The Life of Abraham LincolnCosimo, Inc., 2008 M01 1 - 488 páginas She is remembered today as a muckraking journalist, author of such blockbuster exposes as 1904's The History of the Standard Oil Company, which actually contributed to the corporation's breakup in 1911. But in this 1900 work, as charming as it is important, American author IDA MINERVA TARBELL (1857-1944) shows a softer side as she traces, with a laudatory and admiring spirit, the development of the character and morals of Abraham Lincoln. Begun as a project by McClure's Magazine to collect and preserve the reminiscences of friends and acquaintances of Abraham Lincoln while they were still alive, the project grew into a series of articles for the periodical, and then finally this two-volume spiritual biography of the great man, which draws on firsthand memories and other material, including original sources such speeches, letters, and telegrams. Volume II begins with Lincoln's inauguration as President of the United States and follows him through the Civil War, his struggle with the "weapon" of emancipation, his reelection in 1864, and his death and funeral. This volume also features an extensive appendix of original documents written by and to Lincoln. |
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... told that squads of riflemen were in each wing ; that under the platform from which he was to speak were fifty or sixty armed soldiers ; that General Scott and two batteries of flying artillery were in adjacent streets ; and that a ring ...
... told that squads of riflemen were in each wing ; that under the platform from which he was to speak were fifty or sixty armed soldiers ; that General Scott and two batteries of flying artillery were in adjacent streets ; and that a ring ...
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... told me that he meant to put him- self as prominently forward in the ceremonies as he properly could , and to leave no doubt on any one's mind of his de- termination to stand by the new Administration in the per- THE FIRST INAUGURATION ...
... told me that he meant to put him- self as prominently forward in the ceremonies as he properly could , and to leave no doubt on any one's mind of his de- termination to stand by the new Administration in the per- THE FIRST INAUGURATION ...
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... told him sadly that " evacuation seemed almost inevitable . " Unwilling to decide at once , Lincoln devised a manœuvre by which he hoped to shift public attention from Fort Sumter to Fort Pickens , in Pensacola Harbor . The situation of ...
... told him sadly that " evacuation seemed almost inevitable . " Unwilling to decide at once , Lincoln devised a manœuvre by which he hoped to shift public attention from Fort Sumter to Fort Pickens , in Pensacola Harbor . The situation of ...
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... told them of General Scott's letter . He then asked them to meet him the next day . That night the President did not close his eyes in sleep . The moment had come , as it must come , at one time or another , to every President of the ...
... told them of General Scott's letter . He then asked them to meet him the next day . That night the President did not close his eyes in sleep . The moment had come , as it must come , at one time or another , to every President of the ...
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... told him , he again brightened up for a moment and asked him in an abrupt kind of way , laying his hand as he spoke with a queer but not uncivil familiarity on his shoulder , ' You haven't such a thing as a postmaster in your pocket ...
... told him , he again brightened up for a moment and asked him in an abrupt kind of way , laying his hand as he spoke with a queer but not uncivil familiarity on his shoulder , ' You haven't such a thing as a postmaster in your pocket ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Abraham Lincoln appointment April Army of Potomac asked August Baltimore believe Burnside cabinet called City Point coln Colonel Congress Cypher DEAR SIR death sentence December December 26 DEPARTMENT desertion dispatch election emancipation Emancipation Proclamation enemy execution of death EXECUTIVE MANSION February Fort Monroe Fort Sumter forward record Frémont friends further order Governor Grant Halleck Illinois January January 20 John June letter MAJOR ECKERT MAJOR-GENERAL MEADE March McClellan ment military Missouri Monroe morning never NICOLAY night North October October 15 OFFICER IN COMMAND Ohio party passed persons pier President President's proclamation received regiment Republican Richmond Saint Louis Secretary of War Senator sent September September 13 Seward slavery slaves soldiers South Springfield Stanton Sumter Suspend execution Talbott telegram telegraph Tenn thing tion to-day troops Union Volunteers vote WAR DEPARTMENT WASHINGTON WASHINGTON CITY Whigs White House wrote York