Joseph Meredith Toner Collection (Library of Congress)
VIAF ID: 156075665 ( Corporate )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/156075665
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- 110 2 _ ‡a Joseph Meredith Toner Collection (Library of Congress)
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (5)
Works
Title | Sources |
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The book of the colonies; comprising a history of the colonies composing the United States, from the discovery in the tenth century until the commencement of the revolutionary war | |
Documents relating to the proposed purchase of Mount Vernon ... | |
Effort and failure to civilize the aborigines : letter to Hon. N.G. Taylor, Commissioner of Indian Affairs | |
The eloquence of the colonial and revolutionary times. With sketches of early American statesmen and patriots. Delivered before the New England Society of Cincinnati. | |
An essay on Hippocrates | |
Ethnography and philology of the Hidatsa Indians | |
General Woodhull and his monument. An oration on the life, character and public services of General Nathaniel Woodhull. | |
History of the discovery of America: of the landing of our forefathers, at Plymouth, and of their most remarkable engagements with the Indians, in New-England, from their first landing in 1620, until the final subjugation of the natives in 1679. | |
History of the Shawnee Indians, from the year 1681 to 1854, inclusive. | |
The history of the United States of North America, from the plantation of the British colonies till their assumption of national independence. | |
Homes of American statesmen: with anecdotical, personal, and descriptive sketches | |
An illustrated history of Washington and his times : embracing a history of the Seven-Years War, the Revolutionary War, the formation of the federal Constitution, and the administration of Washington | |
Illustrations of the manners, customs & condition of the North American Indians. With letters and notes, written during eight years of travel and adventure among the wildest ... tribes now existing. | |
In Senate of the United States. March 3, 1819. Mr Lacock from the committee appointed in pursuance of the resolution of the Senate of the 18th of December, 1818 on the subject of the Seminole war, communicated the following additional testimony, which was read: and orderd to be printed for use of the Senate. | |
Inaugural and anniversary addresses delivered before the Medical society of the state of New York, at its sixty-ninth session, held at the city of Albany, February 2d, 3d, and 4th, 1875. | |
The Indian races of North and South America. Comprising an account of the principal aboriginal races; a description of their national customs, mythology, and religious ceremonies; the history of their most powerful tribes, and of their most celebrated chiefs and warriors ; their intercourse and wars with the European settlers ; and a great variety of anecdote and description, illustrative of personal and national character | |
The Indian school at Carlisle barracks ... | |
Indian wars of the West; Containing biographical sketches of those pioneers who headed the western settlers in in repelling the attack of the savages , together with a view of the character, manners monuments and antiquties of the western Indians | |
An inquiry into the distinctive characteristics of the aboriginal race of America. Read at the annual meeting of the Boston Society of Natural History, on the 27th of April, 1842. | |
An introduction to systematic and physiological botany | |
Investigation into Indian affairs, before the Committe on appropriations of the House of represenatives . | |
Joseph Meredith Toner papers | |
The lady's guide to perfect gentility, in manners, dress, and conversation ... also a useful instructor in letter writing, toilet preparations, fancy needlework, millinery, dressmaking, care of wardrobe, the hair, teeth, hands, lips, complexion, etc. | |
Last words of General Washington. | |
Leaves from a daily journal kept by Captain Charles Lewis, while serving in the Virginia regiment under the command of Col. George Washington in 1775. : Giving the march from Fredricksburg to Fort Cumberland. From the original in possesion of Thomas Waring Lewis. | |
A letter to a Protestant friend, on the Holy Scriptures, or the written word of God : being a continuation of the "Defence of Catholic principles," in opposition to the "Vindication of the doctrines of the reformation." ... | |
Liberty primer. Giving the dates of the anniversaries commemorated by the ringing of the Columbian liberty bell | |
Library of Congress. Special collections of the Library of Congress: | |
The life and character, of Stephen Decatur; late commodore and post-captain in the navy of the United States, and navy-commissioner: interspersed with brief notices of the origin, progress, and achievements of the American navy. | |
The life, anecdotes, and heroic exploits of Israel Putnam, Major-General in the Revolutionary War. | |
The life of Gen. Francis Marion : a celebrated partisan officer in the revolutionary war, against the British and Tories in South Carolina and Georgia. | |
The life of George Washington: a new biography of the father of his country : as boy, youth and student: as surveyor and land-agent; as explorer and messenger to the Indians and French; as major and colonel in the old French war; as planter; as patriot and general in chief of the Army of Independence; as constructor of the new republic; as president | |
The life of George Washington, commander in chief of the armies of the United States of America throughout the war which established their independence; and first president of the United States | |
Ma-ka-tai-me-she-kia-kiak, or Black Hawk, and scenes in the West : a national poem in six cantos ... | |
Manhood, the want of the day. A sermon preached in the church of the Cambridgeport parish, March 1, 1863 | |
A mariner's sketches, originally pub. in the manufactures and farmers journal, Providence. | |
The massacre near Old Tappan | |
Medical record. | |
Memoir on the recent surveys, observations, and internal improvements, in the United States : with brief notices of the new counties, towns, villages, canals, and railroads, never before delineated | |
Memorial of the Chippeway, Pottawatomy and Ottawa Indians, of Walpole Island! Touching their claim of the Huron reserve . Fighting , Bois Blanc . Turkey and Point au Pelee I slands. | |
