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| | lowndes |
 | | Hayne was born on a rice plantation, studied in a law office, and was admitted to practice law at the age of 21. |  | | Hayne was elected to the South Carolina legislature in 1814 and became speaker in 1818. |  | | Hayne's position was that a state had the right to nullify a federal law. |
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http://lowndescountycommission.com
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| | Robert Y. Hayne - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography |
 | | Robert Young Hayne (November 10, 1791–September 24, 1839) was an American political leader. |  | | Hayne vigorously opposed the tariff of 1832, was a member of the South Carolina Nullification Convention of November 1832, and reported the ordinance of nullification passed by that body on the November 24. |  | | Resigning from the Senate, he was Governor of South Carolina from December 1832 to December 1834, and as such took a strong stand against President Andrew Jackson, though he was more conservative than many of the nullificationists in the state. |
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http://www.arikah.net/encyclopedia/Robert_Young_Hayne
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| | Hayne, Robert Young -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Daniel Webster, senator from Massachusetts, made it in answer to Senator Robert Young Hayne of South Carolina. |  | | Robert Hayne was born on Nov. 10, 1791, in what is now Colleton County, S.C. He was elected to the state legislature in 1814 and was state attorney general for four years. |  | | Hayne entered the U.S. Senate in 1823 and soon became prominent as a spokesman for the South and for the doctrine of states' rights. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9039670?tocId=9039670
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| | Robert Young Hayne Biography / Biography of Robert Young Hayne Biography Biography |
 | | United States senator Robert Young Hayne (1791-1839), a notable defender of the Southern states'-rights position, distinguished himself in the 1830 Senate debates on the nature of the Union. |  | | Robert Hayne was born on a rice plantation in South Carolina on Nov. 10, 1791. |  | | Hayne based his case on the argument that the Federal government lacked such power, for the territories were joint possessions of all the states. |
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http://www.bookrags.com/biography-robert-young-hayne/index.html
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| | YUBA COUNTY Biographies |
 | | Hayne, the father of our subject, was the elder of two sons born to Robert Young Hayne, American statesman, born in St. Paul’s Parish, Colleton County, S. C., November 10, 1791; he studied law at Charleston, and at the age of twenty-one was admitted to practice at the bar. |  | | Hayne was married in San Francisco, in 1899, to Miss Maud Bourn, a native of that city and a daughter of W. and Sarah (Chase) Bourn, both natives of Massachusetts. |  | | A brother of Governor Hayne, A. Hayne, was Jackson’s adjutant general, and distinguished himself at the Battle of New Orleans. |
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http://www.cagenweb.com/yuba/bios/hayne.htm
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| | Robert Haynes: Information From Answers.com |
 | | Hayne resigned from the Senate (1832) and was governor of South Carolina (1832–34) at the time the nullification convention met. |  | | Hayne upheld the doctrines of states' rights and nullification, thus provoking Webster's impassioned defense of a nationalistic interpretation of the Constitution. |  | | Colleton District, S.C. Having served in the South Carolina legislature (1814–18) and as attorney general of South Carolina (1818–22), Hayne was a U.S. Senator (1823–32) and gained attention as a leading Southern spokesman against the tariff. |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/robert-haynes
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| | Hayne, Paul Hamilton |
 | | Hayne lost his father while he was still an infant and was raised by his mother in the home of a prosperous and cultured Charleston uncle, Robert Y. Hayne, who was a notable orator who served in the United States Senate. |  | | Paul Hamilton Hayne was born in Charleston, South Carolina, on January 1, 1830. |  | | Hayne, after the war, adopted Georgia as his home. |
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http://www.wvu.edu/~lawfac/jelkins/lp-2001/hayne.html
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| | RobertYoungHayne.htm |
 | | Resigning from the Senate to serve as governor (1832-34) of South Carolina, Hayne upheld his state's NULLIFICATION of the tariff of 1832 but accepted the compromise tariff of 1833. |  | | Elected to the U.S. Senate in 1822, Hayne became a leading opponent of the protective tariff of 1828 (see TARIFF ACTS). |  | | After serving (1835-37) as mayor of Charleston, Hayne involved himself in the promotion of railroad construction. |
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http://www.libarts.ucok.edu/history/faculty/roberson/course/1483/suppl/chpXIII/RobertYoungHayne.htm
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| | Find A Grave - Search Results for "HAYNE" |
 | | He was a wealthy young rice planter who fought for independence during the American Revolution. |  | | Hayne Hall Plantation Burial Ground, Jacksonboro, Colleton County, South Carolina, USA |  | | Elected to represent Ohio's 7th and 10th Districts in the United States House of Representatives, serving from 1889 to 1893. |
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http://www.findagrave.com/php/famous.php?page=name&firstName=&lastName=HAYNE
