Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Complete Papers And Writings Of Abraham Lincoln - cover

The Complete Papers And Writings Of Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln

Publisher: Dead Dodo History

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Dodo Collections brings you another classic from Abraham Lincoln, ‘The Papers And Writings Of Abraham Lincoln.’
 
This Special Edition contains selected papers and writings of Mr. Lincoln, carefully selected from the Lincoln Archives by historians, recognized experts in Civil War history and respected Lincoln scholars. It includes The Gettysburg Address and the Emancipation Proclamation, two of the most significant historical documents by Lincoln, and a cornerstone of our nation's independence. 
 
It also contains an Introduction by Theodore Roosevelt, with 'The Essay on Lincoln' by Carl Schurz and 'The Address on Lincoln' by Joseph Choate. This book provides the reader with a rare glimpse into the intellect, humor and wit that made Abraham Lincoln one of the most important political figures not only in American History, but a man for and of the world at large and an icon for the ages.
 
Abraham Lincoln was the sixteenth President of the United States, serving from March 4, 1861 until his assassination. As an outspoken opponent of the expansion of slavery in the United States, Lincoln won the Republican Party nomination in 1860 and was elected president later that year. During his term, he helped preserve the United States by leading the defeat of the secessionist Confederate States of America in the American Civil War. He introduced measures that resulted in the abolition of slavery, issuing his Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 and promoting the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution in 1865.
Available since: 09/08/2015.

Other books that might interest you

  • Bearing Witness - How Writers Brought the Brutality of World War II to Light - cover

    Bearing Witness - How Writers...

    John R. Carpenter

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    It has been said that during times of war, the Muses fall silent. However, anyone who has read the major figures of mid-twentieth-century literature—Samuel Beckett, Richard Hillary, Norman Mailer, Albert Camus, Jean-Paul Sartre, and others—can attest that it was through writing that people first tried to communicate and process the horrors that they saw during one of the darkest times in human history even as it broke out and raged on around them. 
    In Bearing Witness, John Carpenter explores how across the world those who experienced the war tried to make sense of it both during and in its immediate aftermath. Writers such as Alexander Solzhenitsyn and Theodore Plievier questioned the ruling parties of the time based on what they saw. Correspondents and writer-soldiers like John Hersey and James Jones revealed the chaotic and bloody reality of the front lines to the public. And civilians, many of who remain anonymous, lent voice to occupation and imprisonment so that those who didn't survive would not be forgotten. 
    The digestion of a cataclysmic event can take generations. But in this fascinating book, Carpenter brings together all those who did their best to communicate what they saw in the moment so that it could never be lost.
    Show book
  • Quarantine Diary: Living In A Pandemic - cover

    Quarantine Diary: Living In A...

    Julio Bonilla

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    President Donald Trump thought it was a hoax, but it turns out COVID-19 exists.  
      
    Thousands of people died. First it was reported that seniors were susceptible to the disease.... 
      
    These are the diary entries I started typing in May, 2020... Read about how life changed after March 13th, when the virus, originally known in China as the Coronavirus, came to the United States, and put us all in lockdown for months. Survive. 
     
    Show book
  • The Brilliance Of Meister Eckhart A Visionary For Our Times - cover

    The Brilliance Of Meister...

    Ph.D. Matthew Fox

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Meister Eckhart was a preacher and mystic who lived in the late 13th and early 14th centuries. Yet like Rumi and Hafiz he remains relevant today. He dedicated his life to trying to restart Christianity into something experiential. Fox also speaks of the Cosmic Christ and the feminine force of wisdom.
    Show book
  • Margaret - Friend of Orphans - cover

    Margaret - Friend of Orphans

    Mary Lou Widmer

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A biography of Margaret Haughery, the beloved woman who went from a life of poverty to one of philanthropy and became known as the “Angel” of New Orleans.   Margaret Haughery gave everything she ever had to the orphans and the poor. Despite being unable either to read or write, she possessed an incredible business acumen, which allowed her to donate—including what she bequeathed in her will—more than $500,000 throughout her life.   What is perhaps even more astounding is that Margaret lost everyone she ever loved, yet she was still able to give so much love. As a child in the Maryland area, this Irish immigrant lost her parents and her baby sister when they died in a fever epidemic. She was separated from her brother in the aftermath, and he very well may have perished in the epidemic as well. Then, when she was a young wife and mother in New Orleans, her husband died of consumption. Soon afterward, her newborn daughter died in her sleep.   Determined to not succumb to self-pity and depression, Margaret, strengthened by her Roman Catholic faith, dedicated the rest of her life to helping the orphans and the poor. Helping to support an orphanage, she first started a dairy to provide milk for the children. Then she went on to earn a small fortune from running a local bakery. This financial success allowed her to donate enormous monetary sums to charity. Still, her fiscal generosity was eclipsed by her spiritual gifts.   This docunovel has dialogue added to enliven the text.
    Show book
  • Gandhi Smuts & Race in the British Empire - Of Passive & Violent Resistance - cover

    Gandhi Smuts & Race in the...

    Peter Baxter

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Towards the end of 1906, a meeting took place between two emerging giants of the age, Mohandas K. Gandhi and General Jan Christian Smuts. United under the same empire, but separated by distance and culture, Smuts was born in the Cape Colony, and Gandhi in Porbandar, a duchy of the Indian province of Gujarat. Both, however, went on to study law in Britain, and while developing a great admiration for the institutions of empire, each man also suffered his own particular crisis of faith. From their widely dispersed origins, Gandhi and Smuts collided over the issue of race and equality in a turbulent province of the empire, each attempting to hold the British to their stated ideals. This insightful book explores attitudes to race, and belonging, in an age when the English speaking peoples straddled the globe, and sought to impose on all of their subject races, basking under the radiance of Britannia, a common ideal of parity, equal opportunity and free movement.
    Show book
  • "Get Beethoven!" - cover

    "Get Beethoven!"

    Paul Cassidy

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A comic book character is born, the youngest of sixteen, into a war torn country. Facing extreme brutality at school and on the streets, not to mention the oppression of the Catholic Church, he finds music. Armed with a violin and a burning passion, he escapes the madness and sets off to pursue his dreams.
    "Get Beethoven!" is the inspirational story of Paul Cassidy's life. Overcoming adversity in his younger years, Paul recounts tragedy, joy, horror and humour. Informative and entertaining, the book charts his journey up to joining the Brodsky Quartet in 1982.
    Show book