984 resultados para Beecher, Lyman, 1775-1863.


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Ancestry: p. 17-22.

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In the original sermon, delivered in 1806, Dr. Beecher had inveighed against dueling. The present editor substitutes the word slavery and its correlative terms for the word dueling and its correlative terms.

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Attributed to Walker in Sabin, no.101057, and in the National Union Catalog.

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Written for, and first published, without postscript, in the "Trumpet and Universalist Magazine," January 3, 1829, in response to a lecture delivered by Beecher, Dec. 2, 1828.

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Contains also Minutes of Vermont annual conference 1845, Catalobue 1843, 44, 45 of Newbury seminary, Benefit and danger of society: an address to the ladies' mutual improvement association of Newbury seminary, 1845. A reformation of morals practicable indispensable: a sermon by L. Beecher, 1814.

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The Boston Athenaeum, in its Catalogue, suggests Lyman Beecher as possible author. Richard H. Shoemaker's A checklist of American imprints for 1828 mentions Beecher and Benjamin Wisner as possible authors.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Mode of access: Internet.

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Shoemaker 28093.

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Reprint. Originally published: Cincinnati : Truman & Smith, 1835.

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Contains notes taken by Harvard student Lyman Spalding during eleven chemistry lectures delivered by Harvard Professor Aaron Dexter (1750-1829) in the fall of 1795 and recipes prepared and used by Spalding in his medical practice in 1797. The recipes include elixir vitriol, containing liquor, Jamaica pepper, cinnamon, and ginger, and an electuary for a cough, containing oxymel squills (sea onion in honey), licorice, antimonium tartaricum potash (a compound of the chemical element antimony and a potassium-containing salt), and opium. The volume also contains writings about chemistry by Spalding, some of which appear transcribed from published sources, in undated entries, and a diary entry from 1799 regarding an experiment with water.