Sitka Public Library
--1794--
Microform
Paris--printed : New-York--re-printed for Francis Childs & Co. and J. Fellows, by George Forman.,
Microform
Advice to the privileged orders, in the sevearal [sic] states of Europe : resulting from the necessity and propriety of a general revolution in the principle of government. : Part II.
Advice to the privileged orders. Part 2
Early American imprints. First series ;
Barlow, Joel, 1754-1812.
by Joel Barlow, author of The vision of Columbus, A letter to the national convention, and the conspiracy of kings.
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Advice to the privileged orders, in the sevearal [sic] states of Europe : resulting from the necessity and propriety of a general revolution in the principle of government. : Part II.
1998.
Book
Harvard University Press,
9780674874459
9780674874466
Book
Terrific majesty : the powers of Shaka Zulu and the limits of historical invention
Painted chests, academic body servants, and visions of modern airlines: Shaka in contemporary discourses -- The origins of the image of Shaka -- The men who would be Shaka: Shaka as a model for the Natal native administration -- "The establishment of a living source of tradition": James Stuart and the genius of Shakan despotism -- Shaka as metaphor, memory, and history in apartheid South Africa -- "The Government resembles Tshaka."
Hamilton, Carolyn.
Carolyn Hamilton.
1998
Terrific majesty : the powers of Shaka Zulu and the limits of historical invention
1982-2012.
Traces Johnson's life from his Texas childhood through his rise to political power and his successful 1948 senatorial campaign and eventual presi
Book
Alfred A. Knopf,
9780679405078
9780394528366
9780394528359
9780394499734
9780679729457
9780679733713
9780394720951
9780375713255
Book
The years of Lyndon Johnson
The path to power. 1908-1941. The trap -- The Bunton strain -- The people's party -- The Johnson strut -- The father and mother -- The son -- "The best man I ever knew" -- "The bottom of the heap" -- Escape -- "Bull" Johnson -- The rich man's daughter -- Cotulla -- White stars and black stars -- "A very unusual ability" -- Sowing -- On his way -- The New Deal -- The boss of the little Congress -- In tune -- Lady Bird -- Rayburn -- "Put them to work!" -- The dam -- Reaping -- The first campaign -- From the forks of the creeks -- Galveston -- Balancing the books -- Longlea -- The tenth district -- The sad irons -- "I'll get it for you" -- New fields -- Mr. Johnson goes to Washington -- A contract and three telegrams -- Campaign committee -- The Munsey Building -- Through the back door -- Defeat -- "Pass the biscuits, Pappy" -- "I want to see Lyndon" -- "Mister Speaker" -- The "perfect Roosevelt man."
Means of ascent. 1941-1948. Ends and means -- "Too slow" -- Going back -- All quiet on the Western front -- In the Pacific -- Lady Bird -- Marking time -- Buying and selling -- One of a crowd -- The old and the new -- The story of Coke Stevenson -- Head start -- "Will!" -- The flying windmill -- All or nothing -- The stealing -- Lists of names -- Qualities of leadership -- The making of a legend -- A love story -- Three rings.
Master of the Senate. 1948-1958. The presence of fire -- The dam. The desks of the Senate -- "Great things are underway!" -- Seniority and the South -- Learning. A hard path -- The path ahead -- "The right size" -- A Russell of the Russells of Georgia -- "We of the South" -- Thirtieth place -- Lyndon Johnson and the liberal -- The hearing -- The debate -- "No time for a siesta" -- Out of the crowd -- Looking for it. No choice -- The general and the senator -- The "nothing job" -- The Johnson ranch -- The orator of the dawn -- Gettysburg -- The whole stack -- Using it. Masterstrokes -- Tail-gunner Joe -- The "Johnson rule" -- The leader -- "Zip, zip" -- "Go ahead with the blue" -- Memories -- The program with a heart -- The great cause. The rising tide -- The compassion of Lyndon Johnson -- "Proud to be of assistance" -- Footsteps -- Finesses -- Convention -- Choices -- The "working up" -- Hells Canyon -- "You do it" -- Yeas and nays -- Omens -- After the battle. Three more years -- The last caucus.
Passage of power. 1958-1964. "What the hell's the presidency for?" -- Johnson vs. Kennedy : 1960. The prediction -- The rich man's son -- Forging chains -- The back stairs -- The "LBJ Special" -- "Rufus Cornpone". "Power is where power goes" -- Genuine warmth -- "Cut" -- Gestures and tactics -- The protégé -- Dallas. The cubicle -- Taking charge -- Taking command. Aboard Air Force One -- Three encounters -- The drums -- To become a president. EOB 274 -- The Warren Commission -- The Southern strategy -- "Old Harry" -- "The Johnsons in Johnson City" -- Serenity -- "Old Harry" II -- In the books of law -- Defeating despair -- Hammer blows -- Long enough.
