Bibliography

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bibliography Bibliography Archival Sources American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts Cheever Family Papers E. S. Bird Memorial Library, Special Collections, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York George Peck Papers Manuscripts Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Ulysses S. Grant Papers Andrew Johnson Papers John P. Newman Papers Matthew Simpson Papers George J. Mitchell Department of Special Collections & Archives, Bowdoin College Library, Brunswick, Maine Oliver Otis Howard Papers Presbyterian Historical Society, Philadelphia Albert Barnes Papers Henry A. Boardman Papers Phineas D. Gurley Papers Herrick Johnson Papers Alexander T. McGill Papers Published Personal Papers Basler, Roy P., ed. The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln. 9 vols. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1953–55. Blassingame, John W., and John R. McKivigan, eds. The Frederick Douglass Papers, Series One: Speeches, Debates, and Interviews. 5 vols. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1979–92. Foner, Philip S., ed. The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass. 5 vols. New York: International, 1950–55. Graf, LeRoy P., Ralph Haskins, Paul H. Bergeron, et al., eds. The Papers of Andrew Johnson. 16 vols. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1967–. Sears, Stephen W., ed. The Civil War Papers of George B. McClellan: Selected Correspondence, 1860–1865. New York: Ticknor and Fields, 1989. Simon, John Y., ed. The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant. 28 vols. Carbondale: University of Southern Illinois Press, 1967–. Serial Publications American Presbyterian and Theological Review American Presbyterian Review Atlantic Monthly Baptist Quarterly Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review Christian Recorder Harper’s New Monthly Magazine Harper’s Weekly Methodist Quarterly Review National Baptist Presbyterian Quarterly and Princeton Review Principia Principia and National Era New Englander and Yale Review New York Evangelist New York Independent New York Times North American Review Zion’s Herald Miscellaneous Printed Primary Sources Abbe, Frederic Randolph. “Wisdom Better Than the Weapons of War.” Boston: T. R. Marvin and Son, 1865. Adams, John W. National Thanksgiving Sermon. Manchester, N.H.: Mirror Steam Job Printing Establishment, 1866. Agnew, D. Hayes. “Biographical Sketch of the Rev. Elias R. Beadle, D.D., LL.D.” Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 22 (October 1885): 227–40. Aikman, Robert. Discourse on the Death of President Garfield. New York: Horace Holden, 1881. Atwood, Edward S. The Nation’s Loss. Salem, Mass.: Salem Gazette, 1865. Ayrault, Walter. A Sermon. Oxford, N.Y.: J. B. Galpin, 1867. Babcock, Samuel B. A Discourse on the Death of President Lincoln. Dedham, Mass.: John Cox, Jr., 1865. Backman, Charles. Abraham Lincoln, the World’s Great Martyr. Jamaica, N.Y.: Charles Welling, 1865. Badger, Henry C. The Humble Conqueror: A Discourse Commemorative of the Life and Services of Abraham Lincoln. Boston: William V. Spencer, 1865. Bain, John W. National Lessons from the Life and Death of President Lincoln. Pittsburgh: W. S. Haven, 1865. Baldridge, Samuel Coulter. The Martyr Prince. Cincinnati: Jon B. Boyd, 1865. Bancroft, George. A History of the United States. 10 vols. Boston: Little, Brown, 1834– 75. Barnes, Albert. The Church and Slavery. Philadelphia: Parry and McMillan, 1857. ———. Inquiry into the Scriptural Views of Slavery. Philadelphia: Perkins and Purves, 1846. ———. Lectures on the Evidences of Christianity in the Nineteenth Century. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1867. ———. Life at Threescore and Ten. New York: American Tract Society, 1871. ———. The Love of Country. Philadelphia: C. Sherman and Son, 1861. ———. “Peace and Honor.” National Preacher and Village Pulpit 40 (January 1866): 1– 28. ———. The State of the Country. Philadelphia: Henry B. Ashmead, 1865. Barr, Thomas Hughes. A Discourse. Wooster, Ohio: Republican Steam Power Press, 1865. Barrows, William. Honor to the Brave. Boston: John M. Whittemore, 1863. Bartlett, Dwight K. Our National Idea. Rochester, N.Y.: Tracy and Rew, 1869. ———. The Philosophy of the Rebellion. Albany, N.Y.: Weed, Parsons, 1864. Bartol, Cyrus Augustus. “Address.” In Sermons Preached in Boston on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, 49–56. Boston: J. E. Tilton, 1865. ———. The President’s Death. Boston: A. Williams, 1881. Beadle, Elias R. The Drift of Divine Providence. Philadelphia: McLaughlin Brothers, 1878. ———. “Gladness in the Works of God.” Philadelphia: J. B. Chandler, 1873. ———. Thanksgiving-Day Sermon. Philadelphia: Jas. B. Rodgers, 1866. Beecher, Henry Ward. Beecher’s “Cleveland Letters”: The Two Letters on Reconstruction of the Southern States. 