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Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Albert Sidney Johnson Letter To Texas Governor Peter Hansborough Bell Introducing Charles Stewart Todd. New Orleans, 1850., Albert Sidney Johnston
Albert Sidney Johnson Letter To Texas Governor Peter Hansborough Bell Introducing Charles Stewart Todd. New Orleans, 1850., Albert Sidney Johnston
Broadus R. Littlejohn, Jr. Manuscript and Ephemera Collection
Albert Sidney Johnson letter to Texas governor Peter Hansborough Bell introducing Charles Stewart Todd, a commissioner appointed by the U.S. to execute aspects of the Treaty of Guadalupe (1848, between U.S. and Mexico). Specifically, Johnston notes Stewart is to "make such dispositions of the Indian tribes bordering upon the line about to be established between this [U.S.] government & Mexico, as will enable the Government of the U. States to carry out the stipulation of the treaty of Guadaloupe [sic]."
South Carolina Conference Journal 1850, Methodist Episcopal Church, South. South Carolina Conference
South Carolina Conference Journal 1850, Methodist Episcopal Church, South. South Carolina Conference
South Carolina Conference 1785 Journal
No abstract provided.
Letter From Daniel Webster Concerning The Word "Slavery" In Constitution, Dated 1850, Daniel Webster
Letter From Daniel Webster Concerning The Word "Slavery" In Constitution, Dated 1850, Daniel Webster
Broadus R. Littlejohn, Jr. Manuscript and Ephemera Collection
Daniel Webster writes Reverand S. K. Lothrop to question where to find the observation from Mr. Madison that states the reason to keep the word "slavery" from the Constitution, dated Feb. 27, 1850.