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1 How much stronger, then, is the argument for immediate than gradual abolition !
2 And this is the practical result of the much-lauded plan of gradual abolition .
3 How much stronger, then, was the argument, for immediate than for gradual abolition !
4 The gradual abolition of personal servitude, hardly accomplished in three successive centuries, now began.
5 The act providing for gradual abolition , was, I believe, lost by a single vote.
6 In 1780 the Pennsylvania Legislature passed a law providing for the gradual abolition of slavery.
7 The bill for gradual abolition displeased those who were most deeply interested in the matter.
8 In 1780 Pennsylvania passed a gradual abolition act.
9 Mr. Bathurst and Mr. Hiley Addington preferred a plan for gradual abolition to the present mode.
10 Pennsylvania, gradual abolition by statute, began in 1780; had 64 in 1840.
11 The closing days of Jay's public life included an act for the gradual abolition of domestic slavery.
12 Rhode Island and Connecticut, gradual abolition , 1784.
13 They rendered essential service in promoting the gradual abolition of slavery in New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey.
14 And this, too, is gradual abolition .
15 Mr. Turgot, he said, had recommended in the National Assembly of France the gradual abolition of the Slave Trade.
16 Besides, the plan of gradual abolition has been tried in this country and the West Indies, and found wanting.
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This collocation consists of: Gradual abolition through the time
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