First Sentence:
On November 1, 1843, Governor James Henry Hammond of South Carolina received a fateful letter from his brother-in-law Wade Hampton II, one of the wealthiest and most powerful men in the state.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs):
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southern legal culture, southern high courts, southern jurists, incest conviction, southern appellate courts, maternal custody rights, appellate jurists, southern judiciary, paternal custody rights, contractual families, southern bench, parental custody rights, southern legal system, interracial fornication, slave sentenced, custody contests, antimiscegenation legislation, southern judges, household patriarchy, appellate judiciary, tender years doctrine, custody claims, southern courts, antimiscegenation statutes, incestuous intercourse
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs):
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African American, North Carolina, South Carolina, Old South, Georgia Supreme Court, After the Flood, Tennessee Supreme Court, United States, Freedmen's Bureau, New South, Southern Legal Culture, Radical Reconstruction, Louisiana Supreme Court, New Orleans, Keeping the Child, Mississippi Supreme Court, Victorian South, Black Codes, Southern Literary Messenger, American Revolution, Southern Quarterly Review, George Fitzhugh, Wade Hampton, Fourteenth Amendment, Georgia Bar Association
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