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Box 13

 Container

Contains 36 Results:

"State Sovereignty and the Doctrine of Coercion, by the Hon. Wm. D. Porter

 File — Box: 13, Folder: 29
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: 1835 - 1995

Together with a Letter from Hon. J. K. Paulding, Former Sec. of Navy. The Right to Secede, by ‘States.'" Pamphlet

 File — Box: 13, Folder: 29
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: 1835 - 1995

"Mrs. Abraham Lincoln and Her Friends." Willis Steell. Removed from Munsey's Magazine. N.d. Manuscript

 File — Box: 13, Folder: 30
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: 1835 - 1995

"Prophecy and Fulfillment. Speech of A. H. Stephens, of George, (Vice-President of so-called Confederate States) in Opposition to Secession. Delivered." "Address of E. W. Gantt, of Arkansas, (Brigadier-General in the Confederate Army) in Favor of Re-union in." In Loyal Publication Society, no. 36. Pamphlet, November 14, 1860

 File — Box: 13, Folder: 31
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: November 14, 1860

"Lincoln Statue Almost Unknown: Rosemond Cemetery, Near Pana, Holds Bronze Figure of the Great Emancipator." Newspaper clipping from unmarked paper. Manuscript

 File — Box: 13, Folder: 32
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: 1835 - 1995

"An Anthropologist Looks at Lincoln," T. D. Stewart. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC. Pamphlet, 1953

 File — Box: 13, Folder: 33
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: 1953