1884. ———. Oration at Raising the Old Flag over Fort Sumter, April 14th, 1865. New York: Schermerhorn, Bancroft, 1865. ———. Patriotic Addresses: America and England, from the 1850s to 1885, on Slavery, the Civil War, and the Development of Civil Liberty in the United States. New York: Fords, Howard, and Hubert, 1887. Beecher, Willis J., and Mary A. Beecher, eds. Index of Presbyterian Ministers. Philadelphia: Presbyterian Board of Publication, 1883. Bell, Samuel B. Sermon. New York: Baptist and Taylor, 1864. Benedict, Andrew Dibble. Our Nation’s Sorrow. Racine, Wisc.: Journal Print, 1865. Beveridge, Andrew M. A Discourse on the Assassination of President Lincoln, Delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Lansingburgh, N.Y., on Sabbath Evening, April 16, 1865. Troy, N.Y.: A. W. Scribner, 1865. Bingham, Joel Foote. Bright Republic. Buffalo, 1865. ———. Great Providences toward the Loyal Part of the Nation. Buffalo: Breed, Butler, 1864. ———. The Hour of Patriotism. Buffalo: Franklin, 1862. ———. National Disappointment. Buffalo: Breed, Butler, 1865. Blackburn, William M. The Crime against the Presidency. Trenton, N.J.: Murphy and Bechtel, 1865. Bliss, John C. Obedience the Fruit of Gratitude. Carlisle, Pa.: Book and Job Office of the “American Volunteer,” 1865. Boardman, George Dana. An Address in Commemoration of James Abram Garfield. Philadelphia: Chandler Printing House, 1881. ———. Addresses Delivered in the Meeting-House of the First Baptist Church of Philadelphia, April 14th, 16th, and 19th, 1865. Philadelphia: Sherman, 1865. ———. Civil Government, A Divine Ordinance. Philadelphia: Ringwalt and Brown, 1864. ———. Conservative Progress. Philadelphia: James B. Chandler, 1876. ———. Parable of the Shrewd Steward. Philadelphia: Chandler Printing House, 1879. ———. The Parliament of Religions: An Address before the Philadelphia Conference of Baptist Ministers, October 23, 1893. 2nd ed. Philadelphia: National Baptist Print, 1893. ———. The Two Anointed Ones; or, Church and State. Philadelphia: First Baptist Church, 1881. Boardman, George Nye. The Death of President Lincoln. Binghamton, N.Y.: F. N. Chase, 1865. ———. Historical Discourse. New York: Wynkoop and Hallenbeck, 1868. Boardman, Henry Augustus. The American Union. Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo, 1851. ———. The Bible in the Counting-House: A Course of Lectures to Merchants. 7th ed. Philadelphia: American Sunday-School Union, 1877. ———. The Bible in the Family; or, Hints on Domestic Happiness. 13th ed. Philadelphia: American Sunday-School Union, 1877. ———. Christian Fidelity and Its Reward. Philadelphia: Collins, 1876. ———. A Discourse on the Life and Character of Daniel Webster. Philadelphia: Joseph M. Wilson, 1852. ———. Earthly Suffering and Heavenly Glory. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1878. ———. The Federal Judiciary. Philadelphia: William S. and Alfred Martien, 1862. ———. The General Assembly of 1866. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1867. ———. God’s Providence in Accidents. Philadelphia: Parry and McMillan, 1855. ———. The Great Question: Will You Consider the Subject of Personal Religion? Philadelphia: American Sunday School Union, 1855. ———. A Handful of Corn: Selected Passages from the Writings of Henry A. Boardman. New York: Anson D. F. Randolph, 1884. ———. Healing and Salvation for Our Country from God Alone. Philadelphia: William S. and Alfred Martien, 1864. ———. The Peace-Makers. Philadelphia: James S. Claxton, 1865. ———. The Peace We Need, and How to Secure It. Philadelphia: James S. Claxton, 1865. ———. A Reformed and Revived Christianity: Our Country’s Greatest Necessity. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1867. ———. A Sermon Occasioned by the Death of William Henry Harrison. Philadelphia: William S. Martien, 1841. ———. The Sovereignty of God, the Sure and Only Stay of the Christian Patriot in Our National Troubles. Philadelphia: William S. and Alfred Martien, 1862. ———. Thanksgiving in War. Philadelphia: C. Sherman and Son, 1861. ———. Two Sermons: Preached on the Twenty-Fifth and Fortieth Anniversaries of the Author’s Pastorate. Philadelphia: Inquirer Book and Job Print, 1873. ———. What Christianity Demands of Us at the Present Crisis. