Call number | Item |
E | History: United States (General) (Go to start of category) |
E431 .S26 | The Progress and Prospects of America: or, The Model Republic, Its Glory, Its Fall; With a Review of the Causes of the Decline and Failure of the Republics of South America, Mexico, and of the Old world; Applied to the Present Crisis in the United States (new edition; New York: E. Walker, ca. 1855), by Frederick Saunders and Thomas Bangs Thorpe (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E431 .S78 | Letters for the People, on the Present Crisis (1853), by Frederick Starr |
E432 .H38 | Life of Franklin Pierce (Boston: Ticknor, Reed and Fields, 1852), by Nathaniel Hawthorne |
E433 .B8 | Nebraska: A Poem, Personal and Political (Boston: J. P. Jewett and Co.; Cleveland: Jewett, Proctor, and Worthington, 1854), by George W. Bungay (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E433 .C34 | Nebraska and Kansas: Speech of Mr. Cass, of Michigan, On the Powers of the Government Over Slavery in the Territories, Delivered in the Senate of the United States Feb. 20, 1854 (Washington: Printed at the Congressional Globe office, 1854), by Lewis Cass |
E433 .C37 | Speech of Mr. Walker, of Montgomery, Delivered in the Ohio Senate, January 23 and 25, on the Resolutions on the Subject of Slavery and the Fugitive Slave Law (Columbus, OH: Scott and Bascom, 1851), by Moses B. Walker (page images at ohiomemory.org) |
E433 .G64 | The Kansas Struggle, of 1856, in Congress & in the Presidential Campaign, by William Goodell (page images at MOA) |
E433 .H93 | The Missouri Compromise, by Heman Humphrey (page images at MOA) |
E433 .L73 | Abraham Lincoln's Lost Speech, May 29, 1856: A Souvenir of the Eleventh Annual Lincoln dinner of the Republican Club of the City of New York, at the Waldorf, February 12, 1897 (New York: Printed for the Committee, 1897), by Abraham Lincoln (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E433 .P24 | The Nebraska Question: Some Thoughts on the New Assault Upon Freedom in America, and the General State of the Country in Relation Thereunto (Boston: B. B. Mussey and Co., 1854), by Theodore Parker |
E433 .R43 | Address of the Republican Convention, Assembled at Pittsburgh, February 22, 1856 (New York: National Executive Committee, 1856), by Republican National Convention (Javascript-dependent page images at Ohio Memory) |
E433 .S39 1856 | The Crime Against Kansas: Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, in the Senate of the United States, May 19, 1856 (New York: Greely and McElrath, 1856), by Charles Sumner (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E433 .S39 1856 | The Crime Against Kansas; The Apologies for the Crime; The True Remedy: Speech of Hon. Charles Sumner in the Senate of the United States, 19th and 20th May, 1856 (Boston: J. P. Jewett and Co., et al., 1856), by Charles Sumner (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E435 .A261 | The Agitation of Slavery: Who Commenced! And Who Can End It!! Buchanan and Fillmore Compared From the Record (Washington: Printed at the Union Office, 1856) (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E435 .B87 | Buchanan's Political Record: Let the South Beware! (Washington: National Executive Committee of the American Party, 1856) (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E435 .C23 | American Nominations: Fillmore and Donelson: Being an Extract from a Work entitled The Great American Battle; or, The Contest Between Christianity and Political Romanism (New York and Auburn: Miller, Orton and Mulligan, 1856), by Anna Ella Carroll |
E435 .C6 | Col. Fremont Not a Roman Catholic (1856) (page images at loc.gov) |
E435 .C85 | Speech of Hon. L. M. Cox, of Kentucky, Delivered in the House of Representatives, July 26, 1856, in Defence of the Principles of the American Party, and the Approaching Presidential Election, by L. M. Cox (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E435 .D87 | The Duty of Native Americans in the Present Crisis (1856) (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E435 .G78 | The Great Fraud Upon the Public Credulity in the Organization of the Republican Party Upon the Ruins of the "Whig Party" (page images at MOA) |
E435 .G78 | The Great Fraud Upon the Public Credulity in the Organization of the Republican Party Upon the Ruins of the "Whig Party": An Address to the Old-Line Whigs of the Union (Washington: Printed at the Union Office, 1856), by National Whig (page images at Google) |
E435 .I73 | Is Millard Fillmore an Abolitionist? (extract from a pamphlet "The Agitation of Slavery" with commentary; Boston: American Patriot Office, 1856) |
E435 .M841 | Fillmore's Political History and Position; George Law and Chauncey Shaffer's Reasons for Repudiating Fillmore and Donelson, and the Action of the Know-Nothing State Convention at Syracuse on the Resolutions Censuring Brook's Assault on Senator Sumner, &c., by Edwin Barber Morgan, contrib. by George Law and Chauncey Shaffer (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E435 .R33 | Reflections and Suggestions on the Present State of Parties (Nashville: Printed by G. C. Torbett and Co., 1856), by An Old Clay Whig (multiple formats at archive.org) |
E435 .R4 | Republican Campaign Edition for the Million: Containing the Republican Platform, the Lives of Fremont and Dayton, with Beautiful Steel Portraits of Each (1856) |