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6197
Date Created1844-07
DescriptionArticle from the New Jersey Freeman about the use of tobacco. This article is temperance related and thus shows another side to the purpose of the New Jersey Freeman. The article itself condemened...
6198
Date Created1845-06
DescriptionArticle from the newspaper, the New Jersey Freeman about drinking. The article reports that out of a group of ten men, who spent one night in a bar drinking; three are now in a "drunkard's grave"...
6199
Date Created1844-09
DescriptionArticle from New Jersey Freeman claiming some sections in Virginia believed that slavery was not against the Bible. These sections also claimed that the Bible supports slavery.
6200
Date Created1844-10
DescriptionPoem from the New Jersey Freeman about the life of a slave boy. The poem talks about the depressing conditions of slave life, but ends with hope that the bonds of slavery will be broken.
6201
Date Created1844-09
DescriptionPoem from New Jersey Freeman about the country riding a train to emancipation
6202
Date Created1844-09
DescriptionArticle from the New Jersey Freeman about a Colonel's feelings towards the difference between drinking wine and whiskey. The colonel believed it was ok to drink wine because it was done in private,...
6203
Date Created1844-09
DescriptionPoem from the New Jersey Freeman about a disgusted wife, who condemned her husband's smoking habit. The poem says the husband promised to quit smoking when the wife accepted to wed him, but never...
6204
TitleTexas
Date Created1844-09
DescriptionArticle from the New Jersey Freeman about the way the prospect of annexing Texas will effect the Presidential election of 1844. The writer opposed the annexation supposedly not on the grounds that it...
6205
Date Created1865
DescriptionPoem by Asa Pyatt that recounts the burning of the South, the defeat of the Confederate states' attempt to secede from the union, and the political defeat of Jeff Davis.
6206
TitleLines
Date Created1845-06
DescriptionAn anti-slavery poem from an Anti-slavery convention expressing the courage and conviction of the anit-slavery cause. "We will not bate a letter, nor take a letter back."