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| | Daniel Webster And the War on the Second Bank of the United States |
 | | Senator Hayne followed Webster’s speech with one of his own in which he introduced on the floor of the Senate, the speculative theory of ‘nullification’ whereby an individual state could declare a Federal Law ‘null and void’. |  | | Webster also took several swipes at Senator Hayne, defending the North’s protective tariff and arguing for a stronger ‘Union’ not a weaker one. |  | | There is also a famous painting of Daniel Webster debating Hayne, standing among his peers on the floor of the Senate, which hangs today in Fanuiel Hall in Boston. |
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http://earlyamerica.com/review/2004_winter_spring/webster2.htm
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| | The Supreme Court Historical Society |
 | | With William Wirt as Attorney General (see article, "The Many-Sided Attorney General," by Joseph C. Robert in YEARBOOK 1976), Webster's appearance at the Supreme Court bar at this turning-point in history seemed predestined. |
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http://www.supremecourthistory.org/04_library/subs_volumes/04_c15_j.html
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| | South Carolina SC - Robert Young Hayne - 1832-1834 |
 | | South Carolina Governors Robert Young Hayne, 1832-1834 |  | | On December 10, 1832, the South Carolina General Assembly elected Hayne for governor by secret ballot. |  | | 1833 Governor Hayne presided over the convention that rescinded the Ordinance of Nullification |
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http://www.sciway.net/hist/governors/hayne.html
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| | 2003_07.html |
 | | He became a renowned surgeon chief on Robert E. Lee's staff during the Civil War. |  | | Bernard's mother, Isabelle, was the daughter of Sailing Wolfe, a young merchant and planter of Winnsboro, and Sara Cohen, daughter of Rabbi Hartwig Cohen of Charleston. |  | | Young Simon Baruch worked for Baum as a bookkeeper and, with Baum's help, taught himself English. |
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http://www.jquinton.com/archives/2003_07.html
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| | Thomas' Life |
 | | Already recognized as a leader of the Ohio Bar, in January of 1828 he was admitted to practice before the United States Supreme Court, joining the company of such brilliant practitioners as Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, and Robert Young Hayne. |  | | The young lawyer, like so many who followed the same profession, soon developed a taste for politics. |  | | In 1830, Ewing was elected, on the Whig ticket, to the U.S. Senate in which he served until 1837 and in which he is said to have held his own in public debate with such renowned contemporaries as Webster, Clay and Calhoun. |
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http://www.sandcastles.net/lifete.htm
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| | Judge Rules Against Lindh Reporter (Robert Young Pelton) |
 | | His ruling means that for the time being freelance reporter Robert Pelton is required to testify next week at Lindh's pretrial hearing. |  | | Pelton has denied claims he was acting as an agent of the government, and his lawyers argued that his safety and his ability to gather news as an independent journalist would be harmed if he were forced to testify. |  | | Lindh's lawyers subpoenaed Pelton, arguing he was essentially acting as an agent of the U.S. government when he interviewed Lindh at a U.S. military hospital after Lindh was captured. |
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/715357/posts
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| | Daniel Webster: Definition and Much More From Answers.com |
 | | This angered Southern leaders and brought Webster into dispute with South Carolina's Robert Young Hayne, who argued that his state had the right to overturn this particular piece of legislation. |  | | Webster, however, was successful in defending his stance in a Senate debate of 1830, culminating in his second reply to Hayne [2] (http://www.dartmouth.edu/~dwebster/speeches/hayne-speech.html) in which he uttered the famous phrase, "liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable". |  | | In politics Webster along with Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun formed what was called a "great triumvirate," though the three seldom combined except in opposition to President Andrew Jackson. |
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http://www.answers.com/topic/daniel-webster
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| | Books By Robert Young Hayne - Page 1 |
 | | Robert Y. Hayne (of South Carolina) on the reduction of the tariff, delivered January 9, 1832, in the Senate of the United States, on a motion to amend Mr. |  | | Hayne, of South Carolina, in reply to Mr. |  | | Hayne and Webster in the United States Senate on the Resolution of Mr. |
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http://store.rbftpnetworks.com/author_Robert+Young+Hayne
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| | CNN.com - Transcript of John Walker interview - July 4, 2002 |
 | | PELTON: Why didn't you ask some Americans or foreigners to help you... |  | | I was with the separate branch of the non-Afghans. |  | | WALKER: I'm sure you're familiar with the story, but we had arranged with the (inaudible) government that we would pass through his territory, we would (inaudible) from Kunduz, passing through his territory to Herat. |
