284 resultados para Civil War Centennial
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"An alphabetical arrangement of the ships of the Continental and United States Navies, with a historical sketch of each one."
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Report year ends June 30.
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Ca. 165 ft. (ca. 60,000 items)
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Mode of access: Internet.
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I. The French alliance. Condition of the church. The eve of the reformation, 1550-1559. The war of reformation, 1559-1560. The reformation parliament. John Knox. Maitland and Mary Stewart, 1561-1567. Civil war, 1568-1573. The new religion. Church and state. Bishops and presbyters, 1572-1625. The reign of the moderates. The national covenant, 1625-1638. Presbytery restored, 1638. The Glasgow assembly.--II. The covenant in arms, 1639-1641. The solemn league and covenant, 1641-1643. The royalist reaction, 1644-1648. The theocratic experiment, 1648-1651. The reign of the zealots. The restoration, 1651-1663. The Pentland rising, 1663-1667. The Leighton group, 1667-1674. The Bothwell rising, 1674-1680. Fanaticism and repression, 1680-1685. The revolution, 1685-1688. The revolution settlement, 1688-1695.
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"A contribution to the history of bookbinding at Oxford down to the period of the civil war; it treats solely of bindings decorated with stamps and rolls to the exclusion of all gilt-tooled work."
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Originally published New York: Scribner, 1892; cf. Menendez, Civil War novels, 377.
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Menendez. Civil War novels,
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Imperfect: p. 3-4 wanting.
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"These volumes have been prepared to present in more convenient form for present reference the series of articles on 'American political history,' contributed to Lalor's Cyclopædia of political science, political economy, and political history, by the late Professor Alexander Johnston."--Pref.
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Published in 1881 under title: A royal gentleman.
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Menendez. Civil War novels,
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Written during Weed's unofficial mission to Europe to conciliate English and French opinion in the early years of the civil war.
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The Continental Monthly was founded shortly after the start of the Civil War, and strongly favored Lincoln and the Republican Party. Political in nature, the monthly provided a considerable amount of wit and humor, German writing, and fiction. Contributors included Charles Godfrey Leland (editor until April 1863), James Gilmore (the publisher), Henry Carey Lea, George H. Boker, N.L. Frothingham, Richard B. Kimball, and Martha Walker Cook (subsequent editor to Leland). Cf. American periodicals, 1741-1900
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Menendez. Civil War novels,