Andrew, Abram Piatt, 1873-1936
Andrew, A. Piatt (Abram Piatt), 1873-1936
Abram Piatt Andrew, Jr.
Andrew, A. Piatt 1873-1936
Andrew, Abram 1873-1936
Andrew, A. Piatt (Abram Piatt)
VIAF ID: 63997672 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/63997672
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Abram Piatt Andrew, Jr.
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Andrew, A. Piatt ‡d 1873-1936
- 100 1 _ ‡a Andrew, A. Piatt ‡q (Abram Piatt)
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Andrew, A. Piatt ‡q (Abram Piatt), ‡d 1873-1936
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Andrew, Abram Piatt, ‡d 1873-1936
- 100 1 _ ‡a Andrew, Abram ‡d 1873-1936
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (32)
5xx's: Related Names (2)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Amis de la France; le service de campagne de l'Ambulance américaine décrit par ses membres; | |
Banking problems | |
Beauport chronicle : the intimate letters of Henry Davis Sleeper to Abram Piatt Andrew, Jr., 1906-1915 | |
character and influence of recent immigration | |
Concerning the proposal to appropriate 10.000.000 dollars for German relief... | |
essential and the unessential in currency legislation | |
Financial diagrams | |
Friends of France. The field service of the American ambulance... | |
The influence of the crops upon business in America, 1906. | |
Letters written home from France in the first half of 1915 | |
Our prearmistice loans : speech of A. Piatt Andrew in the House of Representativies January 13, 1926. | |
Questions of public policy ; addresses delivered in the Page lecture series, 1913, before the Senior class of the Sheffield scientific school, Yale university. | |
En repos and Elsewhere, Over there, verses written in France, 1917-1918, by Lansing Warren and Robert A. Donaldson. With a preface by Major A. Piatt Andrew | |
Some facts and figures relating to the money trust inquiry, letters to the New York Evening post by A. Piatt Andrew,... | |
Statistics for the United States, 1867-1909 | |
The Treasury and the banks under Secretary Shaw | |
value of the Panama Canal to this country | |
The war debts, status quo or revision? a stenographic report of the 97th New York luncheon discussion, March 12, 1927, of the Foreign Policy Association. |