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Davis, Jefferson, 1808-1889

"The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government"


_Inaugural address_ of the author as President of the Confederate
States, 232.
_Incendiaries_, trained in scenes of Kansas strife, 31.
_Independence_ of North Carolina and Rhode Island while not members of
the Union, 112;
relations between them and the United States, 112;
letter from the Governor of Rhode Island, 112.
_Indiana Territory_, petitions for the suspension of the Ordinance of
1787,
prohibiting slavery, 8;
action on the petitions, 8;
subsequent action and resolutions, 9.
_Insurrection, An_, was it? 325.
_Introduction_, The, 1.
_Irrepressible conflict_, how the declaration of, arose, 34.
"_Is thy servant a dog?_" its use in the United States Senate, 34.
_Invasions of States_, no right in the Federal government to, 411;
words of the Constitution, 411;
deemed a high crime, 411;
response of Governors to President Lincoln's call for troops, 411.
_Invention_ exhausted itself in the creation of imaginary "cabals,"
"conspiracies," and "intrigues," 200;
examples, 209.

Jackson, General T. J., skill and daring in checking the enemy's forces
in June, 1861, 344;
character, 454;
letter proposing a movement into the Shenandoah Valley, 455;
letter of the President, 457.
Jackson, Governor of Missouri, reply to Mr. Lincoln's call for troops,
412;
issues a call for fifty thousand volunteers, 421;
words of the Governor, 421;
his efforts to preserve the peace, 422;
his declarations, 422;
demands of the Federal officers, 422;
his march, 459;
its results, 459.


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