Volume 47
Contains 17 Results:
An oration, commemorative of the late Major-General Alexander Hamilton; pronounced before the New-York State Society of the Cincinnati, on Tuesday, the 31st July, 1804 / by J. M. Mason, D.D., pastor of the First Associate Reformed Church in the City of New- York, 1804
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
Eulogy on General Alexander Hamilton, pronounced at the request of the citizens of Boston, July 26, 1804 / by Harrison G. Otis, Esq., 1804
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
An inaugural oration, delivered at the author's installation, as Boylston Professor of Rhetorick and Oratory, at Harvard University, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Thursday, 12 June 1806 / by John Quincy Adams, 1806
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
An oration, delivered at Wallingford, August 8th, 1805. In commemoration of the independence of the United States / by George W. Stanley, Esq., 1805
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
Oration, in honor of the election of President Jefferson, and the peaceable acquisition of Louisiana, delivered at the national festival, in Hartford, on the 11th of May, 1804 / by Abraham Bishop, 1804
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
Want of patronage the principal cause of the slow progress of American literature. An oration, delivered before the Society of Phi Beta Kappa, upon the anniversary of that institution, December 5th, 1806 / by Samuel F. Jarvis, 1806
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.
An address of the General Association of Connecticut, to the Congregational ministers and churches of the state, on the importance of united endeavours to revive gospel discipline, 1808
Pamphlets collected and studied by Noah Webster. Among the topics are politics, religion, science, and medicine. The pamphlets are thought to have been useful to Webster as sources of American linguistic practice, as well as for his own edification. The pamphlets were bound by Case, Lockwood & Brainard printers of Hartford, and donated to the Hartford Library Association some time in the 19th century.