LINCOLN ROOM UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY MEMORIAL the Class of 1901 founded by HARLAN HOYT HORNER and HENRIETTA CALHOUN HORNER ; PHOTOGRAPH OF MARSHALL'S PORTRAIT OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1870, by W*. E. MARSHALL, in the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. PRELIMINARY EGOTISM jjHIS Bibliography uiay fairly be said to be a catalogue of a collection of Lincoln matter at present in my possession, as I have everything mentioned, except a very few pamphlets, two of the engravings and a few of the medals. It is, without doubt, the largest Lincoln collection extant. I did not commence this collection until a year and a half after Mr. Lincoln's death, though always an admirer of him. Strangers and friends have kindly contributed j but of course the greater part has been made by personal diligent search and purchase. It has been pursued with the assiduity begotten of a heartfelt interest in the subject. Every book and print store that seemed at all likely to contain matter relating thereto was ransacked, and no opportunity to increase and perfect my collection neglected. While traveling on my ordinary business, a half hour's stay at any phce offering a prospect of additional matter, has always been devoted to search. When " snow bound, " or otherwise detained, the opportu- nity has been seized to add to rny collection. During the past four years I have written over 2,000 letters on the subject. I have a large lot of newspapers, printed matter, pictures, &c., bearing upon Lincoln, yet which would not come within the scope of this catalogue, and of course not mentioned. In addition I have a letter in Mr. Lincoln's handwriting written the day before he took his seat in congress 1847. The first survey paper made out by him in 1836. A foolscap leaf from his copy-book made in 1824. His autograph to a subscription for my Washington Directory 1864. Some writing to the secretary of war, March, 1865. A memorandum book of voters' names in Springfield. Some other writing and auto- graphs. A piece of cloth used to stop the flow of blood from his wound. A couple of feathers from the pillow he died on. A piece of floor oil cloth stained with his blood. A piece of wall paper iv PRELIMINARY EGOTISM. from the theatre-box in which he was shot. An old silver watch chain that he wore for twenty years. A plaster cast of his right hand made in 1860. A letter from President Johnson to Mrs. Lincoln at the request of congress upon transmitting, their resolutions to her on the death of Mr. Lincoln. This letter is a quarto page in german text with mourning border, all-printed with a pen, and signed by Mr. Johnson. I have also a large number of letters from authors of eulogies and biographies of Mr. Lincoln and from others, many of which are interesting. Besides over fifty photographs, and a variety of other matter. Mr. Charles H. Hart, at one time contemplated issuing a biblio- graphy of books published on the occasion of Mr. Lincoln's death, and had taken pains to give the text and number of copies printed. Upon learning his willingness to transfer this information to me, I threw out such titles in my list as he had mentioned in his, and gave him a place in my book. CONTENTS. ABRAHAM LINCOLN, BY A. BOYD, ADDENDA, - BADGES AND MOURNING CARDS, CARICATURE PRINTS, INTRODUCTION, BY C: H. HART, - MEDALS, MEDALETS, ETC., PART I, - PAJIT II, SKETCH OF MONUMENTS, ETC., PAGE, 1 86 and 172 - 171 159 9 161 7 172 ILLUSTRATIONS. GRAPH OK MARSHALL'S LINE ENGR. PORTRAIT OK PRES. LINCOLN. PHOTOGRAPH OK A PLASTER CAST OF MR. LINCOLN'S RIGHT HAND. PHOTOGRAPH COPY OK THK ORIGINAL EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION. FAITH, HOPE AND LOVE. I ain loth to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not Ireak our bonds of affection. THE MYSTIC CHORDS OF MEMORY, STRETCHING FROM EVERY BATTLE FIELD AND PATRIOT GRAVE TO EVERY LIVING HEART AND HEARTH-STONE ALL OVER THIS BROAD LAND, WILL YET SWELL THE CHORUS OF THE UNION, WHEN AGAIN TOUCHED, AS SURELY THEY WILL BE, BY THE BETTER ANGELS OF OUR NATURE. Abraham Lincoln, March, 1861. Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may pass speedily away. Yet if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago; so still it must be said, that the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether. With malice towards none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation's wound; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphans; to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves, and with all nations. Abraham Lincoln, 1865. [Hon. John J. Crittenden, of Ky., 1861.] There is a niche in the Temple of Fame, a niche near to Washington, which should be occupied by the statue of him who shall save his country. Mr Lin- coln has a mighty destiny. It is for him to be but a President of the people of the United States, and there will his statue be. [Hon. Owen Lovejoy in reply to the above.] There IS a niche for Abraham Lincoln in Freedom's holy fane. In that niche he shall stand proudly, glo- riously, with shattered fetters, and broken chains and slave whips beneath his feet. His name shall not only be enrolled in this earthly temple, but it will be traced on the living stones of that temple, which rears itself amidst the thrones of heaven. This is a fame worth living for ; aye, more, it is a fame worth dying for, even though that death led through the blood of Gethsemane and the agony of the accursed tree. No pen Will ever be able to do justice to the memory of Abraham Lincoln. Hon. Isaac N. Arnold, to A. Boyd, 1865. Mr Lincoln was good, kind, tender, noble, lovely, The very loveliest of men. He was a man of great fidelity, integrity, and honor ; He was a great, noble, strong man, The greatest, noblest, and strongest of men. He had great virtue, great broad toleration, and was pure, I think he is the finest American character yet born. The man is not yet understood, His history is not known ; And the man not generally appreciated, As I see him ; And as the world will see him, Before fifty years roll by. God bless Abraham. Hon. Wm. II. Herndon, Mr. Lincoln's law partner, to A. Boyd, 1866. PHOTOGRAPH OP A PLASTER CAST MR. LINCOLN'S RIGHT HAND. as made BOOH after Mr. Lincoln's Nomination in 1 by L. W. Volk, of Chicago). ABRAHAM BY ANDREW BOYD. I know that there is a God, and that He hates injustice and slavery. I see the storm coming, and I know that His hand is in it. If He haa a place and work for me and I think He has I believe I am ready. I am nothing, but Truth is everything. I know I am right, because I know that liberty is right, for Christ teaches it, and Christ is God. I have told them that a house divided against itself cannot stand ; and Christ and reason say the same ; and they will find it so. ********* God cares, and humanity cares, and I care ; and with God's help I shall not fail. I MAY NOT SEE THE END ; BUT IT WILL COME. Abraham Lincoln, 1860. |T is not without reason we preserve even the slightest memorial of the great and good who have passed away. The merest trifles may have a distinct value of their own in history, as it is from this we reproduce in our minds the character of the great and noble men who have passed away in the long years and centuries gone by. The idiosyncracies of the great, their ways, their trifling peculiarities of manner, and habit, or familiar phrases, all go to illustrate character, and are of no little importance to the historian. To be thus minutely criticised is one of the penalties paid for a niche in the temple of fame. How few characters will bear that scrutinizing analysis so well as Abraham Lincoln's? Every little incident of his life, every oddity of manner or phrase, his very jests and humorous stories served but to bring out the great, warm, human heart of the man who knew no guile; but so nearly fulfilled the divine injunction, " Be ye wise as serpents ; but harmless as doves." 'All the biographers of Mr. Lincoln state that his mother's maiden name was Nancy Hanks, while in fact it was Nancy SPAUKOW. John and Dennis 1 2 ABRAHAM A - a prophet is not without honor save in his own country, it may be half said a great man is not without honor save in his own gene- ration. Washington who justly occupies to-day so lofty a place in our history, had detractors amongst his contemporaries almost if not fully as hitter as Lincoln, who, when political jealousy shall have died and the venom of his enemies, who are also the enemies of humanity, be spent, will take his place in history as the savior of the republic, and the liberator of 4,000,000 of the human race from bondage. There can be no incident in the life of such a man, no trait of character, no peculiarity of feature too trivial for a place in history : he has filled the eye of the world, and the hearts of millions not his countrymen. He has illustrated as no other has done the institu- tions of his country ; and demonstrated to the world the possibili- ties that await every American citizen. Abraham Lincoln was born in Hardin county, Kentucky, on the 12th February, 1809. His parent's names were Thomas and Nancy (Sparrow*) Lincoln. He was born in a log cabin in obscurity and poverty, having no education, beyond one year's schooling, excepting what he attained by his own unassisted efforts. When quite a young man he made one or two trips on the Mississippi as a flat-boatman, and split rails for fencing his father's farm ; hence the sobriquet, Rail splitter, by which he was designated in