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1860. Boole, William H. Our Bible, Our Schools, and Our Flag: One and Inseparable. 3rd ed. Brooklyn: L. Darbee and Son, 1870. ———. “Shall Our Common School System Be Maintained as It Is?” New York: N. Tibbals, 1870. Booth, Robert Russell. Personal Forgiveness and Public Justice. New York: Anson F. Randolph, 1865. Boynton, Charles Brandon. The Duty which the Colored People Owe to Themselves. Washington, D.C., 1867. ———. National Thanksgiving Services held on Thursday, December 7, 1865, in the Hall of the House of Representatives of the United States of America. Washington, D.C.: W. H. and O. H. Morrison, 1865. Bradlee, Caleb Davis. A Sermon. Boston: Nathan Sawyer and Son, 1881. Buckingham, Samuel Giles. A Sermon. Springfield,
Recommended publications
  • The Stanton-Ames Order and Union Military-Supported Church Confiscation During the American Civil War
    BearWorks MSU Graduate Theses Spring 2021 We May Undertake to Run the Churches: The Stanton-Ames Order and Union Military-Supported Church Confiscation During the American Civil War Todd Ernest Sisson Missouri State University, [email protected] As with any intellectual project, the content and views expressed in this thesis may be considered objectionable by some readers. However, this student-scholar’s work has been judged to have academic value by the student’s thesis committee members trained in the discipline. The content and views expressed in this thesis are those of the student-scholar and are not endorsed by Missouri State University, its Graduate College, or its employees. Follow this and additional works at: https://bearworks.missouristate.edu/theses Part of the History of Religion Commons, Political History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Sisson, Todd Ernest, "We May Undertake to Run the Churches: The Stanton-Ames Order and Union Military-Supported Church Confiscation During the American Civil arW " (2021). MSU Graduate Theses. 3619. https://bearworks.missouristate.edu/theses/3619 This article or document was made available through BearWorks, the institutional repository of Missouri State University. The work contained in it may be protected by copyright and require permission of the copyright holder for reuse or redistribution. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WE MAY UNDERTAKE TO RUN THE CHURCHES: THE STANTON-AMES ORDER AND UNION MILITARY-SUPPORTED
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 General Conference Preview
    APRIL 2016 • VOL. 20 NO. 10 FEATURED: 2016 General Conference Preview PAGES 6-13 INSIDE THIS ISSUE News from the Episcopal Office 1 Events & Announcements 2 Christian Conversations 3 Local Church News 4-5 General Conference 6-13 Historical Messenger 14-15 Conference News 16-17 ON THE 16 COVER Montage picturing delegates at round tables at the 2012 General Conference and Peoria Convention-site of the 2016 General Conference The Current (USPS 014-964) is published Send materials to: monthly by the Illinois Great Rivers P.O. Box 19207, Springfield, IL 62794-9207 Conference of The UMC, 5900 South or tel. 217.529.2040 or fax 217.529.4155 Second Street, Springfield, IL 62711 [email protected], website www.igrc.org An individual subscription is $15 per year. Periodical postage paid at Peoria, IL, and The opinions expressed in viewpoints are additional mailing offices. those of the writers and do not necessarily POSTMASTER: Please send address reflect the views of The Current, The IGRC, changes to or The UMC. The Current, Illinois Great Rivers Communications Team leader: Paul E. Conference, Black Team members: Kim Halusan and P.O. Box 19207, Springfield, IL 62794-9207 Michele Willson 13 IGRC’s best kept secret: Your church has FREE Current subscriptions! Due to the faithful payment of apportionments of our churches, free subscriptions to The Current are available to each IGRC congregation. The bad news? One-half of those subscriptions go unclaimed! Pastors: Check the list of subscribers to The Current for your church by visiting www.igrc.org/subscriptions. Select the District, Church and enter the church’s six-digit GCFA number.
