United States -- Politics and government -- 1861-1865
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United States -- Politics and government -- 1861-1865
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Context of United States -- Politics and government -- 1861-1865Subject of
- "First among equals" : Abraham Lincoln's reputation during his administration
- "Gentleman George" Hunt Pendleton : party politics and ideological identity in nineteenth-century America
- "Heaven will frown on such a cause as this" : six Democrats who opposed Lincoln's war
- "To all whom it may concern" : the conspiracy of leading men of the Republican Party to destroy the American Union proved by their words and acts antecedent and subsequent to the rebellion
- "To all whom it may concern" : the conspiracy of leading men of the Republican Party to destroy the American Union proved by their words and acts antecedent and subsequent to the rebellion
- "We cannot escape history" : Lincoln and the last best hope of Earth
- "What shall we do with the Negro?" : Lincoln, white racism, and Civil War America
- 1861 : the Civil War awakening
- 1863 : Lincoln's pivotal year
- 1864 : Lincoln at the gates of history
- A Connecticut yankee in Lincoln's cabinet : Navy Secretary Gideon Welles chronicles the Civil War
- A Democratic peace offered for the acceptance of Pennsylvania voters
- A Lincoln dialogue
- A business man's views of public matters.
- A challenge! : The rebellion of the southern traitors against the Union and the government, is a rebellion against the democratic rights of the people, and an attempt to destroy true republican institutions, and build up an aristocracy or a monarchy upon the ruins. ..
- A constitutional view of the late war between the states : its causes, character, conduct and results : presented in a series of colloquies at Liberty Hall
- A constitutional view of the late war between the states : its causes, character, conduct and results : presented in a series of colloquies at Liberty Hall
- A constitutional view of the late war between the states : its causes, character, conduct and results ; presented in a series of colloquies at Liberty Hall
- A constitutional view of the late war between the states; : its causes, character, conduct and results. Presented in a series of colloquies at Liberty Hall.
- A copy of a letter to George B. McClellan, nominee for president, A.M., by the Lord's servant. : A prompt address by Mr. F.W. Sprague, Newport, R.I. Price 7 cents. Sir, --By profession, religiously, God's servant; politically the same; though, not to mingle the elements of the two orders together, I claim, principally, to be an American. ..
- A familiar epistle to Robert J. Walker : formerly of Pennsylvania, later of Mississippi, more recently of Washington, and last heard of in Mr. Coxwell's balloon
- A great Civil War : a military and political history, 1861-1865
- A memoir of Abraham Lincoln : president elect of the United States of America, his opinion on secession, extracts from the United States Constitution, &c. : to which is appended an historical sketch on slavery, reprinted by permission from "The Times"
- A more perfect Union: : the impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on the Constitution,
- A more perfect Union: : the impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on the Constitution,
- A new birth of freedom : Abraham Lincoln and the coming of the Civil War
- A paper containing a statement and vindication of certain political opinions
- A people at war : civilians and soldiers in America's Civil War, 1854-1877
- A plan to stop the present and prevent future wars : containing a proposed constitution for the general government of the sovereign states of North and South America
- A reply to Horace Binney's pamphlet on the habeas corpus
- A report of the debates and proceedings in the secret sessions of the Conference Convention for proposing amendments to the Constitution of the United States : held at Washington, D.C., in February, A.D. 1861
- A respectable minority : the Democratic Party in the Civil War era, 1860-1868
- A review of Mr. Binney's pamphlet on "The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus under the Constitution"
- A savoury dish for loyal men
- A secret society history of the Civil War
- A short history of the Confederate States of America, by Jefferson Davis
- A treatise on the law of the American rebellion : and our true policy, domestic and foreign
- A youth's history of the great civil war in the United States, from 1861 to 1865 ...
- A. Lincoln : a biography
- Abraham Lincoln
- Abraham Lincoln
- Abraham Lincoln : a legacy of freedom
- Abraham Lincoln : political writings and speeches
- Abraham Lincoln : speeches and writings
- Abraham Lincoln and Civil War America : a biography
- Abraham Lincoln and Horace Greeley
- Abraham Lincoln and liberal democracy
- Abraham Lincoln and the fifth column
- Abraham Lincoln and the fifth column,
- Abraham Lincoln and the road to emancipation, 1861-1865
- Abraham Lincoln and white America
- Abraham Lincoln as a man of ideas
- Abraham Lincoln's life and execution : a Southern perspective
- Abraham Lincoln's political faith
- Abraham Lincoln, constitutionalism, and equal rights during the Civil War era
- Abraham Lincoln, constitutionalism, and equal rights in the Civil War era
- Abraham Lincoln, slavery, and the Civil War : selected writings and speeches
- Address and resolutions of the Union League of Philadelphia : September 16, 1863
- Against the degradation of the states : an oration delivered before the Peace Democracy, at Canton, Stark County, Ohio, July 4, 1863
- Alexander H. Stephens' anti-secession speech. : The following speech before the Georgia Secession Convention, delivered by the present vice-president of the so-called Confederacy, we commend to the careful perusal of all who are fond of talking about the "aggressions" of the North on the South which led to the present troubles: "This step (said Mr. Stephens) once taken, could never be recalled ..."
- All the great prizes : the life of John Hay, from Lincoln to Roosevelt
- America, viewed physically, politically, religiously : a discourse, delivered on Thanksgiving Day, November 24, 1864
- America: the origin of her present conflict; : her prospect for the slave, and her claim for anti-slavery sympathy; illustrated by incidents of travel during a tour in the summer of 1863, throughout the United States, from the eastern boundaries of Maine to the Mississippi.
- American rebellion; : report of the speeches of Henry Ward Beecher
- American republicanism--its success, its perils, and the duty of its present supporters : sermon delivered before the citizens of Brandon, on the occasion of the national fast, September 26, 1861
- Amiable scoundrel : Simon Cameron, Lincoln's scandalous Secretary of War
- An address to Christians throughout the world
- An address to King Cotton
- An end to valor; : the last days of the Civil War
- An end to valor; : the last days of the Civil War
- Another life-long Democrat testifies to the truth!! : A patriotic letter from Dr. George B. Loring, of Salem, Mass. Support of the administration the only path to peace, unity, national prosperity. The elevation of McClellan a national calamity!! Dr. George B. Loring, of Salem, Massachusetts, is a life-long Democrat whose ability and earnestness always made him an honored and trusted leader in the Democratic Party ... He now, in common with many other Democrats, whose patriotism will not permit them to sacrifice country to party, goes for the election of Abramham Lincoln to the presidency. ..