Memorials of the Moravian church | |
Military journal of Major Ebenezer Denny, an officer in the revolutionary and Indian wars. | |
A miscellany, containing several tracts on various subjects | |
Mr. Clarke's discourse to the Humane Society | |
A narrative of the incidents attending the capture, detention, and ransom of Charles Johnston, of Botetourt county, Virginia, who was made prisoner by the Indians, on the river Ohio, in the year 1790; together with an interesting account of the fate of his companions, five in number, one of whom suffered at the stake. To which are added, sketches of Indian character and manners, with illustrative anecdotes. | |
Nathanael Greene. An examination of some statements concerning Major-General Greene, in the ninth volume of Bancroft's History of the United States. | |
A new and complete gazetteer of the United States; giving a full and comprehensive review of the present condition, industry, and resources of the American confederacy ... | |
New Jersey centennial tea party; held at Taylor Opera House, Trenton, on Wednesday and Thursday evenings, February 25 and 26, 1874. | |
Observations upon a treatise on the virtues of hemlock, in the cure of cancers. | |
Of the causes, nature, and treatment of palsy and apoplexy: of the forms, seats, complications, and morbid relations of paralytic and apoplectic diseases. | |
Oration, delivered on the Fourth of July, A. D. 1827, at Newport, R. I. | |
An oration pronounced at Cambridge, before the society of Phi beta kappa. | |
An oration, pronounced, July 4, 1798, at the request of the inhabitants of the town of Boston, in commemoration of the anniversary of American independence. | |
The origin of the North American Indians; with a faithful description of their manners and customs ... and the discovery of the New world by Columbus. Concluding with a copious selection of Indian speeches, the antiquities of America, the civilization of the Mexicans, and some final observations on the origin of the Indians. | |
Record of the causes and events which produced, and terminated in the establishment and independence of the American Republic | |
Recueil de pièces relatives a la fièvre jaune d'Amérique | |
Reply of Peter P. Pitchlynn, Choctaw delegate, to a libellous pamphlet published by Douglas H. Cooper. | |
Reply of the delegates of the Cherokee nation to the demands of the commissioner of Indian affairs. May, 1866. | |
The reply of the Guardians for the relief and employment of the poor of the city of Philadelphia, the district of Southwark, and the townships of the Northern Liberties and Penn, to certain remarks made in theis presentments by the Grand inquests inquiring for the county of Philadelphia for February and April sessions 1849. | |
Report of Indian Peace Commissioners : message from the President of the United States transmitting report of the Indian Peace Commissioners. | |
Report of the proceedings at an Indian council held at Cattaraugus, in the State of New York, 6th Month, 1846. | |
Report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the collection of duties. | |
Reports and proceedings of Col. McKenney : on the subject of his recent tour among the southern Indians, as submitted to Congress with the message of the President U.S. | |
Representatives of Nathaniel Irish ...report | |
Safe banking, including the Principles of wealth : being an enquiry into the principles and practice of safe and unsafe banks, or monied institutions in North America, the defects of the American banking system and legislation, &c. | |
Secret proceedings and debates of the convention assembled at Philadelphia, in the year 1787, for the purpose of forming the Constitution of the United States of America. From notes taken by the late Robert Yates, esquire, chief justice of New York, and copied by John Lansing, jun., esquire, late chancellor of that state, members of that convention. Including "The genuine information,' laid before the legislature of Maryland | |
Selections from letters written during a tour through the United States in the summer and autumn of 1819; illustrative of the character of the native Indians, and of the descent from the lost ten tribes of Israel; as well as descriptive of the present situation and sufferings of emigrants, and of the soil and state of agriculture. | |
Selections from the private correspondence of James Madison : from 1813 to 1836 | |
Selections in pathology and surgery, or, An exposition of the nature and treatment of local disease : exhibiting new pathological views, and pointing out an important practical improvement. Illustrated by cases | |
Speech of Hon. Jno. M. Bright, delivered at Charlotte, N.C., on the 20th of May, 1875, in honor of the Mecklenburg declaration of independence, one hundred years before | |
Summer travel. Philadelphia & Reading r. r. co. North Penn & Bound Brook division. Bound Brook route, Lehigh valley route. Official book of summer excursion routes for the season of 1879 ... | |
Tentamen inaugurale, de causa apoplexiæ. Quod ... pro gradu doctoris ... | |
A tract for the times : The religious character of Washington | |
Traits of the tea party: being a memoir of George R.T. Hewes, one of the last of its survivors; with a history of that transaction: reminiscences of the massacre, and the siege, and other stories of old times. | |
Travels in Canada, and the United States : in 1816 and 1817 | |
Union foundations: a study of American nationality as a fact of science. | |
Universal biography, containing sketches of prominent persons of the 19th century ... | |
Viaje a la caverna de Cacahuamilpa : datos para la geolgia y la florade los estados de Morelos y Guerrero | |
A vindication of General Samuel Holden Parsons against the charge of treasonable correspondence during the revolutionary war. | |
A vindication of the authenticity of the elephant pipes and inscribed tablets in the museum of the Davenport Academy of Natural Sciences, from the accusations of the Bureau of Ethnology of the Smithsonian Institution | |
Washington, an exemplification of the principles of free masonry: an oration delivered in the Metropolitan hall, in the city of New York, Nov. 4, A. L. 5852, at the centennial commemoration of the initiation of George Washington into the order of Free and accepted masons. | |
Washington in domestic life. From original letters and manuscripts. |