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- catalog contributor b1129878.
- catalog contributor b1129879.
- catalog coverage "United States Politics and government 1783-1865.".
- catalog created "[1967]".
- catalog date "1967".
- catalog date "[1967]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1967]".
- catalog description "Bibliography: p. xxxv-xxxvii.".
- catalog description "Pt. 1, The development of principles, 1832-1854 : -- I am young and unknown / Appeal to the voters of Sangamo County, 1832 -- I shall consider the whole people / Letter to the Sangamo Journal, 1836 -- The perpetuation of our political institutions / Address before the Springfield Young Men's Lyceum, 1838 -- When there shall be neither a slave nor a drunkard / Address before the Springfield Temperance Society, 1842 -- The guarantee of the Rights of Conscience / Resolutions of the Anti-Catholic Riots, 1844 -- By the fruit the tree is to be known / Letter on the Liberty Party and Texas, 1845 -- The truth of the scriptures / Reply to charges of irreligion, 1846 -- No one man should hold the power / Letter on the President's war-making power, 1848 -- The right...to revolutionize / Resolutions on Hungarian Independence, 1852 -- The White-man's Charter of Freedom / Eulogy on Henry Clay, 1852.".
- catalog description "Pt. 2, The challenge of slavery, 1854-1861 : -- This question of slavery extension / Speech on the Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854 -- Others say...I am not an abolitionist / Letter to Joshua F. Speed, 1855 -- The Declaration of Independence includes all men / Speech on the Dred Scott Decision, 1857 -- A house divided against itself / Speech accepting the Republican Senatorial nomination, 1858 -- To immancipate the mind / Lecture on discoveries and inventions, 1859 -- The man before the dollar / Letter on Thomas Jefferson, 1859 -- Labor is the superior...of capital / Address at the Wisconsin State Fair, 1859 -- The old policy of the fathers / Address at the Cooper Union, 1860.".
- catalog description "Pt. 3, The challenge of disunion, 1861-1863 : -- What, then, is coercion? / Speech in Indianapolis, 1861 -- The momentous issue of Civil War / First Inaugural Address, 1861 -- Secession or rebellion? / Message to Special Session of Congress, 1861 -- I cannot assume this reckless position / Letter on Fremont's Emancipation Order, 1861 -- To emancipate gradually / Appeal to border-state Congressmen, 1862 -- We may not touch property / Veto message: Second Confiscation Act, 1862 -- Would you drop the war where it is? / Letter on Louisiana Affairs, 1862 -- The ban is still upon you / Remarks to a Committee of Colored Men, 1862 -- My paramount object / Reply to Horace Greeley, 1862 -- The root of the rebellion / Reply to Christians of Chicago, 1862 -- We cannot escape history / Second Annual message to Congress, 1862 -- A measure made expedient by a war / Opinion on the admission of West Virginia, 1862 -- Slaves... shall be free / Final proclamation of Emancipation, 1863.".
- catalog description "Pt. 4, The challenge of peace and reconstruction, 1863-1865 : -- Broken eggs can not be mended / Letter on peace terms, 1863 -- The scope of moral results / Response to English Workingmen, 1863 -- Ours is a case of rebellion / Letter to New York Democrats, 1863 -- The public safety / Letter to Ohio Democrats, 1863 -- The signs look better / Letter to James C. Conking, 1863 -- Wherein is the peculiar hardship now? / Statement on the draft, 1863 -- Education for young Blacks / Two letters to Nathaniel P. Banks, 1863 -- It is for us the living / Gettysburg Address, 1863 -- To build only from the sound / Third annual message to Congress, 1863 -- The jewel of liberty / Note to Michael Hahn, 1864 -- The rights of all working people / Reply to New York workingmen, 1864 -- I am naturally anti-slavery / Remarks on the use of Negroes as soldiers, 1864 -- Peace and re-union / Letter on war aims, 1864 -- The election was a necessity / Response to a serenade, 1864 -- I retract nothing...as to slavery / Fourth annual message to Congress, 1864 -- With malice toward none / Second Inaugural Address, 1865 -- A righteous and speedy peace / Last public address, 1865 -- Some principles briefly stated / Excerpts and fragments, 1837-1864.".
- catalog extent "xl, 340 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Political thought of Abraham Lincoln.".
- catalog identifier "0672600684 (pbk.)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Political thought of Abraham Lincoln.".
- catalog isPartOf "The American heritage series, 46".
- catalog issued "1967".
- catalog issued "[1967]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill".