- Answer to Mr. Binney's reply to "Remarks" on his treatise on the habeas corpus
- Anticipations of the future to serve as lessons for the present time : in the form of extracts of letters from an English resident in the United States, to the London Times, from 1864 to 1870 : with an appendix, on the causes and consequences of the independence of the South
- Antislavery politics in antebellum and Civil War America
- Arbitrary arrests! : The platform. "Under the pretence of a military necessity of a war power higher than the Constitution, the Constitution itself has been disregarded in every part, and public liberty and private right alike trodden down." The Democratic Party hereby declare that they consider the administration usurpation of extraordinary and dangerous powers not granted by the Constitution, the subversion of the civil by military law in states not in insurrection, the arbitrary military arrest, imprisonment, trial and sentence of American citizens--the suppression of freedom of speech and of the press--as calculated to prevent a restoration of the Union and the perpetuation of a government deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed. ..
- At Lincoln's side : John Hay's Civil War correspondence and selected writings
- Authorities cited antagonistic to Horace Binney's conclusions on the writ of habeas corpus
- Autobiographical sketch of Capt. S. W. Fowler ... : Together with an appendix containing his speeches on the state of the Union, "Reconstruction" etc., also his report on the "Soldiers' voting bill" made in the Michigan Senate, etc
- Baltimore and the nineteenth of April 1861 : a study of the war
- Baltimore and the nineteenth of April 1861 : a study of the war
- Becoming American under fire : Irish Americans, African Americans, and the politics of citizenship during the Civil War era
- Blueprint for modern America; : non-military legislation of the first Civil War Congress
- Bullets, ballots, and rhetoric : Confederate policy for the United States Presidential contest of 1864
- Causes of the Civil War, 1859-1861,
- Charles Sumner and the rights of man,
- Charleston Mercury extra: : Passed unanimously at 1.15 o'clock, P.M., December 20th, 1860. An ordinance to dissolve the union between the state of South Carolina and other states united with her under the compact entitled "The Constitution of the United States of America." ... The Union is dissolved!
- Chase and Civil War politics,
- Circular from H.N. Congar. : To the Union citizens of Newark, New Jersey: From my transient home in the Far East, I send greeting to the Union men of my native city. In the midst of a struggle for the preservation of the nation, and on the eve of a political contest in which are involved its highest interests, I feel that duty calls me to labor in your ranks ..
- Circular to the state council, and the subordinate councils of the Loyal Union League in the State of New York. : An important campaign movement has been commenced, which, if promptly followed up, will have an immense influence upon the presidential canvass. Its object is to send and circulate at once, throughout the army in Virginia, and especially to the soldiers of New York State, an ample supply of the best loyal newspapers. ... The state council first urged this measure, and council no. 2 of this city, happening to have members who are familiar with this kind of work, has adopted a plan to carry the suggestions of the state council into execution, systematically, cheaply, and without delay. ..
- Civil War and reconstruction; : selected essays.
- Civil War high commands
- Civil War senator : William Pitt Fessenden and the fight to save the American republic
- Coercion completed, or, Treason triumphant : remarks
- Complete works of Abraham Lincoln
- Conservative essays, legal and political
- Conservative essays, legal and political
- Constitutional law : with reference to the present condition of the United States
- Constitutional problems under Lincoln
- Constitutional problems under Lincoln,
- Copperheads : the rise and fall of Lincoln's opponents in the North
- Correspondence in relation to the public meeting at Albany, N.Y.
- Dark lanterns : secret political societies, conspiracies, and treason trials in the Civil War
- Dark union : the secret web of the profiteers, politicians, and Booth conspirators that led to Lincoln's death
- De l'esclavage dans ses rapports avec l'union américaine
- Decision of Chief Justice Taney, in the Merryman case, upon the writ of habeas corpus
- Der amerikanische Bürgerkrieg : Geschichte des Volks der Vereinigten Staaten vor, während und nach der Rebellion
- Der amerikanische Bürgerkrieg von seinem Beginn bis zum Schluss des Jahres 1862 : nebst einleitender Betrachtung über seine socialen, ökonomischen und politischen Ursachen
- Der zweite freiheitskampf der Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika
- Diary ...
- Diary of Gideon Welles, : secretary of the Navy under Lincoln and Johnson,
- Diary.
- Did Lincoln and the Republican Party create the Civil War? : an argument
- Die Platformen
- Die amerikanische Union : ihre Einwirkung auf National-Charakter und Politik : nebst einer Erörterung der Fragen, Ist Secession ein constitutionelles Recht? und Welches sind die Ursachen der Spaltung? : aus dem Englischen
- Discourse of Dr. R. J. Breckinridge : delivered on the day of national humiliation, January 4, 1861, at Lexington, Ky
- Disunion and slavery : a series of letters to Hon. W.L. Yancey, of Alabama
- Dr. John L. Dunlap, of New York, and Major Gen. U.S. Grant, of Illinois for president and vice president in 1864! ...
- Elements of discord in Secessia, &c., &c.
- Elements of discord in Secessia, &c., &c. : New York, May, 1863
- Emancipating Lincoln : the Proclamation in text, context, and memory
- Essays political, legal, and miscellaneous
- Exploring Lincoln : great historians reappraise our greatest president
- Fallacies of freemen and foes of liberty : a reply to "The American war, the whole question explained"
- Fifty years' observations of men and events, civil and military.
- Final freedom : the Civil War, the abolition of slavery, and the Thirteenth Amendment
- Forced into glory : Abraham Lincoln's White dream
- Founders' son : a life of Abraham Lincoln
- Frank Blair : Lincoln's conservative
- Franklin D. Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln : competing perspectives on two great presidencies
- Franklin Pierce's letter to Jeff. Davis. : Last July, soon after the fall of Vicksburg, the library of Jeff. Davis ... fell into the hands of the Union troops. In it was found a large collection of letters ... Among these was found one from Frankin [sic] Pierce, bearing date January 6, 1860. This came into the possession of Captain Gibbs, of the 15th Illinois Regiment, who transmitted a copy of it from Natchez to the editors of the Independent Democrat, Concord, N.H., in which paper it was published, September 17th, 1863. ... in December, that original was received ... To accompany the lithographic fac simile will be found below a correct copy of the original, printed in ordinary type. ..