Caro, Robert A.
Robert A. Caro.
2012
2011
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2009
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The years of Lyndon Johnson
©1998.
Contains speeches on slavery, civil rights, segregation, Afro-American women, education, and other topics.
Book
University of Alabama Press,
9780817309060
9780817308483
Book
Lift every voice : African American oratory, 1787-1900
Studies in rhetoric and communication
Studies in rhetoric and communication.
I Speak to Those Who Are in Slavery / You Stand on the Level with the Greatest Kings on Earth / A Charge Delivered to the Brethren of the African Lodge / Pray God Give Us the Strength to Bear Up Under All Our Troubles / Address to the People of Color / Eulogy for Washington / Universal Salvation / Abolition of the Slave Trade / A Thanksgiving Sermon / Mutual Interest, Mutual Benefit, and Mutual Relief / A Sermon Preached on the Funeral Occasion of Mary Henery / O! Africa / Valedictory Address / The Condition and Prospects of Haiti / Termination of Slavery / The Necessity of a General Union Among Us / Slavery and Colonization / The Cause of the Slave Became My Own / It Is Time for Us to Be Up and Doing / Why Sit Ye Here and Die? / Let Us Alone / What If I Am a Woman? / Eulogy on William Wilberforce / The Slavery of Intemperance / Why a Convention Is Necessary / Put On the Armour of Righteousness / The Slave Has a Friend in Heaven, Though He May Have None Here / On the Improvement of the Mind / Prejudice Against the Colored Man / Slavery Brutalizes Man / We Meet the Monster Prejudice Every Where / Slavery Presses Down upon the Free People of Color / Let Us Do Justice to an Unfortunate People / The Rights of Colored Citizens in Traveling / We Must Assert Our Rightful Claims and Plead Our Own Cause / An Address to the Slaves of the United States of America / For the Dissolution of the Union / I Am Free from American Slavery / Under the Stars and Stripes / I Have No Constitution, and No Country / The Fugitive Slave Bill / A Plea for the Oppressed / I Won't Obey the Fugitive Slave Law / Ar'n't I a Woman? / Orators and Oratory / What, to the Slave, Is the Fourth of July? / Snakes and Geese / I Set Out to Escape from Slavery / There Is No Full Enjoyment of Freedom for Anyone in This Country / The Triumph of Equal School Rights in Boston / What, to the Toiling Millions There, Is This Boasted Liberty? / The Negro Race, Self-Government, and the Haitian Revolution / Liberty for Slaves / If There Is No Struggle There Is No Progress / I Will Sink or Swim with My Race / Break Every Yoke and Let the Oppressed Go Free / Should Colored Men Be Subject to the Penalties of the Fugitive Slave Law? / Why Slavery Is Still Rampant / The American Government and the Negro / I Do Not Believe in the Antislavery of Abraham Lincoln / A Plea for Free Speech / Let Us Take Up the Sword / What If the Slaves Are Emancipated? / We Ask for Our Rights / Lincoln's Colonization Proposal Is Anti-Christian / The Negroes in the United States of America / Freedom's Joyful Day / Address to the Youth / The Moral and Social Aspect of Africa / The Good Time Is at Hand / The Position and Duties of the Colored People / A Tribute to a Fallen Black Soldier / The Mission of the War / Give Us Equal Pay and We Will Go to War / Every Man Should Stand Equal Before the Law / Let the Monster Perish / Colored Men Standing in the Way of Their Own Race / Advice to Ex-Slaves / An Appeal for Aid to the Freedmen / Deliver Us from Such a Moses / We Are All Bound Up Together / These Are Revolutionary Times / Equal Rights for All, Three Speeches / To My White Fellow Citizens / Break Up the Plantation System / Justice Should Recognize No Color / I Claim the Rights of a Man / Finish the Good Work of Uniting Colored and White Workingmen / Composite Nation / Then I Began to Live / Abolish Separate Schools / The Ku Klux of the North / The Right of Women to Vote / A Plea in Behalf of the Cuban Revolution / The Civil Rights Bill / Equality before the Law / The Civil Rights Bill / The Great Problem to Be Solved / Oration in Memory of Abraham Lincoln / The Sioux's Revenge / How Long? How Long, O Heaven? / Socialism: The Remedy for the Evils of Society / Reasons Why the Colored American Should Go to Africa / The Destined Superiority of the Negro / Migration Is the Only Remedy for Our Wrongs / Race Unity / Redeem the Indian / These Evils Call Loudly for Redress / Negro Education -- The Stone Cut Out of the Mountain / Reasons for a New Political Party / The Present Relations of Labor and Capital / How Shall We Make the Women of Our Race Stronger? / Introduction of Master Workman Powderly / I Am an Anarchist / Mob Violence / Woman's Place in the Work of the Denomination / How Shall We Get Our Rights? / Importance of Race Pride / Woman Suffrage / I Denounce the So-Called Emancipation as a Stupendous Fraud / Organized Resistance Is Our Best Remedy / National Perils / It Is Time to Call a Halt / Harvard Class Day Oration / Education and the Problem / Lynch Law in All Its Phases / The Intellectual Progress of the Colored Women of the United States Since the Emancipation Proclamation / Women's Cause Is One and Universal / Justice or Emigration Should Be Our Watchword / The Ethics of the Hawaiian Question / Address to the First National Conference of Colored Women
Foner, Philip Sheldon, 1910-1994.
