good index. See especially Vol. II, pp. 205- 

 263 on Negro Slavery. 



7. Flint, C. L. Agriculture in the United States, 



in Eighty Years' Progress, 1861, Vol. I, pp. 

 19-102. See Table of Contents, under appro- 

 priate headings. 



8. Hammond, M. E.The Cotton Industry. Pub- 



lications of the American Economic Associa- 

 tion, New Series, No. 1, 1897, Chapters II, 

 III. Printed also in Carver: Selected Read- 

 ings in Rural Economics, pp. 267-301. 



9. Hart, A. B. Slavery and Abolition, in The 



American Nation, Vol. XVI, Chapters IV, V, 

 VI, VII. 



10. Helper, H. R. The Impending Crisis (1860), 



pp. 11-122, 281-413. 



11. Ingle, Edward. Southern Sidelights. A Pic- 



ture of Social and Economic Life in the South 

 a Generation before the Civil War, 1896. 



12. Jacobstein, M. The Tobacco Industry in the 



United States, in the Columbia University 

 Studies, Vol. XXVI, No. 3, 1907, Part I, 

 Chapter II. 



13. McCay, C. F. Cotton Culture, in Eighty Years' 



Progress, 1861, Vol. I, pp. 103-124. ' 



14. McMaster, J. B. History of the People of the 



United States, Vof. VII, Chapter 76. 



15. Olmsted, F. L. Journeys and Explorations in 



the Cotton Kingdom. (Two volumes, London, 

 1861.) A traveler's observations on cotton 

 and slavery in the American Slave States. 

 These two volumes are based on earlier vol- 

 umes on journeys and investigations in the 

 Southern States, by the same author. 



16. Page, T. N. The Old South (1892). 



17. Phillips, U. E.The Economic Cost of Slave 



Holding in the Cotton Belt, in The Political 

 Science Quarterly, Vol. XX, pp. 257-275. 



47 