- Freedom and federalism : Congress and courts, 1861-1866
- Freedom of Speech : speech of Hon. James S. Rollins, of Missouri, in the House of Representatives, April 12, 1864, on the resolutions offered by Mr. Colfax, proposing to expel Mr. Long
- Freedom, union, and power : Lincoln and his party during the Civil War
- From rail-splitter to icon : Lincoln's image in illustrated periodicals, 1860-1865
- Gathering to save a nation : Lincoln and the Union's war governors
- General McClellan's letter of acceptance : together with his West-Point oration
- General Wadsworth : the life and wars of Brevet General James S. Wadsworth
- German immigrants, race, and citizenship in the Civil War era
- God bless Abraham Lincoln! : a solemn discourse
- Hand-book of the democracy for 1863 & '64
- How the war commenced, and how near it is ended. : Who commenced the war? One "lie well stuck to" is that told by the Peace Democracy, that the administration of Mr. Lincoln is responsible for the war in which the country is involved. We have this asserted in the Chicago platform; we have it reiterated daily in the Copperhead presses and by Copperhead speakers. ..
- Huit mois en Amérique : lettres et notes de voyage, 1864-1865
- Inaugural address delivered to the tenth General Assembly of the state of Iowa
- Inauguration of the National Union Club : speech of Benjamin H. Brewster, delivered at the Musical Fund Hall, Philadelphia, Wednesday evening, March 11, 1863
- Indices of public opinion, 1860-1870
- Inside the White House in war times : memoirs and reports of Lincoln's secretary
- Interesting debate : reception of Gov. Andrew Johnson, of Tennessee, and Ex-Gov. Wright, of Indiana, at the State Capitol of Pennsylvania : full proceedings in the Senate
- Interior causes of the war : the nation demonized, and its president a spirit-rapper
- Is emancipation the object of the present war : or is it to sustain the Constitution as it is and restore the Union as it was? : speech of Hon. Hiester Clymer, of Berks County : delivered in the Senate of Pennsylvania, March 11, 1862
- Jim Lane : scoundrel, statesman, Kansan
- John Palmer Usher, : Lincoln's Secretary of the Interior,
- King of the lobby : the life and times of Sam Ward, man-about-Washington in the Gilded Age
- La crise americaine : recueil de documents pouvant servir a l'histoire de la guerre des Etats Unis. (1859-1860-1861-1862) Le Nord et le Sud
- La victoire du Nord aux États-Unis
- Lectures on the American Civil War, : delivered before the University of Oxford in Easter and Trinity terms 1912.
- Let us have peace : Ulysses S. Grant and the politics of war and reconstruction, 1861-1868
- Letter addressed to the Opera House meeting, Cincinnati
- Letter of Peter Cooper on slave emancipation : New York, Oct., 1863
- Letter on the rebellion
- Letter to the President of the United States
- Letter to the governor of Massachusetts, on occasion of his late proclamation, of August 20, 1861
- Letters and recollections of John Murray Forbes
- Letters from General Rosecrans! : to the democracy of Indiana : action of the Ohio regiments at Murfreesboro, regarding the Copperheads
- Letters of the Hon. Joseph Holt, the Hon. Edward Everett, and Commodore Charles Stewart, on the present crisis
- Letters of the Southern spy, in Washington and elsewhere
- Letters on slavery from the Old World; : written during the canvass for the Presidency of the United States in 1860. To which are added a letter to Lord Brougham on the John Brown Raid; and a brief reference to the result of the presidential contest, and its consequences.
- Letters on the American rebellion
- Letters to Gov. Bradford
- Letters to the President of the United States
- Liberty and union : the Civil War era and American constitutionalism
- Liberty, virtue, and progress : Northerners and their war for the Union
- Life of Gen. James H. Lane, with corroborative incidents of pioneer history
- Lincoln
- Lincoln & Davis : imagining America, 1809-1865
- Lincoln & liberty : wisdom for the ages
- Lincoln : authoritarian savior
- Lincoln and Congress
- Lincoln and Reconstruction
- Lincoln and Whitman : parallel lives in Civil War Washington
- Lincoln and emancipation
- Lincoln and freedom : slavery, emancipation, and the Thirteenth Amendment
- Lincoln and his cabinet,
- Lincoln and his cabinet; : a lecture delivered on Tuesday, March 10, 1896, before the New Haven Colony Historical Society,
- Lincoln and slavery
- Lincoln and the Border States : preserving the Union
- Lincoln and the Civil War
- Lincoln and the War Democrats : the grand erosion of conservative tradition
- Lincoln and the democrats : the politics of opposition in the Civil War
- Lincoln and the power of the press : the war for public opinion
- Lincoln and the radicals
- Lincoln and the union governors
- Lincoln and the war governors
- Lincoln emancipated : the president and the politics of race
- Lincoln revisited : new insights from the Lincoln Forum
- Lincoln takes command,
- Lincoln's America : 1809-1865
- Lincoln's American dream : clashing political perspectives
- Lincoln's Constitution
- Lincoln's Hundred Days : the Emancipation Proclamation and the war for the Union
- Lincoln's White House secretary : the adventurous life of William O. Stoddard
- Lincoln's autocrat : the life of Edwin Stanton
- Lincoln's constitution
- Lincoln's critics : the Copperheads of the North
- Lincoln's defense of politics : the public man and his opponents in the crisis over slavery
- Lincoln's last months
- Lincoln's last speech : wartime reconstruction and the crisis of reunion
- Lincoln's legacy : ethics and politics
- Lincoln's men : the president and his private secretaries
- Lincoln's moral vision : the second inaugural address
- Lincoln's other White House
- Lincoln's plan of reconstruction
- Lincoln's plan of reconstruction
- Lincoln's political generals
- Lincoln's political thought
- Lincoln's sanctuary : Abraham Lincoln and the Soldiers' Home
- Lincoln's selected writings : authoritative texts, Lincoln in his era, modern views
- Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus as viewed by Congress
- Lincoln's war : the untold story of America's greatest president as commander in chief
- Lincoln, religion, and romantic cultural politics
- Lincoln, the rise of the Republicans, and the coming of the Civil War : a reference guide
- Lincoln, the war president : the Gettysburg lectures
- Louis Trezevant Wigfall : the disintegration of the Union and collapse of the Confederacy
- Lyman Trumbull : conservative radical
- Martial law
- Martial law
- Marx, Tocqueville, and race in America : the "absolute democracy" or "defiled republic"
- McClellan Publication Bureau, New York, Sept. 15, 1864. : Dear Sir: The noble, high-toned letter in which our gallant standard-bearer signifies his acceptance of the nomination for the presidency, has given us a platform upon which we can not only proudly stand and valiantly fight as Democrats, but heartily endorse as patriots and Union-loving citizens ..
