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Box 4

 Container

Contains 30 Results:

"Message of A. G. Curtin, Governor of Pennsylvania, Relative to Military Arrests,". Pamphlet, February 12, 1863

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 15
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: February 12, 1863

"Executive Power," B. R. Curtis, H. O. Houghton, Cambridge. Pamphlet, 1862

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 16
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: 1862

"Memoir of a Narrative Received of Colonel John B. Baldwin, of Staunton, Touching the Origin of the War," Rev. R. L. Dabney, pencil notation, from Southern Historical Society Papers, June. Manuscript, 1876

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 17
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: 1876

"Our Women of the Sixties," Sylvia G. L. Dannett and Katharine M. Jones. U.S. Civil War Centennial Commission, Washington, D.C. Pamphlet, 1963

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 18
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: 1963

"How Abraham Lincoln Became President," J. McCan Davis. Henry O. Shepard Company, Springfield, Illinois. Pamphlet, 1908

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 19
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: 1908

"Abraham Lincoln, the Young Man," Ozora S. Davis. Herald Publishing Company, []. Pamphlet, 1906

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 20
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: 1906

"Memorial Discourse on the Character of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States Delivered at Hollis, N.H., on the Day of the National Fast," P. B. Day. McFarland & Jenks, Concord, N.H. Pamphlet, June 1, 1865

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 21
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: June 1, 1865

"Decision of Chief Justice Taney, in the Merryman Case, upon the Writ of Habeas Corpus," R. B. Taney. Pamphlet, 1862

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 22
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: 1862

"History of American Abolitionism: Its Four Great Epochs," F. G. De Fontaine. D. Appleton & Co., New York. Originally published in the New York Herald. Pamphlet, 1861

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 23
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: 1861

"Michigan's Role in Civil War, Centennial -," The Detroit News Sunday Pictorial, Jan. 22. Newspaper, 1861

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 24
Scope and Contents From the Collection: Charles W. Moores (1862–1923) was a life-long Lincoln scholar and collector. He began his study of Lincoln at a time when many of Lincoln’s friends and foes, neighbors, and associates were still alive. Moores published several works about Lincoln, most notably an address read first before the meeting of the American Bar Association in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on September 1, 1910. This address was subsequently published in the American Law Review and as a separate printing. The collection...
Dates: 1861