political campaigns. The character of the man was foreshadowed in the boy who was discouraged by no difficulties ; but when the day's work was done, in- stead of seeking rest or recreation, would often lie at full length upon the hearth in his humble home, and by the blazing fire read and study that he might take his place among men. The high sense of honor which ever characterized the man was illustrated by an in- cident of his boyhood : he had borrowed a life of Washington which was nearly destroyed by the rain beating in through the window upon it during the night, and " pulled fodder" for two days to repay the owner for the damage done his book. F. Hanks, second cousins of Mr. Lincoln, inform me that she was sometimes called Nancy Hanks from the fact that her Aunt Nancy Hanks raised her ; her father's name was Henry Sparrow and her mother's name Luanda Hanks. This no doubt accounts for the discrepancy about Mr. Lincoln's mother's name. (Mr. Dennis F. Hanks writes me that her mother's name was as does also Rer. Elias Nason of North Bill<>rica, Mass. While Mr. Joint Hanks writes that it was Ludndt.) ABRAHAM LINCOLN. 3 He surmounted all the disadvantages of his position by energy and persevering study until he became a lawyer ; and in his practice was ever on the side of mercy and justice. When a great politi- cal party met in convention in 1860, to nominate a candidate for presi- dent of the United States, at a critical period, when it was felt that the fate of the country depended upon the patriotism and discretion of the chief magistrate, they selected him from among great and well known statesmen, and made him their standard bearer ; and with distin- guished competitors at the head of opposing parties for the high office, he was the victorious elected, and became a ruler over more than 30,000,000 of people. The passage from his home in Springfield, 111., commenced on his birthday 1861, to the National Capitol, was a continuous ovation j all along the route he was welcomed with an enthusiasm perhaps never exceeded on any similar occasion. When approaching Washington it was deemed necessary by his friends that he should hasten secretly by night through a border state to escape a plot to assassinate him. . At the expiration of his presidential term he was reelected by an overwhelming majority. During the four years terrible civil war he remained anchored faithful and true to his trust ; undaunted by reverses ; unswayed by the counsels of the timid or temporizing ; and, fully trusting at all times in God for wisdom, looked unflinch- ingly to the end ; he harmonized factions among his political friends, and dealt mercifully with his enemies ; he emancipated a poor down- trodden race that for centuries was compelled to labor and to wait ; he bore modestly his triumphs over the enemies of his country; he brought the war to a successful close, and saved the Union from dis- solution, perpetuating its sovereign strength for all time to come. All these are facts which every youth in our country is acquainted with, and there is scarcely a being, however humble or lowly, in the whole wide world who has not heard the name of ABRAHAM LIN- COLN, the savior of the Republic, which has been aptly called " half brother of the world," and who knows how at the end of its gigantic struggle he was cruelly and brutally murdered. This deed was committed on Good Friday, April 14th, 1865, about 10 o'clock in the evening while he was sitting in a private box at a theatre on Tenth street, in Washington, whither he had gone by request ; near him sat Mrs. Lincoln and a young lady and gentleman. The assassin entered from behind unobserved, and shot him in the head, the ball entering at the left side, and, penetrating the brain, lodged over the right eye. He was removed to a house 4 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. opposite ; and never spoke after the cruel shot, dying the next morning at twenty-two minutes after seven o'clock. " This pistol shot jai-red the continent more than all Columbiads." The whole land was draped in mourning for his death; friends and acquaintances greeted each other solemnly in the streets, as if with mutual condolences for the loss of a friend ; every loyal heart was saddened, and expressions of sympathy from the crowned heads and their subjects from all parts of the world, came to us for the loss of so honest and humane a ruler. Sermons occasioned by the event were preached in nearly every loyal pulpit ; hundreds were reproduced in the newspapers of the day and in pamphlet form, abroad, as well as at home. Mr. Lincoln's remains left Washington on the 21st of April, pass- ing over about the same route he had taken on his way to the capital in 1861 ; the distance was over 1,500 miles, and