    [Show full text]
  • [Título Do Documento] 1
    [Escrever o nome da empresa] 1 [Título do documento] Universidade Técnica de Lisboa Faculdade de Arquitectura Documento definitivo BATMAN: SETE DÉCADAS DE HISTÓRIA E DE ESTÓRIAS A EVOLUÇÃO DA IMAGEM DE UM HERÓI À LUZ DAS TENDÊNCIAS DA MODA Rita Daniela da Silva Camponez (Licenciada) DISSERTAÇÃO PARA OBTENÇÃO DO GRAU DE MESTRE EM DESIGN DE MODA Orientador Científico: Doutor Armando Jorge Caseirão Júri: Presidente: Doutora Manuela Cristina Figueiredo Vogais: Doutor Armando Jorge Caseirão Doutor Rui Zink - Lisboa, Dezembro de 2010 - We now say that Batman has two hundred suits hanging in “ the Batcave so they don’t have to look the same (…). Everybody loves to draw Batman, and everybody wants to put their own spin on it. (Dennis O’Neil apud Les Daniels, 1970, p. 98) “ Agradecimentos Embora esta dissertação seja, pelo seu fim académico, um trabalho de natureza individual, não seria possível a sua realização sem apoios de natureza diversa, que não podem deixar de ser realçados. Assim, gostaria de dirigir os mais verdadeiros agradecimentos a quem contribuiu, de forma directa ou indirecta, para a concretização deste projecto: À minha mãe, ao meu pai, ao Eduardo, avós e toda a família, não posso deixar de expressar e reconhecer o apoio incontestável e permanente incentivo, ânimo ou por apenas me terem dado, ao longo destes meses, o prazer da sua convivência. Ao Sérgio, meu namorado, por procurar com o seu comportamento contribuir para o meu bem-estar e felicidade, pelo estímulo e por partilhar comigo a convicção de que vale a pena um sacrifício, quando estão em causa valores e objectivos valiosos.
    [Show full text]
  • Civil War Generals Buried in Spring Grove Cemetery by James Barnett
    Spring Grove Cemetery, once characterized as blending "the elegance of a park with the pensive beauty of a burial-place," is the final resting- place of forty Cincinnatians who were generals during the Civil War. Forty For the Union: Civil War Generals Buried in Spring Grove Cemetery by James Barnett f the forty Civil War generals who are buried in Spring Grove Cemetery, twenty-three had advanced from no military experience whatsoever to attain the highest rank in the Union Army. This remarkable feat underscores the nature of the Northern army that suppressed the rebellion of the Confed- erate states during the years 1861 to 1865. Initially, it was a force of "inspired volunteers" rather than a standing army in the European tradition. Only seven of these forty leaders were graduates of West Point: Jacob Ammen, Joshua H. Bates, Sidney Burbank, Kenner Garrard, Joseph Hooker, Alexander McCook, and Godfrey Weitzel. Four of these seven —Burbank, Garrard, Mc- Cook, and Weitzel —were in the regular army at the outbreak of the war; the other three volunteered when the war started. Only four of the forty generals had ever been in combat before: William H. Lytle, August Moor, and Joseph Hooker served in the Mexican War, and William H. Baldwin fought under Giuseppe Garibaldi in the Italian civil war. This lack of professional soldiers did not come about by chance. When the Constitutional Convention met in Philadelphia in 1787, its delegates, who possessed a vast knowledge of European history, were determined not to create a legal basis for a standing army. The founding fathers believed that the stand- ing armies belonging to royalty were responsible for the endless bloody wars that plagued Europe.
