), and by Lois Holman on 8 December 1994 (Accession No. 5498). Betty Olson donated Dunklin material to the State Historical Society of Missouri on 16 February 1989 (SHS Accession No. 2731).
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Daniel Dunklin was born in Greenville, South Carolina, on 14 January 1790 to Sarah (Sullivan) and Joseph Dunklin, Jr. In 1805 Joseph obtained land and built a home in Caldwell County, Kentucky, in order to move his family from South Carolina. After returning to South Carolina to retrieve his family, Joseph died. Sarah carried out Joseph's plan and relocated her family to Kentucky. In 1810 Daniel obtained a Spanish land grant and settled near Mine-a-Breton (Potosi), Missouri. On 2 May 1815 Daniel married Emily Willis Pamela Haley of Mercer County, Kentucky. They raised five daughters and one son: Mary W., Emily, James L., Sarah, Eliza, and Jane Caroline. The Dunklins built a two-story brick house near Riverside in 1840. On 25 August 1844 Dunklin died of pneumonia at the age of 54. He is buried on the bluffs of the Mississippi River, north of Herculaneum. (For more Dunklin genealogy, please consult reference staff about Collection #995, v.16, #450 and view the WHMC-C reference policies and procedures

75. Address To The U.S. Senate, 29 July 1846, Of John Caldwell Calhoun (South Caroli
Manuscript, 29 July 1846, address of John Caldwell Calhoun (17821850) before the US The text of Calhoun s remarks was printed in The Papers of John C.
http://www.sc.edu/library/socar/uscs/2000/calhoun.html
SOUTH CAROLINIANA LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY SOUTH CAROLINIANA SOCIETY
MANUSCRIPTS DIVISION Manuscripts 2000 Front Page Previous Issues Friends of the Library ... Search USC
Address to the U.S. Senate, 29 July 1846, of
John Caldwell Calhoun
M anuscript, 29 July 1846, address of John Caldwell Calhoun (1782-1850) before the U.S. Senate in debate over the Oregon question with Senators William Allen of Ohio and Lewis Cass of Michigan. The text of Calhoun's remarks was printed in The Papers of John C. Calhoun, the National Intelligencer, The Congressional Record, and a number of newspapers. This manuscript is in two hands, neither of which is Calhoun's; neither are the emendations in his hand, and there are other variants from the version printed in The Papers of John C. Calhoun.
URL http://www.sc.edu/library/socar/uscs/2000/calhoun.html

76. Conservative Book Service
If you hear about John C. Calhoun (17821850) at all nowadays, it s from liberalswho try to tar him as a Southern-partisan relic whose thought was
http://www.conservativebookservice.com/products/SearchResults.asp?ProdCat=E&Prod

77. Calhoun Coat Of Arms
Some noteworthy people of the name Calhoun. John C. Calhoun (17821850) Americanpolitician; Rory Calhoun (1923-) American actor; John Caldwell Calhoun
http://www.houseofnames.com/xq/asp.c/qx/calhoun-coat-arms.htm
Satisfaction Guaranteed What is the Calhoun Coat of Arms ? Where did the name Calhoun come from? When did the Calhoun family first arrive in the United States? Where did the various branches of the Calhoun family go?
Coat of Arms
> Calhoun Coat of Arms
Calhoun Coat of Arms
Calhoun
Origin Displayed: Scottish
Spelling variations include: Colquhoun, Colhoun, Colhoon, Cahoun, Cohoun, Cahoon, Cohoon, Culquhoun, Cahune, Cohune, Cowquhone, Colquhone, Culquhown, Cahoone, Calhoun, Kalhoun, Kulhoun, Kolhoun, Calhoon, Calloon, Culloone, Collune and many more. First found in Angus where they were seated from very ancient times, some say well before the Norman Conquest and the arrival of Duke William at Hastings in 1066 A.D. Some of the first settlers of this name or some of its variants were: Mary Cahoone who settled in New York in 1803; John Colquhoon settled in Boston Mass in 1651; Archibald Colquhoon and his wife Anne settled in Wilmington N.C. in 1775. (Above is a small excerpt from our 1800 word history) Motto Translated: If I can.

78. Lebanese Forces Official Forums - Need Your Comments
state is the one he lives in it Sen.John c.Calhoun(17821850) what doyou think? You have forgotten to mention in what context the above statement
http://www.lebanese-forces.org/vbullet/archive/index.php/t-2786.html
Lebanese Forces Official Forums Lebanese Forces Forum Lebanese Forces Political Forum PDA View Full Version : Need your comments Hippie 10-26-2002, 07:57 AM "Liberty then,when forced on a people unfit for it,would,instead of a blessing,be a curse,the man's natural state is the one he lives in it"
Sen.john c.Calhoun(1782-1850)
what do you think? Ghassan 10-26-2002, 10:25 AM [updated:LAST EDITED ON Oct-26-02 AT 11:36 AM (GMT)]>"Liberty then,when forced on a people unfit for
>state is the one he lives in it"
You have forgotten to mention in what context the above statement was made. It was from a speech of the South Carolina Senator John C. Calhoun on "the Importance of Domestic Slavery".
This statement was wrong and it died when the South lost the American Civil War. It is very similar to the calls the Syrian puppets make in Lebanon these days(e.g: Kandil, Sabounji, Berri and the likes)
If you are trying to imply that the calls for freedom from the Lebanese opposition are wrong because we ought to accept the current "natural" status quo, my answer is that we refuse to live under the Syrian occupation and we refuse to live as "Dhimmeh" people under an islamic rule.
Buttom line is that we refuse to live as slaves and we can not justify any statement that advocates for slavery whether it came from
Calhoun or from any of those Lebanese puppets.

79. Anecdote - John Caldwell Calhoun - Vice President Calhoun
Years later, in 1824, John C. Calhoun became vice president. Calhoun, JohnCaldwell (17821850) American politician, Vice President of the United States
http://www.anecdotage.com/index.php?aid=11350

80. History / Primary Sources Page 3
Calhoun, John C. (John Caldwell), 17821850. The Papers of John C. Calhoun.Edited by Robert L. Meriwether. Columbia Published by the Univ. of South
http://www.wcmo.edu/library/information_resources/bibliographies/history3.asp
Home Reeves Library Research Tools Bibliographies History / Primary Sources Page 3 September 10, 2005 Reeves Library
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History / Primary Sources Page 3 A bibliography of primary sources in history available at Reeves Library and Winston S. Churchill Memorial Library, Westminster College, and Dulany Library, William Woods University. Addendum Adams, John, 1735-1826.
The Works of John Adams, Second President of the United States: With a Life of the Author, Notes and Illustrations Reeves E 302 .A26 Adams, John, 1735-1826.
Reeves E 302 .A28 Adams, Samuel, 1722-1803.
The Writings of Samuel Adams Dulany E 302 .A31 1968 Franklin, Benjamin, 1706-1790.
Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiographical Writings Reeves E 302 .F7 A2 1945 Franklin, Benjamin, 1706-1790.
The Writings of Benjamin Franklin Reeves E 302 .F82 1905 Franklin, Benjamin, 1706-1790. The Papers of Benjamin Franklin Reeves E 302 .F82 1959 (Also in Dulany, Vols. 1-17) Hamilton, Alexander, 1757-1804. The Papers of Alexander Hamilton . Harold C. Syrett, editor. New York : Columbia Univ. Press, 1961-1987. 27 Vols. Reeves E 302 .H2 1961 (Also in Dulany)

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