Research Catalog

[Speeches, etc.]

Title
[Speeches, etc.] [electronic resource].
Publication
[United States : s.n., 1856]

Available Online

Available from home with a valid library card and onsite at NYPL

Details

Additional Authors
Schade, Louis
Description
1 online resource (25 v.)
Series Statement
Slavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 2: Slave trade in the Atlantic world
Uniform Title
Slavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 2: Slave trade in the Atlantic world.
Alternative Title
  • Buchanan and Breckinridge : the Democratic hand-book.
  • Virginia resolutions of 1798, pronouncing the alien and sedition laws to be unconstitutional, and defining the rights of the states : drawn by Mr. Madison.
  • Appendix : ordinance of 1787 : cession from the state of Virginia.
  • Fremont : his supporters and their record : the opinions of our great statesmen upon the Missouri restriction.
  • In the Senate of the United States : June 30, 1856 : ordered to be printed : motion by Mr. Jones, of Tennessee, to print 10,000 additional copies referred to the Committee on Printing : Mr. Douglas made the following report (to accompany Bill S. 356)
  • Read and reflect!
  • Issue fairly presented : the Senate Bill for the admission of Kansas as a state : democracy, law, order, and the will of the majority of the whole people of the territory, against Black Republicanism, usurpation, revolution, anarchy, and the will of a meagre minority.
  • Fearful issue to be decided in November next! : shall the Constitution and the Union stand or fall? Fremont, the sectional candidate of the advocates of dissolution! Buchanan, the candidate of those who advocate one country! one union! one Constitution! and one destiny!
  • Short answers to reckless fabrications, against the Democratic candidate for president, James Buchanan.
  • Independent treasury : speech of Hon. James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania : in the Senate of the United States, January 22, 1840, on the Independent Treasury Bill : in reply to Mr. Clay, of Kentucky.
  • Infidelity and abolitionism : an open letter to the friends of religion, morality, and the American Union.
  • Official proceedings of the National Democratic Convention, held in Cincinnati, June 2-6, 1856.
  • Black Republican imposture exposed! Fraud upon the people! Fremont no soldier!
  • Speech of Hon. J.R. Thomson, of New Jersey, on the conquest of California : delivered in the United States Senate, August 9, 1856.
  • Real issue : union or disunion : letter of Hon. S.S. Marshall, on the parties and politics of the day, to the freemen of the Ninth Congressional District of Illinois.
  • Letter of an adopted Catholic, addressed to the president of the Kentucky Democratic Association of Washington City on temporal allegiance to the Pope, and the relations of the Catholic Church and Catholics, both native and adopted, to the system of domestic slavery and its agitation in the United States.
  • Old line Whigs for Buchanan & Breckinridge : letters from Hon. James Alfred Pearce, and Hon. Thomas G. Pratt, to the Whigs of Maryland : speeches of Hon. J.W. Crisfield, of Maryland, and Hon. James B. Clay, of Kentucky.
  • Letter of ex-president Van Buren : June 28, 1856.
  • Speech of Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia, on the Bill to Admit Kansas as a State under the Topeka Constitution : delivered in the House of Representatives, June 28, 1856.
  • Kansas : the territories : speech of Hon. Lewis Cass, of Michigan, delivered in the Senate of the United States, May 12-13, 1856.
  • Democracy national and not sectional : speech of Hon. Thomas J.D. Fuller, of Maine, delivered in the House of Representatives, August 28, 1856, in vindication of the Democratic Party from the charge of sectionalism, made by his colleagues, and defending its action upon the disagreement of the two Houses of Congress upon the Army Appropriation Bill.
  • Minority report.
  • Spurious Kansas memorial : debate in the Senate of the United States, on the memorial of James H. Lane, praying that the Senate receive and grant the prayer of the memorial presented by General Cass, and afterwards withdrawn : embracing the speeches of Senators Douglas, Pugh, Butler, Touchy, Rusk, &c.
  • Powers of the government of the United States : federal, state, and territorial : speech of Hon. James A. Stewart, of Maryland, on African slavery, its status : natural, moral, social, legal, and constitutional : and the origin, progress, present condition, and future destiny of the United States, considered in connection with African slavery as a part of its social system : with the bearings of that institution upon the interests of all sections of the Union, and upon the African race : delivered in the House of Representatives, July 23, 1856.
  • Massachusetts resolutions on the Sumner assault, and the slavery issue : speeches of Senators Butler, Evans, and Hunter, delivered in the Senate of the United States.
Subject
  • Democratic Party (U.S.) > History