about sixteen days were occupied in bearing the body to his old home in Illinois, where it was interred on the 4th of May. The funeral pageant was immense. It was attended by a nation of mourners ; in some cities where the remains were exposed to view, people once in the line had to wait for hours to obtain the last look upon the face of the beloved and revered dead, so great was the throng. In Washington, over 40,000 persons viewed the remains. In New York, they filed by the coffin on either side to the number of 80 and 100 in a minute, and it is said more than 150,000 people paid this last tribute of respect and love, while thousands were una- ble to approach. The number was little less in Philadelphia; and in Springfield, 111., was estimated at 75,000 persons. It is not possible to believe that any conqueror or hero ever had a grander and more triumphal march to the grave, or more genuinely impressive than did Mr. Lincoln. At the depots, at the crossings and all along the road sides, people came with uncovered heads to witness the train go by that carried the remains of this good man. Before Mr. Lincoln had ceased to live, the secretary of war had every avenue of escape guarded, and directed search to be made for the murderer and his accomplices. More than 8200, 000 reward was offered for their capture ; and subsequently 3210,000 was offered by the executive for the arrest of others said to be implicated. The murderer was pursued, and in a few days overtaken in a barn in ABRAHAM LINCOLN. 5 Virginia, and, refusing to surrender, was shot; he died in great agony a few hours afterwards. Eight other of the conspirators were captured and tried ; four of them were hanged on the 7th of July (one of them a woman). Three were sentenced to hard labor for life and one for six years. One died, and the remainder were par- doned by Andrew Johnson a day or two before the expiration of his presidential term. A son of the poor unfortunate woman hanged, had fled ; but was captured in Egypt about a year and a half after the assassination, was brought back, tried and acquitted. All the above facts are fresh in the minds of our people ; but it was deemed not inappropriate to put on record in a work of this kind a brief sketch of the life of him who occasioned so many pub- lications, to enumerate and describe which this catalogue is issued. The hand of divine providence is discerned in the lifting up of such a man when the destiny of the republic trembled in the ba- lance } and the day star of the oppressed all over the world seemed about to go out in blood with the disruption of our country. The hand of the assassin, long upraised, was staid until his mission was accomplished, when it seemed the will of the great ruler of all that he should wear this martyr's crown. It was his time to be president at a period when he could scarcely have been otherwise than a great central point of notice, and of remembrance to posterity, even though his life had not been taken ; that baptism in blood, however, served to place his name as high as the stars, as that of a man who had been murdered for his integrity. It gave him a crown, and made him a figure of admiration for future generations ! a figure of almost unapproachable grandeur. His great tenderness of heart made him shrink from punishing even the guilty ; and he ever sought for some extenuating circum- stance that "justice might be tempered with mercy." His ina- bility to resist an appeal for clemency almost amounted to weakness ; a mother pleading for the life of her son he could not deny, though he would afterwards say, " perhaps I have done wrong, but 1 have made that poor woman happy." Again he said " Some of our generals complain that I impair discipline and subordination in the army by my pardons and respites, but it makes one rested, after a hard day's work, if I can find some good excuse for saving a man's life, and I go to bed happy as I think how joyous the signing of my name will make him and his family and his friends." The Hon Schuyler Col- fax says, " Calling upon the president one morning in the winter of 18G3, I found him looking more than usually pale and careworn, 6 ABRAUAM LINCOLN. M and inquired the reason. He replied, with the bad news he had received at a late hour the previous night, which had not yet been communicated to the press, he had not closed his eyes or breakfasted : and with an expression I shall never forget, he exclaimed, ' How willingly would I exchange places to-day with the soldier who sleeps on the ground in the army of the Potomac' " His ear and heart were ever open to the pleadings of distress j the humblest citizen was never denied an audience, and at unreasona- ble hours of the night even an interview has been granted when the case did