onstitution,"
Univ. of Wis. _Bulletin_, pp. 8, 9, and citations. Note especially "New
Hampshire State Papers," x, pp. 228 _et seq._
[111:2] Libby, _loc. cit._, pp. 12-14, 46, 54-57.
[112:1] Farrand, in _Yale Review_, May, 1908, p. 52 and citation.
[112:2] Libby, _loc. cit._
[112:3] See Turner, "Rise of the New West" (Amer. Nation series, N. Y.,
1906), pp. 16-18.
[112:4] Parkman, "Pontiac" (Boston, 1851), ii, p. 352.
[112:5] Shepherd, "Proprietary Government in Pennsylvania," in Columbia
Univ. _Studies_, vi, pp. 546 _et seq._ Compare Watson, "Annals," ii, p.
259; Green, "Provincial America" (Amer. Nation series, N. Y., 1905), p.
234.
[113:1] Lincoln, "Revolutionary Movement in Pennsylvania" (Boston,
1901); McMaster and Stone, "Pennsylvania and the Federal Constitution"
(Lancaster, 1888).
[114:1] "Notes on Virginia." See his table of apportionment in Ford,
"Writings of Thomas Jefferson," iii, p. 222.
[115:1] "Debates of the Virginia State Convention, 1829-1830" (Richmond,
1854), p. 87. These debates constitute a mine of material on the
difficulty of reconciling the political philosophy of the Revolution
with the protection of the property, including slaves, of the lowland
planters.
[115:2] _Loc. cit._, p. 407. The italics are mine.
[116:1] McCrady, "South Carolina, 1719-1776," p. 623.
[117:1] Brevard, "Digest of S. C. Laws," i, pp. xxiv, 253; McCrady,
"South Carolina, 1719-1776," p. 637; Schaper, "Sectionalism in South
Carolina," in Amer. Hist. Assoc. "Report," 1900, i, pp. 334-338.
[117:2] Schaper, _loc. cit._, pp. 338, 339; Calhoun, "Works" (N. Y.,
1851-59), i, p. 402; _Columbia_ (S. C.) _Gazette_, Aug. 1, 1794; Ramsay,
"South Carolina," pp. 64-66, 195, 217; Elliot, "Debates," iv, pp. 288,
289, 296-299, 305, 309, 312.
[117:3] Schaper, _loc. cit._, pp. 440-447 _et seq._
[118:1] Turner, "Rise of the New West," pp. 50-52, 331; Calhoun,
"Works," i, pp. 400-405.
[118:2] "N. C. Colon. Records," vii, pp. xiv-xvii.
[118:3] See Bassett, "Regulators of N. C." in Amer. Hist. Assoc.
"Report," 1894, pp. 141 (bibliog.) _et seq._; "N. C. Colon. Records,"
pp. vii-x (Saunder's introductions are valuable); Caruthers, "David
Caldwell" (Greensborough, N. C., 1842); Waddell, "Colonial Officer"
(Raleigh, 1890); M. De L. Haywood, "Governor William Tryon" (Raleigh, N.
C., 1903); Clewell, "Wachovia," chap. x; W. E. Fitch, "Some Neglected
History of N. C." (N. Y., 1905); L. A. McCorkle and F. Nash, in "N. C
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