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

 263 on Negro Slavery. 



7. Flint, C. L. — Agrinilture 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. B. — 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. ]\IcCay, 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, Vol. 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. ^ .—The Old South (1892). 



17. Phillips, U. B. — The Economic Cost of Slave 



Holding in the Cotton Belt, in The Political 

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



47 