not easily admit of delay. It was my good fortune to see Mr. Lincoln many times during his life, and when his remains were being borne to the grave*! gazed for the last time upon the face of the man I honored and loved. PART I. n CincoInia mi : AN ACCOUKT OF THE PUBLICATIONS OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH ABRAHAM LINCOLN, SIXTEENTH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. BEING A BIBLIOGRAPHICAL CATALOGUE OF ALL, SERMONS, EULOGIES, ORATIONS, ETC., DELIVERED AT THE TIME, NOTES AND AN INTRODUCTION CHARLES H. HART, LL. B M HISTORIOORAPHEIl OF THE NUMISMATIC AND ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY OF PHILADELPHIA, AND (OKUEKPONIIINII MKMIIKR OF THK NEW ENGLAND HISTORIC GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY; THE MAINE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, THE LONO ISLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY, KTC., ETC., ETC. INTRODUCTION. BY C. H. HART. Five years ago the nation was called upon to give its utterance upon the fiendish crime committed at its national capital, on the person of its chief magistrate ; and five years ago the writer of this monograph designed the present work to preserve and memoralize those utterances. To many this volume will appear to be nothing but a bald catalogue, of little value and less interest ; a production showing very meagre results for five years of diligent labor expended in its preparation. Yet so it is, that in the field of literature, the bibliographers' task is that requiring the greatest patience and labor, with the least impressive results, as is quaintly said by Anthony a Wood, in the preface to his History of Oxford : " A painfull work it is I'll assure you, and more than difficult, wherein whattoyle hath been taken, as no man thinketh, so no man believeth, but he hath made the triall," J But is it therefore of the least value '? Is it nothing to have preserved for future ages, a record of those products of the press, called forth by one of the greatest epochs in the nation's life ; to erect a library within one cover for the true historian, the one of fifty or a hundred years hence, to make choice of the foundation whereupon to build his more enduring monument. It is with this aim alone that the Bibliographia Lincolniana has been execute^. It was at first intended that it 2 should accompany the " Life of President Lincoln," to be written by his old friend and law partner, the Hon. William H. Herudon, of Springfield, Illinois, but this gentleman has desisted from his work, having decided that the time has not yet arrived for the proper ap- preciation of such a work as his materials and knowledge of the subject would produce. It therefore appears in its present form. It had been the intention of the writer to add a biographical memoir, prepared solely from the works named in the following catalogue, giving extracts and selections from each ; but his manuscript prepared after this manner, was accidentally lost in its transmission to the printer, so that the following sketch must be accepted in its stead, his time not allowing him the labor of producing a duplicate of the first. Abraham Lincoln was born on the 12th of February, 1809, in Hardin, now Larue county, Kentucky, near Nolin creek, about a mile and a half from IIo;ljr ( 'iiville, the present county seat of Larue County. His parents wereex- (Vi-dingly poor and illiterate, the father being neither able to read nor write, while the mother could read but not write. Of his progenitors the following facts arc gleaned from the able eulogy, by Rev. Elias Nason, of North Billerica, delivered before the New England Historic-Genealogical Society, and Hon. Solomon Lincoln of Hingham, 's " Notes on the Lincoln Family of Massachusetts." 1 When I state that about twelve hundred letters were written, and about eight him dred letters and pamphlets received, in the preparation of this volume, it will be seen that my assertion is not greatly exaggerated. - 1 allude, of course only to my own portion of this work. 2 1 IN TROD UCTION. The line of Mr. Lincoln's ancestry has been followed with certainty only to his great-grandfather, who emigrated about the middle of the last cen- tury from Berks county, Pennsylvania to Rockingham county, Virginia. Where the Lincolns of Berks county came from, no record has as yet di- vulged, but they are believed to have been Quakers, and to have escaped from the intolerance of Massachusetts, to the friendly soil of Pennsylvania. The argument which tends most strongly to bind the ancestry of the late president to that of the distinguished Massachusetts Lincolus, is the great similarity of the Chistian names found in the two families, and one of these by no means a common one. Hingham, Mass., was