- McClellan and Fremont : a reply to "Fremont and McClellan, their political and military careers reviewed"
- Memorial of Hon. Th. H. Baird : praying for the enactment of measures to preserve the Constitution and union of the states. Presented to the House of Representatives, February 7, 1863, and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary
- Mennonites, Amish, and the American Civil War
- Message from the President of the United States to the two houses of Congress : at the commencement of the second session of the Thirty-eighth Congress : with the reports of the heads of departments, and selections from accompanying documents
- Military arrests in time of war
- Military despotism! : Arbitrary arrest of a judge!!
- Militärischer Despotismus! : Eigenmächtige Berhastung eines Richters!!
- Moments of despair : suicide, divorce, & debt in Civil War era North Carolina
- Mr. Ambrose's letters on the rebellion
- Mr. Lincoln's T-mails : the untold story of how Abraham Lincoln used the telegraph to win the Civil War
- Must the war go on? : an inquiry whether the Union can be restored by any other means than war and whether peace upon any other basis would be safe or durable
- New England Loyal Publication Society. : Office, no. 8 Studio Building, Boston. November 7, 1864
- New Jersey for the war : speech of Hon. James M. Scovel, of Camden, New Jersey, on the peace resolutions : delivered in the New Jersey House of Assembly, March 17, 1863
- North America;
- North and South
- Opening of the Civil War
- Oration of the Hon. Richard A. Harrison : delivered at Pleasant Valley, Madison County, Ohio, on the Fourth of July, A.D. 1863
- Oration on the twenty-second of February, 1862
- Origin and objects of the slaveholders' conspiracy against Democratic principles, as well as against the national union : illustrated in the speeches of Andrew Jackson Hamilton, in the statements of Lorenzo Sherwood, ex-member of the Texan Legislature, and in the publications of the Democratic league, &c. : the slave aristocracy against democracy : statements addressed to loyal men of all parties, concerning the antagonistic principles involved in the rebellion
- Our Lincoln : new perspectives on Lincoln and his world
- Our Secret Constitution : How Lincoln Redefined American Democracy
- Our country versus party spirit : being a rejoinder to the reply of Prof. Morse
- Our national Constitution : its adaptation to a state of war or insurrection : a treatise
- Our national constitution : its adaptation to a state of war or insurrection
- Our national constitution : its adaptation to a state of war or insurrection : a treatise
- Our national constitution : its adaptation to a state of war or insurrection : a treatise
- Our national constitution : its adaptation to a state of war or insurrection. A treatise / :
- Our secret constitution : how Lincoln redefined American democracy
- Our secret constitution : how Lincoln redefined American democracy
- Parson Brownlow and the Unionists of East Tennessee : with a sketch of his life : comprising the story of the experiences and sufferings of the Unionists of East Tennessee, the parson's remarkable adventures, incidents of the prison-life of himself and coadjutors, anecdotes of his daughter, editorials of the Knoxville Whig : together with an interesting account of Buell's occupation of Tennessee
- Patriot fires : forging a new American nationalism in the Civil War North
- Peace and union, war and disunion : speech of John McKeon : delivered before the Democratic Union Association, at their headquarters, no. 932 Broadway, on Tuesday evening, March 3
- Personal reminiscences, 1840-1890, : including some not hitherto published of Lincoln and the war,
- Philadelphia, April 15, 1861. To the president of the United States. : The unparalleled event of the past week has revealed to the citizens of the United States, beyond question or possibility of doubt, that a peaceful reconciliation under the form of our Constitution is repelled and scorned, and that secession means, in the hearts of its supporters, both treason and war against our country and nation. We, therefore, the undersigned, loyal citizens of the United States and inhabitants of the city of Philadelphia, responding to the proclamation of the president of the United States, hereby declare our unalterable determination to sustain the government in its efforts to maintain the honor, the integrity and the existence of our national Union ..
- Pictorial history of the civil war in the United States of America.
- Plan for conquering treason : letter to President Lincoln
- Plan for terminating the war, by division of the United States, without concession of principle or right on the part of the North
- Political essays
- Political fallacies: : an examination of the false assumptions, and refutation of the sophistical reasonings, which have brought on this civil war.
- Political writings
- Politics and culture of the Civil War era : essays in honor of Robert W. Johannsen
- Pourquoi le Nord ne peut accepter la séparation
- Prerogative rights and public law
- Prerogative rights and public law
- President Haven's annual message to the third moot congress of the Law Department of the University of Michigan : delivered October 24th, 1863
- President Lincoln : the duty of a statesman
- President Lincoln and General Grant on peace and war. : Interview with the president. Mr. Lincoln's view of Democratic strategy. The Grand County (Wis.) herald contains a very interesting letter from Hon. John T. Mills [i.e., Joseph Trotter Mills], judge of the Fifth Judicial Circuit, giving an account of a recent interview with Mr. Lincoln, with a report of the remarks of the latter in regard to the consequences which would follow the adoption of the war policy urged by the friends of Gen. McClellan. Judge Mills was accompanied by ex-Gov. Randall, of Wisconsin, who introduced him to the president ..
- President Lincoln's cabinet,
- President Lincoln's successor
- President Lincoln's views : an important letter on the principles involved in the Vallandigham case : correspondence in relation to the Democratic meeting at Albany, N.Y
- President Lincoln's views : an important letter on the principles involved in the Vallandigham case [and] correspondence in relation to the Democratic meeting at Albany, N.Y
- President Tappan's annual message to the second moot congress of the Law Department of the University of Michigan : delivered 6th December, 1862
- Proofs for workingmen of the monarchic and aristocratic designs of the southern conspirators and their northern allies
- Provided, that any drafted person, conscientiously unable to perform military service, or pay commutation therefor by reason of his sincere religious scruples against bearing arms, may apply by petition to any judge of any court of the United States for the circuit or district wherein he resides, setting forth the facts ... that such petitioner shall be relieved from the penalties provided for his refusal to respond to said draft and to bear arms ... and honor bound to contribute towards any public hospital or charitable service ...