    [Show full text]
  • Record of the Organizations Engaged in the Campaign, Siege, And
    College ILttirarjj FROM THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT ' THROUGH £> VICKSBURG NATIONAL MILITARY PARK COMMISSION. RECORD OF THE ORGANIZATIONS ENGAGED IN THE CAMPAIGN, SIEGE, AND DEFENSE OF VICKSBURG. COMPILED FROM THE OFFICIAL RECORDS BY jomsr s. KOUNTZ, SECRETARY AND HISTORIAN OF THE COMMISSION. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1901. PREFACE. The Vicksburg campaign opened March 29, 1863, with General Grant's order for the advance of General Osterhaus' division from Millikens Bend, and closed July 4^, 1863, with the surrender of Pem- berton's army and the city of Vicksburg. Its course was determined by General Grant's plan of campaign. This plan contemplated the march of his active army from Millikens Bend, La. , to a point on the river below Vicksburg, the running of the batteries at Vicksburg by a sufficient number of gunboats and transports, and the transfer of his army to the Mississippi side. These points were successfully accomplished and, May 1, the first battle of the campaign was fought near Port Gibson. Up to this time General Grant had contemplated the probability of uniting the army of General Banks with his. He then decided not to await the arrival of Banks, but to make the cam paign with his own army. May 12, at Raymond, Logan's division of Grant's army, with Crocker's division in reserve, was engaged with Gregg's brigade of Pemberton's army. Gregg was largely outnum bered and, after a stout fight, fell back to Jackson. The same day the left of Grant's army, under McClernand, skirmished at Fourteen- mile Creek with the cavalry and mounted infantry of Pemberton's army, supported by Bowen's division and two brigades of Loring's division.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gordian Knot: Apartheid & the Unmaking of the Liberal World Order, 1960-1970
    THE GORDIAN KNOT: APARTHEID & THE UNMAKING OF THE LIBERAL WORLD ORDER, 1960-1970 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of the Ohio State University By Ryan Irwin, B.A., M.A. History ***** The Ohio State University 2010 Dissertation Committee: Professor Peter Hahn Professor Robert McMahon Professor Kevin Boyle Professor Martha van Wyk © 2010 by Ryan Irwin All rights reserved. ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the apartheid debate from an international perspective. Positioned at the methodological intersection of intellectual and diplomatic history, it examines how, where, and why African nationalists, Afrikaner nationalists, and American liberals contested South Africa’s place in the global community in the 1960s. It uses this fight to explore the contradictions of international politics in the decade after second-wave decolonization. The apartheid debate was never at the center of global affairs in this period, but it rallied international opinions in ways that attached particular meanings to concepts of development, order, justice, and freedom. As such, the debate about South Africa provides a microcosm of the larger postcolonial moment, exposing the deep-seated differences between politicians and policymakers in the First and Third Worlds, as well as the paradoxical nature of change in the late twentieth century. This dissertation tells three interlocking stories. First, it charts the rise and fall of African nationalism. For a brief yet important moment in the early and mid-1960s, African nationalists felt genuinely that they could remake global norms in Africa’s image and abolish the ideology of white supremacy through U.N.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 After Slavery & Reconstruction: the Black Struggle in the U.S. for Freedom, Equality, and Self-Realization* —A Bibliogr
    After Slavery & Reconstruction: The Black Struggle in the U.S. for Freedom, Equality, and Self-Realization* —A Bibliography Patrick S. O’Donnell (2020) Jacob Lawrence, Library, 1966 Apologia— Several exceptions notwithstanding (e.g., some titles treating the Reconstruction Era), this bibliography begins, roughly, with the twentieth century. I have not attempted to comprehensively cover works of nonfiction or the arts generally but, once more, I have made— and this time, a fair number of—exceptions by way of providing a taste of the requisite material. So, apart from the constraints of most of my other bibliographies: books, in English, these particular constraints are intended to keep the bibliography to a fairly modest length (around one hundred pages). This compilation is far from exhaustive, although it endeavors to be representative of the available literature, whatever the influence of my idiosyncratic beliefs and 1 preferences. I trust the diligent researcher will find titles on particular topics or subject areas by browsing carefully through the list. I welcome notice of titles by way of remedying any deficiencies. Finally, I have a separate bibliography on slavery, although its scope is well beyond U.S. history. * Or, if you prefer, “self-fulfillment and human flourishing (eudaimonia).” I’m not here interested in the question of philosophical and psychological differences between these concepts (i.e., self- realization and eudaimonia) and the existing and possible conceptions thereof, but more simply and broadly in their indispensable significance in reference to human nature and the pivotal metaphysical and moral purposes they serve in our critical and evaluative exercises (e.g., and after Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum, in employing criteria derived from the notion of ‘human capabilities and functionings’) as part of our individual and collective historical quest for “the Good.” However, I might note that all of these concepts assume a capacity for self- determination.
