Ugur Aybar
Ana Bjelogrlic
Melissa Umali
Ruthie West
Communication 460
Public Discourse in American Communities, 1634-1900
Professor Klumpp
1. Livingstone, David.
"The Emancipation Proclamation, the Declaration
of Independence, and the Presidency: Lincoln's Model of Statesmanship."
Perspectives on Political Science 28 (Fall 1999): 203-209.
2. Smith, Ralph R., and Russel R. Windes. "Symbolic Convergence and
Abolitionism: A Terministic Reinterpretation." The Southern Communication
Journal 59 (Fall 1993): 45-59.
3. Wyly-Jones, Susan. "The 1835 Anti-Abolition Meetings in the South:
A New Look at the Controversy over the Abolition Postal Campaign." Civil
War History 47 (Dec. 2001): 289-309.
4. Korngold, Ralph. Two Friends of a Man: The Story of William Lloyd
Garrison
and Wendell Phillips and their Relationship to Abraham Lincoln.
Boston: Little, 1950.
5. Medler, Keith. "Forerunners of Freedom: The Grimke Sisters in
Massachusetts, 1837-1838." Essex Historical Collections. 103.3.
1997:223-249
6. Foner, Eric and John A. Gavraty. History Channel. 2003. Houghton
Mifflin Company. 19 Oct. 2003 http://www.historychannel.com/perl/print_book.pl?ID=35024
7. US National Archives and Records Administration. 2003. Digital Classroom.
19
Oct. 2003 http://www.archives.gov/digital_classroom/constitution_community.html
8. The Crusade Against Slavery 1830-1860 (2003). Retrieved October
20, 2003, from
http://www.entireearth.com/online
library/slavery
9. Abolition of the Slave Trade (2003). Retrieved October 19, 2003,
from
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Lslavery33.htm
10. Stewart, James Brewer. "Wendell Phillips: Liberty's Hero." American
Historical Review 9.3. Apr. 1998: 504.
Images Taken
From:
www.amcivilwarbiography.homestead.com
www.loc.gov/exhibits/african/afam007.html
www.progibition.history.ohio-state.edu