Pamphlets
This sub collection of the Frank and Virginia Williams Collection of Lincolniana consists of approximately 900 pamphlets.
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How the War was Commenced :an Appeal to the Documents : Southern documents Especially Quoted : (From the Cincinnati Daily Commercial.).
Without covers. Bound in vol. 2 of set labeled: Pamphlets issued by the Loyal Publication Society. Includes references to President Lincoln. Copy 2: S2705 (vol. no. not listed)
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Lincoln's Campaign Songster: for the Use of Clubs: Containing All of the Most Popular Songs.
Portrait of beardless Lincoln on wrapper. Without music; tunes indicated by title.
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Message of the President of the United States Transmitting an Address of a Committee of the ""East Tennessee Relief Association"" on the Condition and Wants of the People of East Tennessee, and Recommending the Construction of a Railroad from Knoxville to Cincinnati, by Way of Central Kentucky, as a Measure of Relief to those People, and of Military Importance.
April 28, 1864.--Read, ordered to lie on the table and be printed; the message itself has the same date. Running title: East Tennessee Relief Association. Signed: Wm. Heiskell [and others].
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Mr. Lincoln's Arbitrary Arrests: the Acts Which the Baltimore Platform Approves.
At head of caption: Sold at 13 Park row, and at all Democratic newspaper offices.
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Only Authentic Life of Abraham Lincoln, alias ""Old Abe"
With an account of his birth and education, his rail-splitting and flat-boating, his joke-cutting and soldiering, with some allusions to his journeys from Springfield to Washington and back again.... Another edition, New York, J.C. Haney & co. [1864] (cover-title, 16, 16 p.) includes ""The life of Gen. George B. McClellan.""
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Proceedings of the National Union Convention held in Baltimore, Md., June 7th and 8th, 1864 / reported by D.F. Murphy.
National Union Convention (1864 : Baltimore, Md.)
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The Opinions of Abraham Lincoln, upon Slavery and Its issues: indicated by his speeches, letters, messages, and proclamations.
Excepts from Lincoln's speeches published for the campaign.
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The Will of the People.
At head of title: No. 18. Resolutions adopted at a special meeting of the Union League of Philadelphia, Jan. 11, 1864, on p. [2].
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To the Soldiers of the Union.
A pro-Lincoln campaign pamphlet, issued in the wake of the Democrats' Chicago Convention, attacking the platform of the McClellan/Pendleton ticket. The pamphlet was made for distribution among the fighting troops of the Union, which may account for its relative scarcity. Urging the defeat of George B. McClellan in the presidential election, 1864; Listed by Bartlett with publications of the Union League of Philadelpia; printer's name supplied by Library of Congress catalog.
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Twenty-Fourth Ward Lincoln and Johnson Club's Union Campaign Songster.
Headquarters: Market Street, above Thirty-third, south side.
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General orders, no. 100. War Department, Adjutant General's Office, Washington, March 15, 1864.
Adjutant General's Office, Washington
Signed: Abraham Lincoln. Official: E.D. Townsend, assistant adjutant general; Printed area measures 11.7 x 8.7 cm.; Additional draft of two hundred thousand men. The following is an order by the president of the United States: Executive Mansion, Washington, March 14, 1864. In order to supply the force required to be drafted for the Navy, and to provide an adequate reserve force for all contingencies ... a call is hereby made and a draft ordered for two hundred thousand men ...
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Address of His Excellency John A. Andrew, to the Two Branches of the Legislature of Massachusetts, January 8, 1864.
John Albion Andrew
Documents accompanying Governor's address--page i-cx. Includes programme for inauguration of the National Cemetery, Gettysburg, Nov. 19, 1863, oration by Edward Everett, map of the cemetery, names of soldiers in the Massachusetts lot, and Lincoln's dedicatory speech.
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Answers of the Governor of Massachusetts to Inquiries Respecting Certain Emigrants who arrived in this Country from Europe, and who are Alleged to be Illegally Enlisted in the Army of the United States, and Other Papers on the Papers on the Same Subject.
John Albion Andrew
Answers of the Governor of Massachusetts to Inquiries Respecting Certain Emigrants who arrived in this Country from Europe, and who are Alleged to be Illegally Enlisted in the Army of the United States, and Other Papers on the Papers on the Same Subject.
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The connection of conflict with destiny: a discourse delivered in Westminister Presbyterian church, Buffalo, April 10, 1864, the Sabbath next after the burial of Aaron Rumsey, esq.
Joel Foote Bingham
This pamphlet is a discourse delivered in Westminister Presbyterian church, Buffalo, April 10, 1864 about the connection of conflict with destiny.
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Notes on the Constitution of the United States : with Expositions of the Most Eminent Statesmen and Jurists, Historical and Explanatory Notes on Every Article
Charles Chauncey Burr
Notes on the Constitution of the United States : with Expositions of the Most Eminent Statesmen and Jurists, Historical and Explanatory Notes on Every Article
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Let Us Reason Together
George Franklin Comstock
From the Papers from the Society for the Diffusion of Political Knowledge, no. 18.
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The President: why he should be re-elected
George William Curtis
This pamphlet is an argument by the author as to his reasons why President Lincoln should be re-elected.
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The War Commenced by the Rebels, Copperheads of the North their Allies: Speech of John D. Defrees, in Washington, D.C., Monday evening, August 1, 1864.
John Doughtery Defrees
Published by the Union Congressional Committee. Also published under title: "Remarks made by John D. Defrees before the Indiana Club Union."
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The Nation's Ballot and its Decision: a Discourse Delivered in Austin-street church, Cambridgeport, and in Harvard church, Charlestown, on Sunday, Nov. 13, 1864; being the Sunday Following the Presidential Election
George Edward Ellis
Reprinted from the 'Monthly religious magazine'.""
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Address by Hon. Edward Everett: Delivered in Faneuil Hall, October 19, 1864 : the Duty of Supporting the Government in the Present Crisis of Affairs.
Edward Everett
The rebellion inexcusable: warning and protest against it. By Alexander H. Stephens, made at the capitol of Georgia, January, 1861: p. 15-16.
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Address of Hon. Edward Everett, at the Consecration of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg, 19th November, 1863: with the Dedicatory Speech of President Lincoln, and the Other Exercises of the Occasion, Accompanied by an Account of the Origin of the Undertaking and of the Arrangement of the Cemetery Grounds and by a Map of the Battle-Field and a Plan of the Cemetery.
Edward Everett
Published for the benefit of the cemetery monument fund; ""Dedicatory address of President Lincoln"": p. [84].