The Right of American Slavery is a controversial nineteenth-century political and philosophical tract by T. W. Hoit that presents an argument in defense of the institution of slavery in the United States. Written during the height of national debate over slavery, the work reflects the ideological positions used to justify bondage on legal, moral, and social grounds.
Hoit constructs his case by appealing to constitutional interpretation, historical precedent, and prevailing racial theories of the era. The text provides modern readers with a clear example of pro-slavery reasoning, offering insight into the arguments that abolitionists sought to dismantle and the moral conflict that divided the nation.
As a historical document, The Right of American Slavery is valuable for understanding the intellectual landscape of nineteenth-century America. Preserved as a public domain work, it serves as an important primary source for scholars studying slavery, political ideology, and the roots of sectional conflict.