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Negro President Jefferson and the Slave Power

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ISBN-10: 0618343989

ISBN-13: 9780618343980

Edition: 2003

Authors: Garry Wills, Garry Wills

List price: $25.00
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Description:

In "Negro President," the best-selling historian Garry Wills explores a controversial and neglected aspect of Thomas Jefferson's presidency: it was achieved by virtue of slave "representation," and conducted to preserve that advantage.Wills goes far beyond the recent revisionist debate over Jefferson's own slaves and his relationship with Sally Heming to look at the political relationship between the president and slavery. Jefferson won the election of 1800 with Electoral College votes derived from the three-fifths representation of slaves, who could not vote but who were partially counted as citizens. That count was known as "the slave power" granted to southern states, and it made some…    
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Book details

List price: $25.00
Copyright year: 2003
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company
Publication date: 11/1/2003
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Size: 6.25" wide x 8.50" long x 1.50" tall
Weight: 1.034
Language: English

Garry Wills, 1934 - Garry Wills was born in Atlanta, Georgia in 1934. Wills received a B.A. from St. Louis University in 1957, an M.A. from Xavier University of Cincinnati in 1958, an M.A. (1959) and a Ph.D. (1961) in classics from Yale. Wills was a junior fellow of the Center for Hellenic Studies from 1961-62, an associate professor of classics and adjunct professor of humanities at Johns Hopkins University from 1962-80. Wills was the first Washington Irving Professor of Modern American History and Literature at Union College, and was also a Regents Professor at the University of California in Santa Barbara, Silliman Seminarist at Yale, Christian Gauss Lecturer at Princeton, W.W. Cook…    

Key to Brief Citations
Prologue: Coming to Terms with Jefferson
Introduction: The Three-Fifths Clause
Before 1800
Pickering vs. Jefferson: The Northwest
Pickering vs. Jefferson: Toussaint
"Second Revolution"
1800: Why Were Slaves Counted?
1800: The Negro-Burr Election
1801: Jefferson or Burr?
1801 Aftermath: Turning Out the Federalists
Pickering in Congress
1803: The Twelfth Amendment
1803: Louisiana
1804: Pickering and Burr
1804-1805: Impeachments
1808: Embargo
1808: Pickering and Governor Sullivan
1808: Pickering and J. Q. Adams
1809-1815: Pickering and Madison
The Pickering Legacy
J. Q. Adams: The Federal (Slave) District
J. Q. Adams: Petition Battles
Epilogue: Farewell to Pickering
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index