  • Slavery > History > United States > Speeches in Congress
Note
  • Reproduction of the original from the Oberlin College Library.
Contents
  • [no. 1]. Buchanan and Breckinridge : the Democratic hand-book / compiled by Mich. W. Cluskey, of Washington City, D.C. ; recommended by the Democratic National Committee -- [no. 2]. Virginia resolutions of 1798, pronouncing the alien and sedition laws to be unconstitutional, and defining the rights of the states : drawn by Mr. Madison -- Appendix : ordinance of 1787 : cession from the state of Virginia -- Fremont : his supporters and their record : the opinions of our great statesmen upon the Missouri restriction / by an Indianian -- [no. 4]. In the Senate of the United States : June 30, 1856 : ordered to be printed : motion by Mr. Jones, of Tennessee, to print 10,000 additional copies referred to the Committee on Printing : Mr. Douglas made the following report (to accompany Bill S. 356) -- [no. 5]. Read and reflect! -- [no. 6]. The issue fairly presented : the Senate Bill for the admission of Kansas as a state : democracy, law, order, and the will of the majority of the whole people of the territory, against Black Republicanism, usurpation, revolution, anarchy, and the will of a meagre minority : published by order of the Democratic National Committee -- [no. 7]. The fearful issue to be decided in November next! : shall the Constitution and the Union stand or fall? Fremont, the sectional candidate of the advocates of dissolution! Buchanan, the candidate of those who advocate one country! one union! one Constitution! and one destiny! --
  • Short answers to reckless fabrications, against the Democratic candidate for president, James Buchanan -- [no. 9]. Independent treasury : speech of Hon. James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania : in the Senate of the United States, January 22, 1840, on the Independent Treasury Bill : in reply to Mr. Clay, of Kentucky -- [no. 10]. Infidelity and abolitionism : an open letter to the friends of religion, morality, and the American Union -- [no. 11]. Official proceedings of the National Democratic Convention, held in Cincinnati, June 2-6, 1856 : published by order of the Convention -- [no. 12]. Black Republican imposture exposed! Fraud upon the people! Fremont no soldier! -- Speech of Hon. J.R. Thomson, of New Jersey, on the conquest of California : delivered in the United States Senate, August 9, 1856 -- [no. 14]. The real issue : union or disunion : letter of Hon. S.S. Marshall, on the parties and politics of the day, to the freemen of the Ninth Congressional District of Illinois -- The immigration into the United States of America, from a statistical and national-economical point of view / by Louis Schade -- Letter of an adopted Catholic, addressed to the president of the Kentucky Democratic Association of Washin[g]ton City on temporal allegiance to the Pope, and the relations of the Catholic Church and Catholics, both native and adopted, to the system of domestic slavery and its agitation in the United States -- [no. 17]. Old line Whigs for Buchanan & Breckinridge : letters from Hon. James Alfred Pearce, and Hon. Thomas G. Pratt, to the Whigs of Maryland : speeches of Hon. J.W. Crisfield, of Maryland, and Hon. James B. Clay, of Kentucky --
  • [no. 18]. Letter of ex-president Van Buren : June 28, 1856 -- [no. 19]. Speech of Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia, on the Bill to Admit Kansas as a State under the Topeka Constitution : delivered in the House of Representatives, June 28, 1856 -- [no. 20]. Kansas : the territories : speech of Hon. Lewis Cass, of Michigan, delivered in the Senate of the United States, May 12-13, 1856 -- [no. 21]. Democracy national and not sectional : speech of Hon. Thomas J.D. Fuller, of Maine, delivered in the House of Representatives, August 28, 1856, in vindication of the Democratic Party from the charge of sectionalism, made by his colleagues, and defending its action upon the disagreement of the two Houses of Congress upon the Army Appropriation Bill -- [no. 22]. Minority report -- [no. 23]. The spurious Kansas memorial : debate in the Senate of the United States, on the memorial of James H. Lane, praying that the Senate receive and grant the prayer of the memorial presented by General Cass, and afterwards withdrawn : embracing the speeches of Senators Douglas, Pugh, Butler, Touchy, Rusk, &c. -- [no. 24]. Powers of the government of the United States : federal, state, and territorial : speech of Hon. James A. Stewart, of Maryland, on African slavery, its status : natural, moral, social, legal, and constitutional : and the origin, progress, present condition, and future destiny of the United States, considered in connection with African slavery as a part of its social system : with the bearings of that institution upon the interests of all sections of the Union, and upon the African race : delivered in the House of Representatives, July 23, 1856 -- [no. 25]. The Massachusetts resolutions on the Sumner assault, and the slavery issue : speeches of Senators Butler, Evans, and Hunter, delivered in the Senate of the United States.