    [Show full text]
  • AMERICAN MANHOOD in the CIVIL WAR ERA a Dissertation Submitted
    UNMADE: AMERICAN MANHOOD IN THE CIVIL WAR ERA A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Notre Dame in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor in Philosophy by Michael E. DeGruccio _________________________________ Gail Bederman, Director Graduate Program in History Notre Dame, Indiana July 2007 UNMADE: AMERICAN MANHOOD IN THE CIVIL WAR ERA Abstract by Michael E. DeGruccio This dissertation is ultimately a story about men trying to tell stories about themselves. The central character driving the narrative is a relatively obscure officer, George W. Cole, who gained modest fame in central New York for leading a regiment of black soldiers under the controversial General Benjamin Butler, and, later, for killing his attorney after returning home from the war. By weaving Cole into overlapping micro-narratives about violence between white officers and black troops, hidden war injuries, the personal struggles of fellow officers, the unbounded ambition of his highest commander, Benjamin Butler, and the melancholy life of his wife Mary Barto Cole, this dissertation fleshes out the essence of the emergent myth of self-made manhood and its relationship to the war era. It also provides connective tissue between the top-down war histories of generals and epic battles and the many social histories about the “common soldier” that have been written consciously to push the historiography away from military brass and Lincoln’s administration. Throughout this dissertation, mediating figures like Cole and those who surrounded him—all of lesser ranks like major, colonel, sergeant, or captain—hem together what has previously seemed like the disconnected experiences of the Union military leaders, and lowly privates in the field, especially African American troops.
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Review
    HISTORICAL REVIEW APRIL 1963 Fred Geary's "The Steamboat Idlewild' Published Quarterly By The State Historical Society of Missouri COLUMBIA, MISSOURI THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF MISSOURI The State Historical Society of Missouri, heretofore organized under the laws of this State, shall be the trustee of this State—Laws of Missouri, 1899, R. S. of Mo., 1949, Chapter 183. OFFICERS 1962-65 ROY D. WILLIAMS, Boonville, President L. E. MEADOR, Springfield, First Vice President LEO J. ROZIER, Perryville, Second Vice President WILLIAM L. BRADSHAW, Columbia, Third Vice President RUSSELL V. DYE, Liberty, Fourth Vice President WILLIAM C TUCKER, Warrensburg, Fifth Vice President JOHN A. WINKLER, Hannibal, Sixth Vice President R. B. PRICE, Columbia, Treasurer FLOYD C SHOEMAKER, Columbia, Sacretary Emeritus and Consultant RICHARD S. BROWNLEE, Columbia, Director, Secretary, and Librarian TRUSTEES Permanent Trustees, Former Presidents of the Society E. L. DALE, Carthage E. E. SWAIN, Kirksville RUSH H. LIMBAUGH, Cape Girardeau L. M. WHITE, Mexico GEORGE A. ROZIER, Jefferson City Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1963 RALPH P. BIEBER, St. Louis LEO J. ROZIER, Perryville BARTLETT BODER, St. Joseph W. WALLACE SMITH, Independence L. E. MEADOR, Springfield JACK STAPLETON, Stanberry JOSEPH H. MOORE, Charleston HENRY C THOMPSON, Bonne Terre Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1964 WILLIAM R. DENSLOW, Trenton FRANK LUTHER MOTT, Columbia ALFRED O. FUERBRINGER, St. Louis GEORGE H. SCRUTON, Sedalia GEORGE FULLER GREEN, Kansas City JAMES TODD, Moberly ROBERT S. GREEN, Mexico T. BALLARD WATTERS, Marshfield Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1965 FRANK C BARNHILL, Marshall W. C HEWITT, Shelbyville FRANK P. BRIGGS, Macon ROBERT NAGEL JONES, St.
