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INDEX

TO THE SELECTIONS FROM WEBSTER.

A.

"ACCEDE," a word not found in the Constitution, 162.

Adams and Jefferson, coincidences in the death and lives of, 62.

members of the committee to prepare the Declaration of Inde-
pendence, 72.

Adams, John, birth and education, 66.

admitted to the bar, 66.

defends British officers and soldiers, 67.

a remarkable letter of, 68.

delegate to Congress, 69.

important resolution, reported by, 72.

power in debate, 76.

knowledge of colonial history, 77.

supposed speech in favor of independence, 80.

minister abroad, 84.

delegate to Massachusetts Convention, 84.

Vice President and President of the United States, 85.

his description of the first prayer in Congress, 307.

Adams, Samuel, delegate to Congress, 307.

anecdote of, 307.

Addition to the Capitol, address at the laying of the corner stone of the,

409.

brief account of the proceedings of the day, in Mr. Webster's
handwriting, deposited beneath the corner stone, 416.
Aix-la-Chapelle, stipulation in regard to slaves in the treaty of, 397.
Albany, speech delivered to the young men of, 392.

speech at a dinner, same day, 405.

America, her contributions to Europe, 292.

familiarity with republican principles at the commencement of
the revolution, 38.

American government, elements of, 292.

American people, prepared for popular government, 55.

American Revolution, its purposes, 163.

effect of, 163.

commenced in New England, 23.

Ancestry, respect for, 14.

Anti-slavery conventions, proceedings of, 387.
Appointing and removing power, speech on, 215.
Architecture, improvement in, 104.

Gothic, 105.

Asiento, stipulation respecting slaves in the treaty, 397.

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Berkeley, Bishop, 338.

Boston, Mechanics Institution of, 98.

citizens of, present a Vase to Mr. Webster, 228.

violation of law in, 434.

Brewster, Elder William, supposed address of, 375.

Brooks, Governor John, first president of the Bunker Hill Monument

Association, 65.

Buffalo, reception of Mr. Webster at, in 1833, 178.

its trade, 179.

reply to the mechanics and manufacturers of, 180.
reception of Mr. Webster at, in 1851, 379.

speech delivered on the occasion, 379.

Bunker Hill Battle, address to the survivors of, 47.
Bunker Hill Monument, laying the corner stone of, 42.
Mr. Webster's address, 42.

completion of the, 280.

Mr. Webster's address, 280.

C.

CALHOUN, J. C., attack upon Mr. Webster, 272.

an honest nullifier, 262

California, establishment of a local government in, 344.

its declaration of independence, and discovery of gold in, 344.
Society of Pilgrims of, 376.

Capitol, extension of, 409.

brief account of the proceedings of the day, in Mr. Webster's
handwriting, deposited beneath the corner stone, 416.

foundation of, laid by Washington, 418.

Charleston, S. C., arrival of Mr. Webster at, 316.
dinner of the New England Society at, 318.

Chatham, Lord, his opinion of the first Congress, 70.

Chief Justice of the United States, a Roman Catholic, 372.
Christianity, importance of teaching children the elements of, 305.
Christian ministry established by Christ, 301.

work of the, 302.

Christian ministry and religious instruction of the young, speech on, in
the Supreme Court, 296.

Clergy, eulogium on, 298.

Colonists, English, character of, 290.

Columbia, S. C., reception of Mr. Webster at, 322.

Columbus, portrayed, 43.

Commerce, extent of power of Congress to regulate, 271.

between the States, 267.

Common Schools of New England, 259.

Compromise Measures, 361.

Confederation, object of, 382.

Congress of Delegates at Philadelphia, in 1774, 69.

sat with closed doors, 76.

Congress of the United States, has no power over slavery in the States,

237.

has power over slavery in the District of Columbia, 237.
Constitution which was adopted on board the Mayflower, 373.
Constitution of the United States, characters of its founders, 137.
meeting in Boston, in favor of adopting, 193.

peculiarities of, 233.

founded on compromise, 235.

not a compact between sovereign States, 157, 166, 167.

preamble of, 445.

provision of, in regard to fugitive slaves and apprentices, 397.

Constitution and the Union, speech for, 341.

Cotton, influence of its production upon the south and upon slavery,

351.

Currency, important question respecting, 265.

cannot be maintained by the States of uniform value, 268.

power of Congress to regulate, (extract from Mr. Madison's mes
sage,) 271.

D.

DANGER from executive patronage, 218.

Declaration of Independence, committee to prepare, 72.

Deposits, removal of, 200.

Dissolution of the Union, evils of, 156.

Duché, Rev. Mr., anecdote of, 307.

E.

EDUCATION, effect of its diffusion, 26, 259.

Effects of instructions to members of Congress, 365.

Emigration, a common incident, 17.

English language, its correct use in the United States, 291.
English race, its extension, 17.

Eulogium on General Taylor, 362.

Europe in the nineteenth century, 46.

her power annihilated in America, 46.

Exchange, cause of difference in, 266.

Expunging resolution, Constitution violated by, 248.

F.

FARROW, Mr., his address to Mr. Webster, on behalf of the students
of South Carolina College, 323.

Festival of the sons of New Hampshire, 328.

Fillmore, President, address to, at the laying of the corner stone of the
addition to the Capitol, 425.

First commandment of the Decalogue fountain of all revealed truth, 303
Foot's Resolution, speech on, 108.

last remarks on, 125.

Franklin, Benjamin, 72.

French Chambers, a member rejected from, for giving pledges to con

stituents, 366.

French and Indians, New Hampshire settlements attacked by, 332.

Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, 386.

more favorable to the fugitive than the law of 1793, 400.
the two objects of, 399.

Fugitives from labor, to be surrendered, 384.

G.

GEORGIA, her patriotism, 326.

the abundance of her resources, 326.

Girard, Stephen, suit of his heirs, 296.

Girard College, provision of Girard's will respecting no Sabbath in, 305.
Government, its nature and constitution, 24.

difficulty of establishing, 55.

its duty respecting currency, 279.

its permanency, 56, 138.

Government, American, its origin and character, 24.

its protection to persons and property, 139.
Granite, its use in architecture, 106.

Greece, revolution in, 32.

our obligations to, 33.

has accomplished much, 38.

propriety of the appointment of agents to, 39.

Greeks, sympathy for, 39.

H.

HAMILTON, Alexander, his services, 134.

Hamilton, General James, at a meeting of the Charleston New England
Society offered a sentiment to the memory of Robert Y.
Hayne, 321.

Hancock, John, recommends association for protecting navigation, 191.
presides over Congress, 79.

signature to the Declaration of Independence, 442.

Harrington, quoted, 25.

Harvard College, 22.

objects of its foundation, 27.

Haven, Messrs. John and others, letter to, 426.

Hayne, Robert Y., eulogium on, 322.

Holmes, Oliver W., quoted, 421.

Hume, his remarks on the administration of justice, 141.

I.

IMMORTALITY, yearning of the soul for, 305.

Inauguration of Washington, 136.

Indiana, its growth, 257.

internal improvement of, 257.

Indians and French, dangers from, 332.

Internal improvements, 243.

in New England, 23.

influence of, 223.

principles of, 261.

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