Volume 62
Contains 24 Results:
Catalogus senatus academici, eorum qui munera et officia academica gesserunt, quique aliquovis gradu exornati fuerunt, in Collegio Yalensi, Novi-Portus, in Republica Connecticutensi, 1823
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.
Catalogus senatus academici, eorurn qui munera et officia academica gesserunt, quique aliquovis gradu exornati fuerunt, in Collegio Yalensi, Novi-Portus, in Republica Connecticutensi, 1826
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.
A catalogue of the Connecticut Alpha of the Phi Beta Kappa. August, 1829, 1829
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.
The charter of Dartmouth College, 1815
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.