formally settled Sep- tember 18, 1635, by the Rev. Peter Hobart and twenty nine others, who drew house lots on that day. In the next year house lots were granted to Thomas Lincoln the miller, Thomas Lincoln the weaver, and Thomas Lin- coln the cooper, and later still or in 1637, to Samuel Lincoln brother of Thomas the weaver. S^nuel Lincoln, of this family the fourth original settler, had four sons : camuel, Daniel, Mordecai and Thomas. Mordecai Lincoln had a son Mordecai. born April 24th, 1686, and another named Abra- ham, born Jan. 13th, 1689. Here we have the three names, Mordecai, Thomas and Abraham in frequent and familiar use. In Rupps's History of Berks and Lebanon Counties, Pennsylvania, we find that among the taxable inhabitants of Exeter, Berks county, soon after its organization in 1752, were Mordecai Lincoln and Abraham Lincoln ; also, that Thomas Lincoln was living in Reading as early as 1757, and that Abraham Lincoln was one of the repre- sentatives from Berks county, in 1782-5 and a member of the convention for the framing of the constitution of the state in 1789-90. In a correspondence held in 1848 between the late president while a member of congress, and Hon. Solomon Lincoln of Hingham, the former stated : " My father's name is Thomas, my grandfather's was Abraham, the same of my own. My grandfather went from Rockingham county in Virginia, to Kentucky about the year 1782, and two years afterwards was killed by the Indians. We have a vague tradition that my great-grandfather went from Pennsylvania to Virginia, and that he was a Quaker. Further than this, I have never heard anything. It may do no harm to say that ' Abraham ' and ' Mordecai ' are common names in our family." In a subsequent letter, he says : " I have mentioned that my grandfather's name was Abraham. He had, as, I think, I have heard four brothers, Isaac, Jacob, Thomas and Jonn. He had three sons, Mordecai, Josiah and Thomas, the last my father. My uncle Mordecai had three sons, Abraham, James and Mordecai ; uncle Josiah had several daughters and an only son Thomas. My father has an only child, myself of course. This is all I know certainly on the subject of names; it is, however, my father's understanding that Abraham, Mordecai and Thomas are old family names of ours." At the present day the above notes and sur- mises are all that can be offered in regard to the connection of the two fami- lies, and we shall have to wait for time to develop the hidden factte requisite to prove the descent from the same source. Thomas Lincoln, the father of the president, was born in Virginia about the year 1778, so that he was a mere infant at the period of his father's removal to Kentucky, and n<;t much more when in 1784, while at work in the field, a short distance from his cabin, he was stealthily approached by. an Indian, and shot dead. In 1806, when Thomas was in his twenty-eighth year, he married Nancy Hanks, 1 like himself a Virginian by birth, and took her to the humble log cabin.where three years later was born the future president of the United States. They had three children, a daughter who married Aaron (J rigs by when she was but fourteen years of age, and died shortly afterwards, and two sons, Abraham, named from his grandfather, and Thomas, who died in infancy, In 1816, when Abraham was but seven [' See note in the preceding article " Abraham Lincoln.'" in regard to the correct name of Mr. Lincoln's mother. A. B.] INTRODUCTION. H years old, his father removed from Kentucky and settled in Spencer county, Indiana, where three years later his mother died, the mother of whom in after years, with tears in his eyes, he said : " All that I am or hope to be, I owe to my angel mother." Her grave lies, unmarked, near the village of Gentryville, Spencer county, Indiana ; hut the first use that her reverent son put the little education he had acquired after her death, was to indite an epistle to an itinerant minister of the Baptist church, by the name of Elkin, whom he had once heard preach before his immigration from Ken- tucky, asking him to come and perform religious services over her grave, which he accordingly did about a twelve month after she had been laid to rest. Although it has been stated, and on no poorer authority than the late presi- dent, himself, that the aggregate of all the school education of his life could be embraced within the limits of one year, still it seems that in this short space of time he was under the charge of no less than five teachers, two, Riney and Caleb Hazel in Kentucky, and Andrew Crawford, Sweeney and Dorsey in Indiana. It is to Andrew Crawford that the stores told of the president's " pulling fodder," for three days, to pay for a Life of Washington. It hap- pened in this wise : Lincoln