- Railroads in the Civil War : the impact of management on victory and defeat
- Rebels at Rock Island : the story of a Civil War prison
- Recollections of President Lincoln and his administration
- Recollections of a busy life,
- Reconfiguring the Union : Civil War transformations
- Reconstructing the Union; : theory and policy during the Civil War
- Record of the National Republican Party
- Reelecting Lincoln : the battle for the 1864 presidency
- Religion and the radical Republican movement, 1860-1870
- Remarks of Messrs. Morrill, of Vt. & Kelley, of Pa. : in reply to Mr. Voorhees, of Indiana, in the House of Representatives, May 21, 1862
- Remarks of the Hon. B.F. Thomas, of Massachusetts, on the relation of the "seceded states" (so called) to the Union : and the confiscation of property and emancipation of slaves in such states, in the House of Representatives, April 10, 1862
- Remarks on Mr. Binney's treatise on the writ of habeas corpus
- Remarks on Mr. Binney's treatise on the writ of habeas corpus
- Reminiscences of James A. Hamilton, or, Men and events, at home and abroad, during three quarters of a century
- Reminiscences of Richard Lathers; : sixty years of a busy life in South Carolina, Massachusetts and New York;
- Reply of Maj. Gen. Sherman to the mayor of Atlanta : and speeches of Maj. Gen. Hooker, delivered in the cities of Brooklyn and New York, Sept. 22, 1864 : letter of Lieut. Gen. Grant : voices from the Army
- Review of Gov. Seymour's message : Speech of Hon. Alexander H. Bailey, of Oneida. In Senate--January 29, 1863
- Rise to greatness: : Abraham Lincoln and America's most perilous year
- Sacred debts : state Civil War claims and American federalism, 1861-1880
- Secession and slavery, or, The constitutional duty of Congress to give the elective franchise and freedom to all loyal persons : in response to the act of secession
- Senator Henry Wilson and the Civil War
- Seward : Lincoln's indispensable man
- Shapers of the great debate on the Civil War : a biographical dictionary
- Sketches of the rise, progress, and decline of secession; : with a narrative of personal adventures among the rebels.
- Slavery the mere pretext for the rebellion; not its cause : Andrew Jackson's prophecy in 1833 ... picture of the conspiracy, drawn in 1863
- Southern hatred of the American government, the people of the North, and free institutions
- Spectator of America.
- Speech of Cassius M. Clay before the Law Department of the University of Albany, N.Y.
- Speech of Cassius M. Clay, before the Law Department of the University of Albany, N.Y., February 3, 1863
- Speech of Charles D. Drake of St. Louis : delivered at a Union meeting at the city of Louisiana, Mo., July 4, 1861
- Speech of Hon. Elijah Babbitt, of Pennsylvania, on the confiscation of rebel property : deliverd in the House of representatives, May 22, 1862
- Speech of Hon. John Conness : delivered at Platt's Hall, San Francisco, on Tuesday evening, October 18, 1864
- Speech of Hon. Joseph Holt, of Kentucky, at Irving Hall, New York, September 3, 1861
- Speech of Hon. S.F. Miller of New York : on the bill to secure to persons in the military or naval service of the United States, homesteads on confiscated or forfeited estates in insurrectionary districts : delivered in the House of Representatives, May 4, 1864
- Speech of Hon. Samuel Shellabarger, of Ohio, on the habeas corpus
- Speech of Hon. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware, on the resolution proposing to expel the Hon. Jesse D. Bright : delivered in the United States Senate, Jan. 29th, 1862
- Speech of Hon. William Allen of Ohio, on confiscation and emancipation : Delivered in the House of Representatives of the United States, April 24, 1862
- Speech of John Smith, Esquire : not delivered at Smithville, Sept. 15th, 1861
- Speech of Mr. Long, of Ohio : in the Federal House of Representatives, at Washington, on 7th April, 1864, on the subject of recognition of the South
- Speech of Wyndham Robertson, Esq. of Richmond City, on the state of the country : delivered in the House of Delegates on the 5th and 6th of March, 1860
- Speeches and addresses delivered in the Congress of the United States, : and on several public occasions [1856-1865]
- Speeches and letters of Gerrit Smith on the rebellion
- Speeches and writings, 1859-1865 : speeches, letters, and miscellaneous writings, presidential messages and proclamations
- Speeches of Andrew Johnson, : President of the United States.
- Speeches of Hon. Horatio Seymour, and Hon. John Van Buren : at the grand ratification meeting, at the Cooper Institute, October 13, 1862 : with General Scott's prophetic letter
- Speeches of the Hon. Henry May, of Maryland : delivered in the House of Representatives, at the third session of the Thirty-seventh Congress
- Speeches, correspondence, etc., of the late Daniel S. Dickinson of New York : including addresses on important public topics : speeches in the state and United States Senate and in support of the government during the rebellion
- State of Rhode Island, &c. : Whereas both houses of the Congress of the United States have proposed an amendment to the Constitution of the United States in the words and figures following, to wit: Article XIII. ... It is therefore resolved, that the legislature of the state of Rhode Island do hereby ratify and confirm the said Article XIII of amendment to the said Constitution of the United States, and do hereby assent thereto. ..
- State sovereignty and treason : Speech of Hon. John D. Baldwin, of Massachusetts, delivered in the House of Representatives, Washington, March 5, 1864, in House being in Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union
- States rights movements in the north during the Civil War
- Stories of the American Civil War : why and how it was fought
- Success is all that was expected : the South Atlantic blockading squadron during the Civil War
- Suspension of the writ of habeas corpus : letter from the Attorney General, transmitting, in answer to a resolution of the House of the 12th instant, an opinion relative to the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus
- Team of rivals : the political genius of Abraham Lincoln
- The American Civil War
- The American conflict : a history
- The American conflict : a history of the great rebellion in the United States of America, 1860-'64 : it's causes, incidents, and results : intended to exhibit especially its moral and political phases : with the drift and progress of American opinion respecting human slavery : from 1776 to the close of the war for the union
- The American conflict : a history of the great rebellion in the United States of America, 1860-'64 : its causes, incidents, and results : intended to exhibit especially its moral and political phases, with the drift and progress of American opinion respecting human slavery, from 1776 to the close of the war for the Union
- The American crisis considered
- The American union : : its effect on national character and policy, with an inquiry into secession as a constitutional right, and the causes of the disruption
- The American union : its effect on national character and policy, with an inquiry into secession as a constitutional right, and the causes of the disruption
- The American war, facts and fallacies : a speech, delivered by Handel Cossham, Esq., at the Broadmead Rooms, Bristol, on Friday, February 12, 1864
- The Cambridge companion to Abraham Lincoln
- The Civil War diary of Gideon Welles, Lincoln's secretary of the Navy : the original manuscript edition
- The Civil War in America,
- The Civil War in the border South
- The Confederate
- The Confederate secession
- The Constitution : originating in compromise, it can only be preserved by adhering to its spirit, and observing its every obligation : an address
- The Cost of a rebel peace. : Plain words for working-men. The war is costly; there is no doubt of that. Taxes are heavy and prices are high. ..