- catalog relation "Political thought of Abraham Lincoln.".
- catalog spatial "United States Politics and government 1783-1865.".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog subject "E457.92 1967b".
- catalog subject "JC176 .A5 no.46".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 Philosophy.".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 Political and social views.".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 Political career before 1861.".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 Sources.".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 Views on Civil Rights".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 Views on religion".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 Views on slavery".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 Views on the Constitution.".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865. Gettysburg address.".
- catalog subject "Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865.".
- catalog subject "Presidents United States Biography.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Pt. 1, The development of principles, 1832-1854 : -- I am young and unknown / Appeal to the voters of Sangamo County, 1832 -- I shall consider the whole people / Letter to the Sangamo Journal, 1836 -- The perpetuation of our political institutions / Address before the Springfield Young Men's Lyceum, 1838 -- When there shall be neither a slave nor a drunkard / Address before the Springfield Temperance Society, 1842 -- The guarantee of the Rights of Conscience / Resolutions of the Anti-Catholic Riots, 1844 -- By the fruit the tree is to be known / Letter on the Liberty Party and Texas, 1845 -- The truth of the scriptures / Reply to charges of irreligion, 1846 -- No one man should hold the power / Letter on the President's war-making power, 1848 -- The right...to revolutionize / Resolutions on Hungarian Independence, 1852 -- The White-man's Charter of Freedom / Eulogy on Henry Clay, 1852.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Pt. 2, The challenge of slavery, 1854-1861 : -- This question of slavery extension / Speech on the Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854 -- Others say...I am not an abolitionist / Letter to Joshua F. Speed, 1855 -- The Declaration of Independence includes all men / Speech on the Dred Scott Decision, 1857 -- A house divided against itself / Speech accepting the Republican Senatorial nomination, 1858 -- To immancipate the mind / Lecture on discoveries and inventions, 1859 -- The man before the dollar / Letter on Thomas Jefferson, 1859 -- Labor is the superior...of capital / Address at the Wisconsin State Fair, 1859 -- The old policy of the fathers / Address at the Cooper Union, 1860.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Pt. 3, The challenge of disunion, 1861-1863 : -- What, then, is coercion? / Speech in Indianapolis, 1861 -- The momentous issue of Civil War / First Inaugural Address, 1861 -- Secession or rebellion? / Message to Special Session of Congress, 1861 -- I cannot assume this reckless position / Letter on Fremont's Emancipation Order, 1861 -- To emancipate gradually / Appeal to border-state Congressmen, 1862 -- We may not touch property / Veto message: Second Confiscation Act, 1862 -- Would you drop the war where it is? / Letter on Louisiana Affairs, 1862 -- The ban is still upon you / Remarks to a Committee of Colored Men, 1862 -- My paramount object / Reply to Horace Greeley, 1862 -- The root of the rebellion / Reply to Christians of Chicago, 1862 -- We cannot escape history / Second Annual message to Congress, 1862 -- A measure made expedient by a war / Opinion on the admission of West Virginia, 1862 -- Slaves... shall be free / Final proclamation of Emancipation, 1863.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Pt. 4, The challenge of peace and reconstruction, 1863-1865 : -- Broken eggs can not be mended / Letter on peace terms, 1863 -- The scope of moral results / Response to English Workingmen, 1863 -- Ours is a case of rebellion / Letter to New York Democrats, 1863 -- The public safety / Letter to Ohio Democrats, 1863 -- The signs look better / Letter to James C. Conking, 1863 -- Wherein is the peculiar hardship now? / Statement on the draft, 1863 -- Education for young Blacks / Two letters to Nathaniel P. Banks, 1863 -- It is for us the living / Gettysburg Address, 1863 -- To build only from the sound / Third annual message to Congress, 1863 -- The jewel of liberty / Note to Michael Hahn, 1864 -- The rights of all working people / Reply to New York workingmen, 1864 -- I am naturally anti-slavery / Remarks on the use of Negroes as soldiers, 1864 -- Peace and re-union / Letter on war aims, 1864 -- The election was a necessity / Response to a serenade, 1864 -- I retract nothing...as to slavery / Fourth annual message to Congress, 1864 -- With malice toward none / Second Inaugural Address, 1865 -- A righteous and speedy peace / Last public address, 1865 -- Some principles briefly stated / Excerpts and fragments, 1837-1864.".
- catalog title "The political thought of Abraham Lincoln. Edited by Richard N. Current.".
- catalog type "text".