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http://archives.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/central/12/20/ret.walker.transcript
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| | Home Page |
 | | In 1830 his eminence as an orator reached its culmination in his reply to the speech of Robert Young Hayne, senator from South Carolina, on the nature of the Union and the states' right of nullification. |  | | He chose Senator Robert Dole of Kansas as his running mate and succeeded in narrowing Democrat Jimmy Carter's large lead in the polls, but finally lost one of the closest elections in history. |  | | She was therefore very grateful when a young man, Almanzo Wilder, a local farmer and brother of her old teacher, offered to drive his sleigh through howling gales and freezing temperatures each weekend to bring her home. |
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http://www.arches.uga.edu/~wprokasy/relatives.htm
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | He resigned to fill the vacancy in the Senate caused by the resignation of Robert Young Hayne, senator form South Carolina. |  | | 1966- Robert C. Weaver became first Black presidential cabinet member when sworn in as Secretary of Housing and Urban Affairs, (Johnson Administration) |  | | The vice-presidents ran as separate offices in his day and he served under John Quincy Adams from March 4, 1825 to March 4, 1829 and under President Andrew Jackson from March 4, 1829 to December 28,1832. |
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http://www.leasingnews.org/American_History/mar_18.htm
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| | The Great Debate Between Robert Young Hayne Of South Carolina And Daniel Webster Of Massachusetts. - SWIFT, LINDSAY (EDITOR); WEBSTER, DANIEL; HAYNE, ROBERT YOUNG. |
 | | The Great Debate Between Robert Young Hayne Of South Carolina And Daniel Webster Of Massachusetts. |  | | Title: The Great Debate Between Robert Young Hayne Of South Carolina And Daniel Webster Of Massachusetts. |  | | Keywords: (Key Words: Daniel Webster, Robert Hayne, Slavery, Government Land Dispersal, Congress, Debate, Speech, Politics). |
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http://www.adinfinitumbooks.com/si/17930X1.html
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| | Smythe OnLine |
 | | Robert Young Hayne (1791-1839) was U. Senator from South Carolina (1823-1832) and Governor of South Carolina (1832-1834). |  | | His father, Robert Young Hayne, signed as president of the railroad. |  | | He was noted for his brilliant debate with Daniel Webster over the Nullification Doctrine in the Tariff Controversy of 1832. |
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http://www.smytheonline.com/news/art_03.php
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| | Webster and Harrison |
 | | South Carolina's Robert Young Hayne argued the states- right's position Daniel Webster took the pro-national government side (he was from Massachusetts) and argued that nullification was dangerous to the integrity of the nation. |  | | In response to South Carolina's assertion of is right of nullification, debates were held in Congress to determine policy. |  | | Elected to House then Senate for Massachusetts; opposed 1824 protective tariff bill but changed his view under influence of New England industrial interests- supported 1828 tariff. |
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http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~mwfriedm/terms/david8.html
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| | U.S. states S-U |
 | | Dec 1856 - Dec 1858 Robert Francis Withers Allston (b. |  | | 9 Jul 1868 - 7 Dec 1872 Robert Kingston Scott (b. |  | | 1717 - 1719 Robert Johnson (1st time) (b. |
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http://www.worldstatesmen.org/US_states_S-U.html
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| | HAYNE, Robert Young (1791-1839) Bibliography |
 | | Robert Y. Hayne and the Sale of David Ramsays History of the United States. South Carolina Historical Magazine 86 (January 1985): 72-74. |  | | Langley, Harold D. Robert Y. Hayne and the Navy. South Carolina Historical Magazine 82 (October 1981): 311-30. |  | | Jervey, Theodore D. Robert Y. Hayne and His Times. |
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http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/bibdisplay.pl?index=H000398
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| | Alibris - Click here to find books by this author! |
 | | Hayne, Arlene N. Hayne, David ~ Hayne, David M. Hayne, Harlene ~ Hayne, Paul H. Hayne, Paul Hamilton ~ Hayne, Robert Young |  | | Hazell, Martin ~ Hazell, Peter B. Hazell, Rebecca ~ Hazell, Robert |  | | Headrick, Daniel R. Headrick, Linda ~ Headrick, Robert J. Headrick, William W. Headridge, J. Heads, Ian |
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http://www.alibris.com/authors/authors0178.html
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| | Jackson,Samuel_C. |
 | | In March 1833, Jackson attended several nullification meetings, and, in April, attended the annual Presbytery in Salem, S.C., where he stayed with planter and Democratic congressman Robert Witherspoon (1767-1837). |  | | He frequently referred to the activities and statements of such leaders of the debate as William Drayton (1766-1846), Robert Y. Hayne (1791-1839), and Joel R. Poinsett (1779-1851). |  | | Jackson began his journey back to Massachusetts on 2 May 1833, recording in his diary brief comments on the parts of North Carolina and Virginia through which he travelled. |
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http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/j/Jackson,Samuel_C.
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