OCLC
  • 785638134
  • galsas200446
Title
[Speeches, etc.] [electronic resource].
Imprint
[United States : s.n., 1856]
Series
Slavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 2: Slave trade in the Atlantic world
Slavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 2: Slave trade in the Atlantic world.
Connect to:
Available from home with a valid library card and onsite at NYPL
Added Author
Schade, Louis. Immigration into the United States of America, from a statistical and national-economical point of view.
Added Title
Buchanan and Breckinridge : the Democratic hand-book.
Virginia resolutions of 1798, pronouncing the alien and sedition laws to be unconstitutional, and defining the rights of the states : drawn by Mr. Madison.
Appendix : ordinance of 1787 : cession from the state of Virginia.
Fremont : his supporters and their record : the opinions of our great statesmen upon the Missouri restriction.
In the Senate of the United States : June 30, 1856 : ordered to be printed : motion by Mr. Jones, of Tennessee, to print 10,000 additional copies referred to the Committee on Printing : Mr. Douglas made the following report (to accompany Bill S. 356)
Read and reflect!
Issue fairly presented : the Senate Bill for the admission of Kansas as a state : democracy, law, order, and the will of the majority of the whole people of the territory, against Black Republicanism, usurpation, revolution, anarchy, and the will of a meagre minority.
Fearful issue to be decided in November next! : shall the Constitution and the Union stand or fall? Fremont, the sectional candidate of the advocates of dissolution! Buchanan, the candidate of those who advocate one country! one union! one Constitution! and one destiny!
Short answers to reckless fabrications, against the Democratic candidate for president, James Buchanan.
Independent treasury : speech of Hon. James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania : in the Senate of the United States, January 22, 1840, on the Independent Treasury Bill : in reply to Mr. Clay, of Kentucky.
Infidelity and abolitionism : an open letter to the friends of religion, morality, and the American Union.
Official proceedings of the National Democratic Convention, held in Cincinnati, June 2-6, 1856.
Black Republican imposture exposed! Fraud upon the people! Fremont no soldier!
Speech of Hon. J.R. Thomson, of New Jersey, on the conquest of California : delivered in the United States Senate, August 9, 1856.
Real issue : union or disunion : letter of Hon. S.S. Marshall, on the parties and politics of the day, to the freemen of the Ninth Congressional District of Illinois.
Letter of an adopted Catholic, addressed to the president of the Kentucky Democratic Association of Washington City on temporal allegiance to the Pope, and the relations of the Catholic Church and Catholics, both native and adopted, to the system of domestic slavery and its agitation in the United States.
Old line Whigs for Buchanan & Breckinridge : letters from Hon. James Alfred Pearce, and Hon. Thomas G. Pratt, to the Whigs of Maryland : speeches of Hon. J.W. Crisfield, of Maryland, and Hon. James B. Clay, of Kentucky.
Letter of ex-president Van Buren : June 28, 1856.
Speech of Hon. Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia, on the Bill to Admit Kansas as a State under the Topeka Constitution : delivered in the House of Representatives, June 28, 1856.
Kansas : the territories : speech of Hon. Lewis Cass, of Michigan, delivered in the Senate of the United States, May 12-13, 1856.
Democracy national and not sectional : speech of Hon. Thomas J.D. Fuller, of Maine, delivered in the House of Representatives, August 28, 1856, in vindication of the Democratic Party from the charge of sectionalism, made by his colleagues, and defending its action upon the disagreement of the two Houses of Congress upon the Army Appropriation Bill.
Minority report.
Spurious Kansas memorial : debate in the Senate of the United States, on the memorial of James H. Lane, praying that the Senate receive and grant the prayer of the memorial presented by General Cass, and afterwards withdrawn : embracing the speeches of Senators Douglas, Pugh, Butler, Touchy, Rusk, &c.
Powers of the government of the United States : federal, state, and territorial : speech of Hon. James A. Stewart, of Maryland, on African slavery, its status : natural, moral, social, legal, and constitutional : and the origin, progress, present condition, and future destiny of the United States, considered in connection with African slavery as a part of its social system : with the bearings of that institution upon the interests of all sections of the Union, and upon the African race : delivered in the House of Representatives, July 23, 1856.
Massachusetts resolutions on the Sumner assault, and the slavery issue : speeches of Senators Butler, Evans, and Hunter, delivered in the Senate of the United States.
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