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Volume 88

 Container

Contains 4 Results:

Twenty-first Congress. First Session. House of Representatives. Treasury Department. Document No. 49. Commerce and navigation of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting statements respecting the commerce and navigation of the United States, &c. &c. February 5, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table., ca. 1830

 File — Volume: 88, Pamphlet: 1
Scope and Content From the Collection:

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.

Dates: ca. 1830

Reports of the majority and minority of the committee of the Senate on the post office and post roads; together with the documents accompanying the same; to which is prefixed an index of the principal matters in the reports., 1835

 File — Volume: 88, Pamphlet: 2
Scope and Content From the Collection:

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.

Dates: 1835

Speech of Joseph Kent, of Maryland, in support of an amendment to the Constitution to restrain the veto power of the President of the United States. Delivered in the Senate of the United States, on the 20th of February, 1835., 1835

 File — Volume: 88, Pamphlet: 4
Scope and Content From the Collection:

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.

Dates: 1835