- The Democratic Party. : The great Democratic Party has been broken in pieces. ... There is no other way to re-unite our forces and get into power again, but by a louder and more vigorous cry, against the rascally abolitionists. ..
- The Democratic party in the United States during the civil war
- The Democratic times. : Chapter I. A dishonorable peace with rebellion. ... Fellow-citizens! such is the prospect held out to you by the principles of the Democratic Party, as expressed in the Chicago platform. Such are the results of the policy proposed by the leaders of the Democratic Party! ..
- The Emancipation Proclamation : speeches of the Hon. Albert Andrus, of Franklin, and Hon. William H. Brand, of Madison : delivered in the Assembly, on the evening of March 4th, 1863, on the Hon. James Redington's resolutions in favor of a vigorous prosecution of the war, of the proclamation of freedom, and of the administration of Abraham Lincoln
- The Garfield orbit
- The Great Union speech of Hon. Alex. H. Stephens, vice-president of the southern Confederacy. : There are many well-meaning men in the party called "Democrats, " who, through party spirit, have allowed themselves to seem to be committed in favor of the "Peace-and-Secession" doctrine of the men whom they have permitted to become their "leaders." To such men we recommend a careful perusal of the following extract from a speech made by Alex. H. Stephens, before a convention of the people of Georgia, called to consider the propriety of secession. ... Mr. Stephens said:--This step once taken could never be recalled ..
- The Great Union speech of Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, vice-president of the southern Confederacy. : There are many well-meaning men in the party called "Democrats, " who, through party spirit, have allowed themselves to seem to be committed in favor of the "Peace-and-Secession" doctrine of the men whom they have permitted to become their "leaders." To such men we recommend a careful perusal of the following extract from a speech made by Alexander H. Stephens, before a convention of the people of Georgia, called to consider the propriety of secession. ... Mr. Stephens said:--This step once taken could never be recalled ..
- The L&N Railroad in the Civil War : a vital north-south link and the struggle to control it
- The Lincoln murder conspiracies : being an account of the hatred felt by many Americans for President Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War and the first complete examination and refutation of the many theories, hypotheses, and speculations put forward since 1865 concerning those presumed to have aided, abetted, controlled, or directed the murderous act of John Wilkes Booth in Ford's Theater the night of April 14
- The McClellan Publication Bureau is an association of literary gentlemen, ardent and earnest supporters of George B. McClellan ... The design of the "Bureau" is the publication and distribution of a class of documents which will appeal to the heart and reason of every individual into whose hands they may fall, calling into action his patriotism, love of country, and his reverence for the Union and the Constitution. ... The following documents are now ready for delivery. ...
- The North and the nation in the era of the Civil War
- The Platforms
- The Portable Abraham Lincoln
- The Presidential election. Vote for General McClellan. : Our bloody Civil War has now lasted nearly four years, under the mismanagement of Abraham Lincoln. ..
- The Privilege and dignity, responsibility and duty of the present Congress, to emancipate the slaves by law
- The Real Chicago platform, as expounded by the Democratic orators at Chicago. : On Monday and Tuesday nights, Aug. 29 and 30, at the city of Chicago, a number of distinguished Democratic orators entertained the members of the Chicago convention and others with their views of the state of the country, and expounded the platform upon which their party then stood ... We have only room for extracts from a few of these orators, but sufficient to show the temper and purpose of all. ..
- The Senate's Civil War
- The Supreme Court and the civil war
- The Times. : Chapter I. A million of men taken from the field of labor for the field of battle! ..
- The Two roads to peace! : How shall we end the rebellion--shall we coax it, or crush it? Every American citizen wants the Rebellion ended and peace restored. Two plans have been proposed for doing it: one, by a convention which met at Baltimore June 7; the other, by the convention which met at Chicago, August 30. Read and compare the two. ..
- The Union men of Kentucky. Their platform as enunciated in the inaugural of Gov. Bramlette, and address of Brutus J. Clay. : The Union triumph in Kentucky in August, by which Thomas E. Bramlette was chosen governor, is claimed by the Republican and Democratic parties of New York each as a vindication of its principles and victory of its friends. This being the case, the position and platform of Gov. Bramlette and his compatriots become subjects of deep interest to the electors of New York at the present time. ..
- The Union on trial : the political journals of Judge William Barclay Napton, 1829-1883
- The Union on trial : the political journals of Judge William Barclay Napton, 1829-1883
- The Union war
- The War Department, 1861 : a study in mobilization and administration
- The abolition conpiracy to destroy the Union, or, A ten years' record of the "Republican" party : the opinions of William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips, Abraham Lincoln ... [et. al.]
- The abolition of slavery : the right of the government under the war power
- The age of hate; : Andrew Johnson and the radicals,
- The annotated Lincoln
- The best American history essays on Lincoln
- The borderland in the civil war,
- The boundaries of American political culture in the Civil War era
- The cause of all nations : an international history of the American Civil War
- The cause of the war : who brought it on, and for what purpose?
- The condition of the South, and the duty of the North : as set forth in a letter from Gen. T. Seymour, lately released from "under fire" at Charleston
- The conditions of reconstruction : in a letter from Robert Dale Owen to the secretary of state : letter from Hon. S.P. Chase ... to the Loyal national league
- The congressman's civil war
- The conscription. Also Speeches of the Hon. W.D. Kelley of Pennsylvania, in the House of Representatives, on the conscription, the way to attain and secure peace, and on arming the Negroes : with a letter from Secretary Chase
- The cousins' wars : religion, politics, and the triumph of Anglo-America
- The cradle of the Confederacy : or, The times of Troup, Quitman, and Yancey : a sketch of Southwestern political history from the formation of the Federal Government to A.D. 1861
- The crisis
- The destiny of our country
- The destruction of republicanism, the object of the rebellion : the testimony of Southern witnesses
- The diary of a public man, : and A page of political correspondence, Stanton to Buchanan;
- The domestic and foreign relations of the United States
- The doom of Reconstruction : the liberal Republicans in the Civil War era
- The earnest men : Republicans of the Civil War Senate
- The eloquent president : a portrait of Lincoln through his words
- The enemy within : fears of corruption in the Civil War North
- The essential Lincoln : speeches and correspondence
- The eve of conflict : Stephen A. Douglas and the needless war
- The eve of conflict; : Stephen A. Douglas and the needless war,
- The field of blood : violence in Congress and the road to civil war
- The first republic & A. Lincoln
- The future of the North-West : in connection with the scheme of reconstruction without New England : addressed to the people of Indiana
- The genesis of the Civil war: : the story of Sumter, 1860-1861,
- The golden hour
- The golden hour.
