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Subordinating conjunctions can indeed introduce only clauses and not phrases, and by doing so they make such clauses dependent. However, when the meaning is clear, the subject of the dependent clause can be dropped. This makes the dependent clause (with the subordinating conjunction) sound like a phrase - which is exactly what is happening in this case.

So if you reintroduce the subject and the linking verb in the original sentence, it becomes -

“ Although he was opposing slavery on philosophical grounds, Jefferson owned a plantation with several hundred slaves.“

Grammar-wise there is nothing wrong with this sentence. But meaning-wise the past progressive tense “was opposing” makes little sense. The simple past tense, as suggested by EducationAisle above makes much more sense.

Posted from my mobile device

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