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Centennial History Of Illinois - By Alvord, Clarence Walworth -- CONTENTS -- CHAPTER I. THE LAND AND THE PEOPLE . ....... 1 11. Trrs NEW STATE GOVERNMENT. 1818-1828 . .. 33 I11 . TEN YEARS OF STATE FINANCE ....... 52 . XV . THE CONVENTIOK STRUGGLE ........ 70 V a THE WAR OK NINXAN EDWARDS ....... 92 V1 . THE RISE OF JACKSOXIAN DBMOCRACY . . 114 VI I . STATE POLITICS. r 830-1834 ......... 136 Vllf . THE LAST OF THE INDIANS ......... 150 IX . THE SLEXENT OF THE NORTH ....... 173 X . TZIE IXTERNAL IMPROVEMENT SYSTEM ..... rgq XI . THE WRECK OF THE INTERNAL IICIPROVEMENT SYSTEM. x837-18qz ........... 2r6 XI1 . THE STRUGGLE FOR PARTY REGUMITY. 1834-1838 . 236 XI11 . THE WHIG AND DEMOCRATIC PARTIES THE CON- VENOK SYSTEM ............ 251 XIV . THE PASSIKCOFTHII OLD DEMOCRACY ..... 265 XV . STATE POLITICS. I 84e1847 ......... 278 XVI . STATE AXD PRIVATE BANKING. 1830-1845 .... 303 XVII . THE INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT SYSTEM THE SOLUTIOX .............. 316 XVIIL THE SLLTOFTHE DEBIOCRATZC PARTY. 1846-1848 . 327 XIX . THE MORRIDN WAR 340 XX . THE XXI . ILLINOIS XXII . SOCIAL. EDUCATIONAL. ............ .......... ........... D RELGIOUS ADVANCE. .............. SLAVERY QUESTION 363 IX FERMEKT 383 BIBLIOGRAPHY .............. 443 INDEX 455 ................
In the antebellum Midwest, Americans looked to the law, and specifically to the jury, to navigate the uncertain terrain of a rapidly changing society. During this formative era of American law, the jury served as the most visible connector between law and society. Through an analysis of the composition of grand and trial juries and an examination of their courtroom experiences, Stacy Pratt McDermott demonstrates how central the law was for people who lived in Abraham Lincoln’s America. McDermott focuses on the status of the jury as a democratic institution as well as on the status of those who served as jurors. According to the 1860 census, the juries in Springfield and Sangamon County, Illinois, comprised an ethnically and racially diverse population of settlers from northern and southern states, representing both urban and rural mid-nineteenth-century America. It was in these counties that Lincoln developed his law practice, handling more than 5,200 cases in a legal career that spanned nearly twenty-five years. Drawing from a rich collection of legal records, docket books, county histories, and surviving newspapers, McDermott reveals the enormous power jurors wielded over the litigants and the character of their communities.
Eugene H. Berwanger's study of anti-slavery sentiment in the antebellum West is as resoundingly important now, in a new paperback edition, as when first published in 1967. In The Frontier against Slavery, Berwanger attributes the social and political climates of the states and territories Ohio River Valley pioneers settled before 1860 to racial prejudice. Drawing from newspaper accounts, political speeches, correspondence, and legal documents, Berwanger reveals that the whites-only sentiments of the pioneers, rather than humanitarian concern for African Americans, limited the expansion of slavery. This whites-only prejudice shaped laws in the majority of western states and territories that excluded all African Americans, enslaved or free, from citizenship, evidencing the deep-rooted discrimination of political leaders and pioneers.