    [Show full text]
  • University of Cincinnati
    UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI Date:_December 13, 2006_ I, James Michael Rhyne______________________________________, hereby submit this work as part of the requirements for the degree of: Doctor of Philosophy in: History It is entitled: Rehearsal for Redemption: The Politics of Post-Emancipation Violence in Kentucky’s Bluegrass Region This work and its defense approved by: Chair: _Wayne K. Durrill_____________ _Christopher Phillips_________ _Wendy Kline__________________ _Linda Przybyszewski__________ Rehearsal for Redemption: The Politics of Post-Emancipation Violence in Kentucky’s Bluegrass Region A Dissertation submitted to the Division of Research and Advanced Studies of the University of Cincinnati in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in the Department of History of the College of Arts and Sciences 2006 By James Michael Rhyne M.A., Western Carolina University, 1997 M-Div., Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1989 B.A., Wake Forest University, 1982 Committee Chair: Professor Wayne K. Durrill Abstract Rehearsal for Redemption: The Politics of Post-Emancipation Violence in Kentucky’s Bluegrass Region By James Michael Rhyne In the late antebellum period, changing economic and social realities fostered conflicts among Kentuckians as tension built over a number of issues, especially the future of slavery. Local clashes matured into widespread, violent confrontations during the Civil War, as an ugly guerrilla war raged through much of the state. Additionally, African Americans engaged in a wartime contest over the meaning of freedom. Nowhere were these interconnected conflicts more clearly evidenced than in the Bluegrass Region. Though Kentucky had never seceded, the Freedmen’s Bureau established a branch in the Commonwealth after the war.
    [Show full text]
  • Lincoln and Habeas: of Merryman and Milligan and Mccardle
    Lincoln and Habeas: Of Merryman and Milligan and McCardle John Yoo* Three cases define the Supreme Court's encounter with the Civil War: Ex parte Merryman,' Ex parte Milligan,2 and Ex parte McCardle.3 All three case names bear the styling "ex parte" because all three were brought on behalf of citizens detained by the armed forces of the Union. All three detainees sought release under the ancient writ of habeas corpus, which requires the government to demonstrate to a federal judge the factual and legal grounds for detention.4 I will explain why the cases of the Civil War did not assume the landmark importance, despite their circumstances and language, as a Marbury v. Madison, McCullough v. Maryland, or Brown v. Board of Education, but instead showed the deferential attitude of the Supreme Court to the other branches of the government during wartime. Merryman was a Maryland militia officer who had blown up railroad bridges between Washington, D.C. and the North, and was training secessionist troops in the earliest days of the Civil War.5 Milligan was an alleged member of an insurgent force in Indiana that was sympathetic to the Confederacy.6 He was tried and sentenced by a military commission-an old form of ad hoc military court established by commanders for the trial of violations of the laws of war and the administration of justice in occupied territory.7 * Distinguished Visiting Professor of Law, Chapman Law School (2008-09); Professor of Law, University of California at Berkeley; Visiting Scholar, American Enterprise Institute. The author thanks Ben Petersen and Janet Galeria for outstanding research assistance.
    [Show full text]
  • Senior Home Owners Learn Best Uses for Home Equity Local Voters
    Summit Heralcl ... Summit's only real newspaper VOLUME 98 NO. 14 November 10,1984 Price: 25' Senior home owners learn best uses for home equity nyPEGTHURLER older being home owners. Twen- pay for home improvements or 3)lioine-matching programs AREA — Senior home owners ty percent live in renlal units, and repairs. Such a plan may mean where better use can be made of arc increasingly rich in equity and only five percent are housed in that low or no interest is paid, existing housing; and 4)accessory poor in cash, according to senior nursing homes or under custodial and no payments are due until the apartments; where a private unit housing consultants speaking at plans. homeowner dies or sells his is installed inside a private home. the Housing Conference for Seniors learned how to best home. Carol Hertweck, Summit, was Union County senior citizens last make use of their equity, Echo housing a committee member of the Con- Saturday at the F. Edward through: l)Loan plans involving Topics similar to those being ference, which featured speakers Bierteumpfel Senior Center in reverse mortgages, offering home discussed by Summit's Planning Leo Baldwin, coordinator of Union. owners the opportunity to ex- Board relating to senior housing housing programs, American Summit's Mary Burger was a change housing equity for cash in the Master Plan being up- Association of Retired Persons, delegate to the Conference as a and continue to occupy their dated, were on the Conference and Leon Harper, Housing Con- representative of the Senior home; 2)Salc plans, where the agenda such as l)echo housing- a sultant, ARP.
    [Show full text]