- The governor's message reviewed : in the Senate, Jan. 28, 1863
- The great American crisis, or, Cause and cure of the rebellion : embracing phrenological characters ...
- The great conspiracy: its origin and history.
- The great impeacher: : a political biography of James M. Ashley
- The great questions of the times! : report of proceedings at the great inaugural mass meeting of the Loyal National League, in Union Square, New York, on the anniversary of Sumter
- The habeas corpus and martial law
- The hidden Civil War; : the story of the Copperheads,
- The hidden civil war : the story of the Copperheads
- The historical atlas of the Congresses of the Confederate States of America, 1861-1865
- The history of the Confederate War; : its causes and its conduct, a narrative and critical history,
- The influence of the cabinet during the American Civil War
- The iron furnace: or, Slavery and secession
- The language of liberty : the political speeches and writings of Abraham Lincoln
- The language of liberty : the political speeches and writings of Abraham Lincoln
- The last year of the war
- The letter of a Republican : Edward N. Crosby, Esq., of Poughkeepsie, to Prof. S.F.B. Morse, Feb. 25, 1863, and Prof. Morse's reply, March 2d, 1863
- The letters of President Lincoln on questions of national policy
- The life and administration of Abraham Lincoln : presenting the early history, political career, speeches, messages, proclamations, letters, etc. : with a general view of his policy as president of the United States, embracing the leading events of the war : also the European press on his death
- The life and public services of Abraham Lincoln
- The life and writings of Abraham Lincoln
- The life of Thaddeus Stevens; : a study in American political history, especially in the period of the civil war and reconstruction,
- The living Lincoln
- The lost "spade" ; or, The grave digger's revenge : a great political, martial, serio-comic, legendary, romantic and farcical drama
- The lost cause regained
- The loyalty demanded by the present crisis
- The loyalty for the times
- The mind and art of Abraham Lincoln, philosopher statesman : texts and interpretations of twenty great speeches
- The nation's trial : the proclamation, dormant powers of the government, the Constitution a charter of freedom, and not "a covenant with Hell"
- The nationality of a people its vital element : an oration delivered in the New City Hall before the city government and citizens of Portland, July 4, 1861
- The new gospel of peace according to St. Benjamin
- The new gospel of peace, : according to St. Benjamin
- The opinions of Abraham Lincoln upon slavery and its issues : indicated by his speeches, letters, messages, and proclamations
- The pictorial field book of the Civil War in the United States of America.
- The political history of the United States of America, during the great rebellion, : including a classified summary of the legislation of the second session of the Thirty-sixth Congress, the three sessions of the Thirty-seventh Congress, the first session of the Thirty-eighth Congress, with the votes thereon, and the important executive, judicial, and politico-military facts of that eventful period; together with the organization, legislation, and general proceedings of the Rebel administration; and an appendix containing the principal political facts of the campaign of 1864, a chapter on the church and the rebellion, and the proceedings of the second session of the Thirty-eighth Congress.
- The political history of the United States of America, during the great rebellion, from November 6, 1860, to July 4, 1864 : including a classified summary of the legislation of the second session of the Thirty-sixth Congress, the three sessions of the Thirty-seventh Congress, the first session of the Thirty-eighth Congress, with the votes thereon, and the important executive, judicial, and politico-military facts of that eventful period : together with the organization, legislation, and general proceedings of the rebel administration
- The political thought of the Civil War
- The power, duty, and necessity of destroying slavery in the rebel states : Speech of Hon. Isaac N. Arnold, of Illinois. Delivered in the House of Representatives, January 6, 1864
- The presidency of Abraham Lincoln
- The presidential election. : Appeal of the National Union Committee [i.e., National Union Executive Committee] to the people of the United States. Headquarters of the National Union Committee, Astor House, New York, Sept. 9, 1864. The Great Rebellion, which for more than three years has wrapped the nation in the flames of civil war, draws near its crisis. ..
- The prisoner of state
- The prisoner of state.
- The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus under the Constitution
- The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus under the Constitution of the United States : in what it consists, how it is allowed, how it is suspended : it is the regulation of the law, not the authorization of an exercise of legislative power
- The radical and the Republican : Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and the triumph of antislavery politics
- The rebellion : its consequences, and the congressional committee, denominated the Reconstruction Committee, with their action
- The rebellion : our relations and duties : speech of Hon. Edward McPherson, of Pennsylvania : delivered in the House of Representatives, February 14, 1862
- The rebellion in America
- The rebellion, its origin, and the means of suppressing it : speech of Hon. Jno. T. Nixon, of New Jersey, in the House of Representatives, Friday, April 11, 1862
- The rejected stone, or, Insurrection vs. resurrection in America
- The republic of republics, or, American federal liberty
- The republic of republics, or, American federal liberty
- The resolution to expel Mr. Long, of Ohio : speech of Hon. Geo. H. Pendleton, of Ohio : delivered in the House of Representatives, April 11, 1864
- The restorer of the union of the United States to its original purity, and an explanation of the errors which brought about destruction of life, liberty and property, and the remedy therefor
- The rise and fall of the Confederate Government
- The rise and fall of the Confederate Government
- The rise and fall of the Confederate Government.
- The rise and fall of the Confederate government
- The rise and fall of the Confederate government.
- The slave power : its character, career and possible designs : being an attempt to explain the real issues involved in the American contest
- The slave power : its character, career, and probable designs : being an attempt to explain the real issues involved in the American contest
- The slave power: : its character, career, and probable designs: being an attempt to explain the real issues involved in the American contest.
- The slave power: its character, career, and probable designs: : being an attempt to explain the real issues involved in the American contest.
- The social and political bearings of the American disruption
- The soldiers' right to vote : who opposes it?--who favors it?, or, The record of the M'Clellan Copperheads against allowing the soldier who fights the right to vote while fighting
- The statesmanship of the Civil War
- The suspending power and the writ of habeas corpus
- The theory of our national existence : as shown by the action of the government of the United States since 1861
- The theory of our national existence : as shown by the action of the government of the United States since 1861
- The trial of Hon. Clement L. Vallandigham, : by a military commission: and the proceedings under his application for a writ of habeas corpus in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern district of Ohio
- The trial of democracy : Black suffrage and northern Republicans, 1860-1910
- The trial of the Constitution
- The trial of the Constitution
- The trial of the Constitution
- The trial of the Constitution.
