Abraham Lincoln: A HistoryCosimo, Inc., 2009 M01 1 - 558 páginas Considered one of the best treatments of the presidency of Abraham Lincoln of its time, this portrait of the man and his administration of the United States at the moment of its greatest upheaval is both intimate and scholarly. Written by two private secretaries to the president and first published in 1890, this astonishingly in-depth work is still praised today for its clear, easy-to-read style and vitality. This new replica edition features all the original illustrations. Volume Eight covers: [ conspiracies in the North [ habeas corpus [ Chickamauga [ Chattanooga [ Burnside in Tennessee [ the Gettysburg address [ foreign relations in 1863 [ Grant general-in-chief [ Spotsylvania [ and much more. American journalist and statesman JOHN MILTON HAY (1838-1905) was only 22 when he became a private secretary to Lincoln. A former member of the Providence literary circle when he attended Brown University in the late 1850s, he may have been the real author of Lincoln's famous "Letter to Mrs. Bixby." After Lincoln's death, Hay later served as editor of the *New York Tribune* and as U.S. ambassador to the United Kingdom under President William McKinley. American author JOHN GEORGE NICOLAY (1832-1901) was born in Germany and emigrated to the U.S. as a child. Before serving as Lincoln's private secretary, he worked as a newspaper editor and later as assistant to the secretary of state of Illinois. He also wrote *Campaigns of the Civil War* (1881). |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 25
Página xiv
... Meade's Failure to Intercept Lee at Front Royal . Lin- coln's Letters to Meade . Two Corps Under Hooker Sent to Rosecrans . Lee moves Northward . His Plan . Meade Discovers it . A Race for Position . The Battle of Bristoe Station . Hill ...
... Meade's Failure to Intercept Lee at Front Royal . Lin- coln's Letters to Meade . Two Corps Under Hooker Sent to Rosecrans . Lee moves Northward . His Plan . Meade Discovers it . A Race for Position . The Battle of Bristoe Station . Hill ...
Página xv
... Meade's Magnanimity . Grant Returns to the West for a Brief Visit CHAPTER XIV . THE WILDERNESS • · Change of Commands . Grant's Headquarters at Cul- peper . His Visits to Washington . His Plan for Con- certed Movement . The Route to ...
... Meade's Magnanimity . Grant Returns to the West for a Brief Visit CHAPTER XIV . THE WILDERNESS • · Change of Commands . Grant's Headquarters at Cul- peper . His Visits to Washington . His Plan for Con- certed Movement . The Route to ...
Página 82
... Meade telegraphed him his judgment that Longstreet had left Lee's army , and even then he did not feel sure of his destination . W. R. Vol . XXX . , Part I. , p . 34 . But before this Rosecrans's dispatches had lost their sanguine tinge ...
... Meade telegraphed him his judgment that Longstreet had left Lee's army , and even then he did not feel sure of his destination . W. R. Vol . XXX . , Part I. , p . 34 . But before this Rosecrans's dispatches had lost their sanguine tinge ...
Página 189
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Página 231
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Contenido
1 | |
28 | |
43 | |
72 | |
Thomas Breaks Braggs Center Rout of the Confed | 121 |
BURNSIDE IN TENNESSEE | 158 |
LINCOLNS GETTYSBURG ADDRESS | 189 |
MISSOURI RADICALS AND CON | 204 |
THE POMEROY CIRCULAR | 309 |
GRANT GENERALINCHIEF | 326 |
THE WILDERNESS | 346 |
309 | 361 |
SPOTSYLVANIA AND COLD HARBOR | 372 |
ARKANSAS FREE | 408 |
LOUISIANA FREE | 419 |
TENNESSEE FREE | 438 |
THE LINE OF THE RAPIDAN | 231 |
FOREIGN RELATIONS IN 1863 | 254 |
OLUSTEE AND THE RED RIVER | 281 |
MARYLAND FREE | 450 |
MISSOURI FREE | 469 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
A. P. Hill advance army artillery attack Banks battle Bragg brigade Burnside campaign captured cavalry CHAP Chase Chattanooga Chickamauga command Confederate Congress constitution Convention corps dispatch division East Tennessee election emancipation enemy enemy's eral favor Federal fight flank force front Government Governor Grant Gratz Brown Halleck Hancock Hill Hooker Ibid intrenchments J. E. B. STUART J. H. Wilson Johnson Knoxville Lee's letter Lincoln Longstreet Lookout Lookout Mountain Louisiana loyal Maryland Meade Memoirs ment miles military Missionary Ridge Missouri morning Mountain move movement Murfreesboro National numbers officers party persons position Potomac President President's prisoners proclamation Radicals rear rebel rebellion received reënforcements Report Richmond Ridge river road Rosecrans Rosecrans's says Schofield Senate sent Sept Sheridan Sherman side slavery Slidell soldiers South success Tennessee River Thomas tion troops Union Union army Virginia vote W. R. Vol Warren Washington wrote