borrowed from his teacher a copy of Ramsey's Life of Washington, which he carelessly left in an open window, when a shower coming on it was drenched and nearly ruined. Hastening to his teacher in great grief and alarm, he explained the accident and offered to work out the worth of the book's damage, which he did in the manner detailed, and was rewarded for his behavior by being presented with the book. The two works with which he became best acquainted in his youth, were ^Ssop's Fables and Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress. And who can follow the record of his life without easily detecting the effect they had upon the develop- ment of two of his distinguishing characteristics his legend of anecdote and reverence for religion. In the autumn of 1819, somewhat more than a year after the death of Abraham's mother, his father married again, this time a widow lady with three children, Mrs. Sally Johnston of Elizabethtown, Kentucky. I think it is to this lady more than to his own mother that he is indebted for his good early training and formation of character. And from the following letter in possession of the writer written to his step-brother, her own so*n, it will be seen that he was much more chary of her rights than^ her own flesh and blood. It bears the superscription, " John_D. Johnston, Charles- Ion, Coles county, Illinois," and is dated, " Springfield, Nov. 25, 1851," and reads as follows : Dear Brother: Your letter of the 22d is just received. Your proposal about selling the East forty acres of land is all that I want or could claim for myself, but I am not satisfied with it on Mother's account. 1 want her to have her living, and I feel that it is my duty, to some extent, to see 'that she is not wronged. She had a right of dower (that is the use of one-third for life) in the other two forties ; but it seems she has already let you take that, hook and line. She now has the use of the whole of the East forty, as long as she lives ; and if it be sold of course she is entitled to the interest on all tlir money it brings as long as she lives ; but you propose to sell it for three hundred dollars, take one hundred away with you, and leave her two hundred, at 8 per cent, making her the enormous sum of sixteen dollars a year. Now, if you are satisfied with treating her in that way, I am not. 1 1 is t rue, that you are to have that forty for two hundred dollars, at Mother's death ; but you are not to have it before. I am confident that land can be made to produce tor Mother at least $30 a year, and I cannot, to oblige any living pers :m consent that she shall be put on an allowance of sixteen ilol- larsayear. Yours, &c., A. LINCOLN. This lady in her eightieth year was still living at the time of the president's peath, near Karmington, Co'les county, Illinois. 12 INTRODUCTION. At the age of nineteen Mr. Lincoln made his first " strike out from home," taking charge of a flat boat and its cargo for the sugar plantations near New Orleans. During the laborious voyage he and his only companion, a son of hie employer, successfully defended themselves against an attack made at night by a band of negroes for the purposes of plunder, and escaping un- hurt reached their destination, disposed of their freight and returned to their homes in safety. In March, 1830, Abraham having just completed his majority, started with his father and family from their Indiana home and after a tedious journey of fifteen days halted on the banks of the Sangamon river, near Decatur, Macon county, Illinois. It was at this era in his life that he acquired the epithet afterwards used towards him of " the rail-splitter of Illinois," he having split rails enough to fence in a lot of ten acres, the di- mensions of his father's new home. Here, however, the family did not remain long. Finding the locality unhealthy they removed to Coles county in the same state, where old Thomas Lincoln died January 17th, 1851, in his seventy-third year. Having cut entirely loose from his family after their removal to Coles county, we next find Lincoln hired by a man named Offutt to build a flat boat at twelve dollars per month, which when completed he took to New Orleans, with a drove of hogs, for his employer. On his return his employer placed him in charge of a store and mill at New Salem, Menard county, Illinois. It was while young Lincoln was engaged in the duties of tending store, that he borrowed from an acquaintance a copy of Kirkham's English grammar and commenced its study. The identical book used by Mr. Lincoln is now in the possession of Capt. R. R. Rutledge, with whose father Mr. Lincoln lived about this time. His name, together with several remarks, originally appeared on the fly leaf, but the leaf has been torn out. In this