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Oh yes - and taxed very heavily too.
In 1808, the law forbidding the foreign slave trade that had been signed into law by Thomas Jefferson in 1807, went into effect. A stipulation in the constitution that prohibited the end of the trade until 1808, prohibited acting on this for another year. The new laws were somewhat loosely enforced with Britain â??deportingâ?? slaves into the United States until 1860 and it remaining a viable trade in Britain in the 19th century.
Bricks
They heavily taxed all domestic production.
glass
a great Britain taxed heavily on british
Existing trade routes were heavily taxed.
Heavily taxed by the British government.
glass
Much like they are today; Heavily taxed by the corrupt ruling class.
yes. No, it should be heavily taxed to pay for cleaning it from public places.
Clarification is needed for your question to be correctly answered: Northern who? Northern businesspeople, northern politicians, northern farmers? Do you mean that someone called for the sale of slaves to be taxed, or something else? I believe that as long as slavery was recognized - as it was in the Constitution until the 13th amendment - slaves were considered like any other property. But I don't know of any specific case of someone calling for them to be taxed.