Cooper, Peter, 1791-1883
Peter Cooper American politician and businessman (1791-1883)
Cooper, Peter
VIAF ID: 74646981 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/74646981
Preferred Forms
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (18)
5xx's: Related Names (2)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Autobiography of Peter Cooper. |
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A communication to show the dangers of a war of commerce on all the great interests of our country. |
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Currency. Mr. Peter Cooper's letter. Mr. Peter Cooper's answer. |
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The dangers of a war of commerce and the necessity of a tariff and of an unfluctuating currency to national prosperity |
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The death of slavery. |
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Ideas for a science of good government, in addresses, letters and articles on a strictly national currency, tariff and civil service. |
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The indissoluble nature of the American union, considered in connection with the assumed right of secession. A letter to Hon. Peter Cooper, New York. |
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Letter from Peter Cooper to the delegates to the Evangelical Alliance, New York, 1870. |
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Letter of Peter Cooper on slave emancipation. |
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A letter on the currency, addressed in 1875. |
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Letters of Peter Cooper on the necessity there is for a wise discriminating tariff to protect American labor ... |
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The nomination to the presidency of Peter Cooper and his address to the Indianapolis convention of the National Independent Party. |
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An open letter from Peter Cooper to the members of the Bankers' Convention, Saratoga, August, 1882; what Jefferson, Franklin, Madison, Webster, Calhoun, Benton, J. E. Williams, F. E. Spinner and others thought of bank currency. |
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An open letter to the President of the United States [June 1, 1877. |
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An open letter to the Republican and Democratic candidates for the presidency |
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The political and financial opinions of Peter Cooper. |
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Protection to American industry ... [from old catalog] |
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Speech of Peter Cooper, esq., delivered at a dinner given by the Commission Merchants of New York to the manufacturers of Massachusetts, December 14th, 1870. |
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A strictly national paper currency, based on national taxation, is the cheapest, safest and most convenient medium of exchange for a republic. |
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To the Legislature of the state of New-York, in Senate and Assembly convened. |
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The unmeasured importance of an unfluctuating national currency over which the government has entire control. |
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