2013.
Arguably our most obscure president, and generally judged mediocre at best, Millard Fillmore came to the presidency in July 1850 when his predece
Electronic resource
Nova Science Publisher's, Inc.,
9781628086720
Electronic resource
Millard Fillmore : the limits of compromise
First Men, America's Presidents Series - Peterson, Barbara Bennett (Oregon State University), S
First Men, America's Presidents Series - Peterson, Barbara Bennett (Oregon State University), S.
Rowland, Thomas J., 1952-
Thomas J. Rowland (Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, WI, USA).
2013
Millard Fillmore : the limits of compromise
Madison House,
9780945612100
Book
A Great and good man : George Washington in the eyes of his contemporaries
Kaminski, John P.
McCaughan, Jill Adair, 1968-
University of Wisconsin--Madison. Center for the Study of the American Constitution.
New York State Commission on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution.
Virginia Commission on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution.
edited by John P. Kaminski and Jill Adair McCaughan ; sponsored by the Center for the Study of the American Constitution, the New York Commission on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution [and] the Virginia Commission on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution.
1989
A Great and good man : George Washington in the eyes of his contemporaries
2013.
Abraham Lincoln occupies a unique place in the American pantheon. Symbol, sage, myth and martyr, he is an American icon - Honest Abe and The Grea
Electronic resource
Cambridge University Press,
9781107313989
9781139034784
Electronic resource
Abraham Lincoln : political writings and speeches
Lincoln : political writings and speeches
Cambridge texts in the history of political thought
Cambridge texts in the history of political thought.
Political Writings and Speeches -- Autobiographical sketch (c. June 1860) -- "The Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions": Address to the Springfield Young Men's Lyceum (January 27, 1838) -- Limits of Presidential Power: To William H. Herndon (February 15, 1848) -- Speech on the Kansas-Nebraska Act (October 16, 1854) -- To Joshua F. Speed (August 24, 1855) -- Speech on the Dred Scott Decision (June 26, 1857) -- "A House Divided" Speech: Acceptance Speech for the Republican Senatorial Nomination (June 16, 1858) -- Portion of a Speech at Edwardsville, Illinois (September 11, 1858) -- Seventh Lincoln-Douglas Debate: Lincoln's Reply (October 15, 1858) -- On Thomas Jefferson: To Henry L. Pierce and Others (April 6, 1859) -- Cooper Union Address (February 27, 1860) -- Speech at Indianapolis, Indiana (February 11, 1861) -- Speech at Independence Hall, Philadelphia (February 22, 1861) -- First Inaugural Address (March 4, 1861) -- Message to Congress in Special Session (July 4, 1861) -- Appeal to Border-State Representatives for Compensated Emancipation (July 12, 1862) -- Address on Colonization to a Committee of Colored Men (August 14, 1862) -- To Horace Greeley (August 22, 1862) -- Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation (September 22, 1862) -- Proclamation Suspending the Writ of Habeas Corpus (September 24, 1862) -- Second Annual Message to Congress (December 1, 1862) -- Final Emancipation Proclamation (January 1, 1863) -- To General John A. McClernand (January 8, 1863) -- To Erastus Corning and Others (June 12, 1863) -- To Matthew Birchard and Others: Reply to the Ohio Democratic Convention (June 29, 1863) -- To James C. Conkling (August 26, 1863) -- Gettysburg Address (November 19, 1863) -- Third Annual Message to Congress (December 8, 1863) -- Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction (December 8, 1863) -- Reply to the New York Working-men's Democratic Republican Association (March 21, 1864) -- To Albert G. Hodges (April 4, 1864) -- To Charles D. Robinson (August 17, 1864) -- Reply to a Southern Woman (December 6, 1864) -- "With Malice toward None": Second Inaugural Address (March 4, 1865) -- Speech on Reconstruction (Lincoln's last speech) (April 11, 1865) -- Notes and Fragments -- On Government (1854?) -- On Slavery (1854?) -- On Slavery and Democracy (1858?) -- On Pro-slavery Theology (1858?) -- On the Struggle against Slavery (c. July 1858) -- On Racial (In)equality 1: First Lincoln-Douglas Debate (August 21, 1858) -- On Racial (In)equality 2: Fourth Lincoln-Douglas Debate (September 18, 1858) -- Declaration of Independence includes all men: Fifth Lincoln-Douglas Debate (October 7, 1858) -- On Slavery, Property, and the Constitution: Fifth Lincoln-Douglas Debate (October 7, 1858) -- On Labor and Capital 1 (1846 or 1847) -- On Labor and Capital 2: Address to the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society (September 30, 1859) -- On Labor and Capital 3: Speech at New Haven, Connecticut (March 6, 1860) -- On Liberty: Address at Sanitary Fair, Baltimore, Maryland (April 18, 1864) -- On the Thirteenth Amendment (abolition of slavery): Fourth Annual Message to Congress (December 6, 1864).
Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865.
Ball, Terence.
edited by Terence Ball.
2013
Abraham Lincoln : political writings and speeches
Bobbs-Merrill,
Book
The political thought of Abraham Lincoln
The American heritage series,
Gettysburg address.
American heritage series (New York, N.Y.) ;
The development of principles, 1832-1854 -- "I am young and unknown" : Appeal to the voters of Sangamo County, 1832 -- "I shall consider the whole people" : Letter to the Sangamo Journal, 1836 -- "The perpetuation of our political institutions" : Address before the Springfield Young Men's Lyceum, 1838 -- "When there shall be neither a slave nor a drunkard" : Address before the Springfield Temperance Society, 1842 -- "The guarantee of the rights of conscience" : Resolutions on anti-Catholic riots, 1844 -- "By the fruit the tree is to be known" : Letter on the Liberty Party and Texas, 1845 -- "The truth of the Scriptures" : Reply to charges of irreligion, 1846 -- "No one man should hold the power" : Letter on the President's war-making power, 1848 -- "The right ... to revolutionize" : Resolutions on Hungarian independence, 1852 -- "The white-man's charter of freedom" : Eulogy on Henry Clay, 1852 -- The challenge of slavery, 1854-1861 -- "This question of slavery extension" : Speech on the Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854 -- "Others say ... I am an abolitionist" : Letter to Joshua F. Speed, 1855 -- "The Declaration of Independence includes all men" : Speech on the Dred Scott decision, 1857 -- "A house divided against itself" : Speech accepting the Republican Senatorial nomination, 1858 -- "Difference between the white and black races" : Debates with Douglas, 1858 -- "To immancipate the mind" : Lecture on discoveries and inventions, 1859 -- "The man before the dollar" : Letter on Thomas Jefferson, 1859 -- "Labor is the superior ... of capital" : Address at the Wisconsin State Fair, 1859 -- "The old policy of the fathers" : Address at the Cooper Union, 1860 -- The challenge of disunion, 1861-1863 -- "What, then, is 'coercion'?" : Speech in Indianapolis, 1861 -- "The momentous issue of Civil War" : First Inaugural Address, 1861 -- "'Secession' or 'rebellion'" : Message to special session of Congress, 1861 -- "I cannot assume this reckless position" : Letter on Frémont's emancipation order, 1861 -- "To emancipate gradually" : Appeal to border-state Congressmen, 1862 -- "We may not touch property" : Veto message: Second Confiscation Act, 1862 -- "Would you drop the war where it is?" : Letter on Louisiana affairs, 1862 -- "The ban is still upon you" : Remarks to a committee of colored men, 1862 -- "My paramount object" : Reply to Horace Greeley, 1862 -- "The root of the rebellion" : Reply to Christians of Chicago, 1862 -- "We cannot escape history" : Second annual message to Congress, 1862 -- "A measure made expedient by a war" : Opinion on the admission of West Virginia, 1862 -- "Slaves ... shall be free" : Final proclamation of Emancipation, 1863 -- The challenge of peace and reconstruction, 1863-1865 -- "Broken eggs can not be mended" : Letter on peace terms, 1863 -- "The scope of moral results" : Response to English workingmen, 1863 -- "Ours is a case of rebellion" : Letter to New York Democrats, 1863 -- "The public safety" : Letter to Ohio Democrats, 1863 -- "The signs look better" : Letter to James C. Conkling, 1863 -- "Wherein is the peculiar hardship now?" : Statement on the draft, 1863 -- "Education for young Blacks" : Two letters to Nathaniel P. Banks, 1863 -- "It is for us the living" : Gettysburg Address, 1863 -- "To build only from the sound" : Third annual message to Congress, 1863 -- "The jewel of liberty" : Note to Michael Hahn, 1864 -- "The rights of all working people" : Reply to New York workingmen, 1864 -- "I am naturally anti-slavery" : Remarks on the use of Negroes as soldiers, 1864 -- "Peace and re-union" : Letter on war aims, 1864 -- "The election was a necessity" : Response to a serenade, 1864 -- "I retract nothing ... as to slavery" : Fourth annual message to Congress, 1864 -- "With malice toward none" : Second Inaugural Address, 1865 -- "A righteous and speedy peace" : Last public address, 1865 -- Some principles briefly stated : Excerpts and fragments, 1837-1864.
Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865.
Current, Richard Nelson.
edited by Richard N. Current.
1967
The political thought of Abraham Lincoln
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