Branham, Robert J.
Cyrus Bustill -- John Marrant -- Prince Hall -- Prince Hall -- Abraham Johnstone -- Richard Allen -- Lemuel Haynes -- Peter Williams, Jr. -- Absalom Jones -- William Hamilton -- George White -- William Hamilton -- Margaret Odell -- John Browne Russwurm -- Austin Steward -- David Walker -- Peter Williams, Jr. -- Sarah M. Douglass -- Peter Osborne -- Maria W. Stewart -- Nathaniel Paul -- Maria W. Stewart -- William Whipper -- William Whipper -- William Hamilton -- James Forten, Jr. -- Theodore S. Wright -- Elizabeth Jennings -- Theodore S. Wright -- Daniel A. Payne -- Clarissa C. Lawrence -- Andrew Harris -- Thomas Paul -- Charles Lenox Remond -- Samuel H. Davis -- Henry Highland Garnet -- Charles Lenox Remond -- Lewis Richardson -- William Wells Brown -- William Wells Brown -- Samuel Ringgold Ward -- Lucy Stanton -- Jermain Wesley Loguen -- Sojourner Truth -- William G. Allen -- Frederick Douglass -- Sojourner Truth -- Stephen Pembroke -- John Mercer Langston -- William C. Nell -- Sara G. Stanley -- James T. Holly -- Frances Ellen Watkins -- Frederick Douglass -- John S. Rock -- Mary Ann Shadd -- Charles H. Langston -- Sarah Parker Remond -- Robert Purvis -- H. Ford Douglas -- Frederick Douglass -- Alfred M. Green -- John S. Rock -- John S. Rock -- Isaiah C. Wears -- Sarah Parker Remond -- Jonathan C. Gibbs -- Sarah J. Woodson -- Martin Robinson Delany -- Robert Purvis -- J.W.C. Pennington -- J. Stanley -- Frederick Douglass -- J.P. Campbell -- Arnold Bertonneau -- Henry Highland Garnet -- James Lynch -- Martin Robinson Delany -- J. Sella Martin -- Lewis Hayden -- Frances Ellen Watkins Harper -- E.J. Adams -- Sojourner Truth -- B.K. Sampson -- Francis L. Cardozo -- William H. Grey -- Henry McNeal Turner -- Isaac Myers -- Frederick Douglass -- Sojourner Truth -- Hiram R. Revels -- Isaiah C. Wears -- Mary Ann Shadd Cary -- Henry Highland Garnet -- Robert Browne Elliott -- John Mercer Langston -- James T. Rapier -- Frances Ellen Watkins Harper -- Frederick Douglass -- B.T. Tanner -- Henry McNeal Turner -- Peter H. Clark -- John E. Bruce -- Alexander Crummell -- Robert J. Harlan -- Ferdinand L. Barnett -- Blanche K. Bruce -- John P. Green -- William H. Crogman -- John Jasper -- Henry McNeal Turner -- T. Thomas Fortune -- Olivia A. Davidson -- Frank J. Ferrell -- Lucy E. Parsons -- Samuel Allen McElwee -- Mary V. Cook -- M. Edward Bryant -- Edward Everett Brown -- Frederick Douglass -- Frederick Douglass -- John E. Bruce -- William Bishop Johnson -- T. Thomas Fortune -- Clement Garnett Morgan -- Joseph C. Price -- Ida B. Wells -- Fannie Barrier Williams -- Anna Julia Cooper -- Henry McNeal Turner -- William Saunders Scarborough -- Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin.
edited by Philip S. Foner and Robert James Branham.
1998
Lift every voice : African American oratory, 1787-1900
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