United States. President (1861-1865 : Lincoln)
Spojené štáty americké. Prezident (1861-1865 : Lincoln)
États-Unis. Président (1861-1865 : Lincoln)
VIAF ID: 121008828 ( Corporate )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/121008828
Preferred Forms
-
-
-
- 110 2 _ ‡a United States ‡b President (1861-1865 : Lincoln)
-
-
-
- 110 1 _ ‡a United States. ‡b President (1861-1865 : Lincoln)
-
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (1)
5xx's: Related Names (14)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Lincoln, Abraham
- 500 1 _ ‡a Lincoln, Abraham, ‡d 1809-1865
- 500 1 _ ‡a Lincoln, Abraham ‡d 1809-1865
- 500 _ 1 ‡a Lincoln ‡b Abraham ‡f 1809-1865
- 500 1 _ ‡a Mitchell, James
- 510 1 _ ‡a Spojené štáty americké. ‡b Prezident
- 500 0 _ ‡a United States. Dept. of State
- 500 0 _ ‡a United States. Emigration Office
- 500 0 _ ‡a United States. National Archives and Records Service
- 500 0 _ ‡a United States. President ‡d 1913-1921 : Wilson)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Whittingham, William Rollinson
- 500 0 _ ‡a YA Pamphlet Collection (Library of Congress)
- 500 1 _ ‡a 斎藤光, 1915-
- 500 1 _ ‡a 高木八尺, 1889 ‡d 1984
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Commonwealth of Massachusetts. | |
[Declaring order of General Hunter emancipating slaves void, etc. | |
Emancipation Proclamation | |
Les États-Unis en 1865, d'après les documents officiels communiqués au Congrès | |
Executive Mansion, Washington, December 22, 1862. To the Army of the Potomac: "I have just read your Commanding General's preliminary report of the battle of Fredericksburg ..." | |
General order respecting the observance of the Sabbath Day in the Army and Navy. | |
Gettysburg address | |
Inaugural address of Abraham Lincoln : March 4th, 1865. | |
Instructions to tax commissioners. | |
Laws and resolutions relating to the direct and excise taxes. | |
[Letter to Lieut. Gen. Scott recommending the appointment of Colonel Meigs as quarter-master general. | |
Letters of Hon. E. H. Ewing, accepting the President's amnesty, and counselling the course for Tennesseans to adopt in reference to the proclamation. | |
Lincoln's account of the Hampton Roads conference : with facsimiles from the original documents in the collection of Judd Stewart. | |
Lincoln's inaugural and first message to Congress. | |
Lincoln's second inaugural; anthem for mixed voices. The text taken from Lincoln's second inaugural address. | |
Memorial on behalf of the State of New York in respect to adopting its canals to the fedense of the Lakes. [from old catalog] | |
Message communicating, in answer to a resolution of the Senate of the 26th of February, correspondence with the workingmen of England. | |
Message of the President of the United States. | |
Message [to Congress, December 8, 1863] | |
Pastoral letter and special service for the day of National Thanksgiving | |
Peace. : Message transmitting, in compliance with the resolution of February 8th, 1865, information relative to a conference held at Hampton Roads with Messrs. | |
Port of Key West to remain open | |
President Abraham Lincoln to Major Thomas T. Eckert : facsimiles of two letters relating to the abortive Hampton Roads Peace Conference of January 30-February 3, 1865 | |
The President to General McClellan. Washington, April 9, 1862. To Major-General McClellan : My dear Sir-- Your dispatches, complaining that you are not properly sustained, while they do not offend me, pain me very mush. Blenker's Division was withdrawn before you left here, and you know the pressure under which I did it, and as I thought, acquiesced in it ... | |
The President's proclamation of pardon and amnesty in the Cherokee language : Translated and printed at Fort Gibson, C. N. by order of Colonel Wm. Phillips. Commanding First brigade, army of the frontier. | |
A proclamation respecting soldiers and absent without leave. | |
Proclamation. Whereas, on the twenty-second day of September | |
Proposed amendments to the Constitution. | |
Regulations prescribed by the President in regard to the appointment, compensation, and duties of consular clerks. Department of State. | |
Report on colonization and emigration, made to the secretary of the interior | |
Resolution of the (Confederate) Congress (in Kentucky) 1861. | |
Rinkān enzetsushū | |
Speeches. | |
Suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. Message transmitting the several orders and proclamation relative to the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. | |
Treaty between the United States of America and the Ottawa Indians of Blanchard's fork and Roche de Bœuf : Concluded June 24, 1862. Ratification advised, with amendment, July 16, 1862. Amendments accepted July 19, 1862. Proclaimed July 28, 1862. | |
The true guide on the situation. Executive mansion. Washington, November 27, 1862. Hon. Geo. F. Shepley, Military governor of Louisiana. Dear Sir: Dr. Kennedy, bearer of this, has some apprehension that Federal officers, not citizens of Louisiana, may be set up as candidates for Congress in that state ... To send a parcel of northern men here as Representatives, elected, as would be understood (and perhaps really so) at the point of the bayonet, would be disgraceful and outrageous; and were I a member of Congress here, I would vote against admitting any such men to a seat ... | |
The war policy of the administration : letter of the President to the Union mass convention at Springfield, Illinois. | |
Whereas, by my proclamation of the nineteenth of April, one thousand and sixty-one, it was declared that the ports of certains states | |
Whereas it has become necessary to define the cases in which insurgent enemies are entitles to the benefits of the proclamation | |
Works. | |
リンカーン演說集 |