- The two American Presidents : a dual biography of Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis
- The two rebellions, or, Treason unmasked
- The union forever : Lincoln, Grant, and the Civil War
- The uprising of a great people. : The United States in 1861.
- The usurpations of the federal government : speech of Hon. J.S. Havens, of Suffolk, on the resolutions of Judge Dean to raise a select committee to investigate the subject of arbitrary arrests and the suspension of the writ of Habeas Corpus : delivered in Assembly, Feb. 17, 1863
- The venom and the antidote
- The victory of the North in the United States
- The war : speech of Hon. E.C. Benedict, in the Assembly of the state of New York, April 6, 1864
- The war and its lessons
- The war powers of the President, : and the legislative powers of Congress in relation to rebellion, treason and slavery.
- The war powers of the President, and the legislative powers of Congress in relation to rebellion, treason and slavery
- The war powers of the President, and the legislative powers of Congress in relation to rebellion, treason and slavery
- The war powers of the President, and the legislative powers of Congress in relation to rebellion, treason and slavery
- The war powers of the President, and the legislative powers of Congress in relation to rebellion, treason and slavery
- The war powers of the President, and the legislative powers of Congress in relation to rebellion, treason and slavery
- The war powers of the President, and the legislative powers of Congress in relation to rebellion, treason, and slavery
- The war powers of the President, military arrests, and reconstruction of the Union
- The war powers of the President, military arrests, and reconstruction of the Union
- The war within the Union high command : politics and generalship during the Civil War
- The war, and how to end it
- The works of Charles Sumner
- The writ of habeas corpus and Mr. Binney
- The writ of habeas corpus and Mr. Binney
- The writings of Abraham Lincoln
- This distracted and anarchical people : new answers for old questions about the Civil War-era North
- This great struggle : America's Civil War
- To all loyal Democrats. : Read the following sentiments of well known Democrats ..
- To the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America, in Congress assembled, : The memorial of the representatives of the Religious Society of Friends, in the state of New York and parts adjacent, respectfully showeth: That your memorialists have always been loyal subjects of this government ... and have felt it to be their religious duty to render a faithful obedience to every legal requirement which does not infringe the rights of conscience. ..
- To the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America, in Congress assembled-- : The memorial of the representatives of the Religious Society of Friends, commonly called Quakers, in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, &c., respectfully represents; that Friends as a body, have ever felt it a religious duty to live a quiet and peaceable life ... Friends have ever borne a stedfast testimony against all wars and fightings ..
- To the country. : First: The cruelty of the rebels is damnable. They have devised this war, and brought on us all these murders. ..
- To working men. : The war is now, thanks to Genl's Grant, Sherman and other heroes of our glorious army and navy, nearly brought to a successful end. The rebels wish you to elect a man who will stop the war, and give them a chance to prepare for it again, in such a way as to give them the advantage. ..
- Tried by war : Abraham Lincoln as commander in chief
- Truths of history... : a fair, unbiased, impartial, unprejudiced and conscientious study of history. Object: to secure a peaceful settlement of the many perplexing questions now causing contention between the North and the South
- Two against Lincoln : Reverdy Johnson and Horatio Seymour, champions of the loyal opposition
- Union Congressional Committee rooms, no. 396 Fourth Street, Washington, D.C. June 29, 1864. : Sir: The importance of the pending contest for the presidency cannot be exaggerated. ... To aid in the election of Lincoln and Johnson and the general strengthening of the Union sentiment of the nation, a judicious distribution of proper documents and speeches will be found a most helpful agency. A list of those at the command of this committee is herewith enclosed, with price per hundred copies annexed. ..
- Union and anti-slavery speeches : delivered during the rebellion
- Union broadsides, no. 1. : What Union men of all parties said in 1861. ... What they say in 1863, after the "Proclamation, " "Conscription, " &c. ..
- Union broadsides, no. 2. : What the Copperheads and their Southern friends say
- Union general John A. McClernand and the politics of command
- Universal suffrage and complete equality in citizenship : the safeguards of democratic institutions
- Vindicating Lincoln : defending the politics of our greatest president
- War of words : Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War press
- War power outside the Constitution : review of Mr. Ryan's address
- War powers under the Constitution of the United States
- War powers under the Constitution of the United States
- War powers under the Constitution of the United States
- War powers under the Constitution of the United States
- War powers under the Constitution of the United States : military arrests, reconstruction and military government : also, now first published, War claims of aliens : with notes on the acts of the executive and legislative departments during our civil war, and a collection of cases decided in the national courts
- War powers under the Constitution of the United States : military arrests, reconstruction and military government : also, now first published, War claims of aliens : with notes on the acts of the executive and legislative departments during our civil war, and a collection of cases decided in the national courts
- War powers under the Constitution of the United States. : Military arrests, reconstruction and military government. Also, now first published, War claims of aliens. With notes on the acts of the executive and legislative departments during our civil war, and a collection of cases decided in the national courts.
- Waters of discord : the Union blockade of Texas during the Civil War
- What Jeff. Davis thinks of the war. : The main plank of the Chicago platform is that which pronounces the war a failure, and on that account demands that "immediate efforts be made for a cessation of hostilities." ... Now let us see what Jeff. Davis thinks on this point ..
- What Lincoln believed : the values and convictions of America's greatest president
- What of the war? : Never was a country, loved as this country has been, by all those who have shared the benefits wherein it has exceeded all others. Whence then the domestic war, sudden, unexpected, which has convulsed it like an earthquake? ..
- When in the course of human events : arguing the case for Southern secession
- Who is responsible for the war? Who accountable for its horrors and desolations? : Extracts from a speech by Alexander H. Stephens (now vice-president of the Confederate States), delivered in the Secession Convention of Georgia, on the 31st day of January, 1861: "This step (the secession of Georgia), once taken, can never be recalled ..
- Who shall be vice-president? : Will he be a loyal or a disloyal man?
- Why is allegiance due? and where is it due? : an address delivered before the National Union Association of Cincinnati, June 2, 1863
- Why the North cannot accept of separation
- William Henry Seward : Lincoln's right hand
- With Lincoln in the White House : letters, memoranda, and other writings of John G. Nicolay, 1860-1865
- With charity for all : Lincoln and the restoration of the Union
- Yankeeland in her trouble : an Englishman's correspondence during the war
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