connection it may be of interest to state, that the writer has in his possession a page of Mr. Lincoln's copy-book made in 1824, when he was fifteen years old. It is of ordinary foolscap size, and has written across the bottom in large characters, " ABRAHAM LINCOLN'S BOOK." This interesting relic was presented to the writer, together with many others of a similar character, by his valued friend the Hon. William H. Herndon of Springfield, Illinois, to whom he is indebted for much valuable information. It was in the spring of 1832, that the skirmishes with the Sac Indians began, known in history as the Black Hawk war, whereupon Governor Reynolds, of Illinois, issued his call for volunteers, and among the first to offer themselves was Abraham Lincoln, who was almost unanimously elected captain of a company, formed in Menard county, from among his friends and neighbors. There was no fighting to be done, so the captain and his com- pany had no chance of distinguishing themselves on the field, 'except in the manner described in the following extract from a speech delivered by Mr. Lincoln, when a member of congress, upon the nomination of General Cass, for the presidency, the general's friends having endeavored to endow their hero Avith a military reputation. "By the way. Mr. Speaker," said Mr. Lincoln, "do you know I am a military hero? Yes, sir, in the days of the Black Hawk war, I fought, bled and came away. Speaking of Genera! Cass's career reminds me of my own. I was not at Stillman's defeat, but I was about as near it as Cass to Hull's surrender; and like him I saw tin- place very soon afterward. It is quite certain I did not break my sword, for I had none to break ; but I bent my musket pretty badly on one occasion. * * If General Cass went in advance of me in picking whortleberries, I guess I surpassed him in charges upon the wild onions. If he saw any live, fighting Indians, it was more that I did, but I had a good many bloody struggles with the mosquitoes ; and although I never fainted from loss of blood, I can truly say I was often very hungry." Mr. Lincoln returned home but about ten days before the state election and was immediately solicited to become a candidate for the legislature, on the Clay ticket, to which position however he was not elected. It was dur- ing this canvas that he made his first political speech, and sufficiently is it INTROD UCT10N. 1 3 cliaracteristic of the man to find a place here. He said : " Gentlemen, fel- low-citizens, I presume you all know who I am, I am humble Abraham Lincoln. I have been solicited by many friends to become a candidate for the legislature. My politics are short and sweet. I am in favor of a national bank. I am in favor of the internal improvement system, and a high pro- tective tariff. These are my sentiments and political principles. If elected I shall be thankful, if not it will be all the same." After the election Mr. Lincoln entered into partnership with a man named Berry, in the town of New Salem ; but the latter proving a wild, dissipated fellow.the business soon became a wreck. He was then appointed postmaster of the town by Presi- dent Jackson, and about the same time became deputy surveyor of the county. Not having the slightest knowledge of surveying, he borrowed the necessary books from his chief, and after much arduous study procured a compass and chain and entered upon his duties. He had not been long engaged in his new employment, when his implements were attached for a debt of the old firm and sold, but generously purchased by a friend of his, one James Short, and gratuitously given back. In 1834, he became again a candidate for the legislature, and this time was elected by the highest vote cast for any candidate. To the same legislature was chosen Major John T. Stuart, whom Mr. Lincoln had known as a captain in the Black Hawk war. Major Stuart was one of the then leaders of the Springfield bar, and urged and encouraged Mr. Lincoln to study the law and make it his profession ; enforcing his advice by offering him the loan of 'any law books he might have in his possession. Mr. Lincoln was not loth to accept this offer, and at the close of the session returned to his home in New Salem " with a load of borrowed legal lore," and began its study with great diligence. In 1836, Mr. Lincoln was re-elected to the legislature, and, in the autumn of the same year, was admitted to the bar. We do not know the exact date of his admission, but he could not have been very long unemployed, for the writer has in his possession the original autograph prsecipe, issued by Mr. Lincoln for the writ in his first case. It is sufficiently curious and in- teresting to find a place here, and is as follows : DAVID WOODBRIDGE, ) ... "" f 1 respass m et armis. HAWTHORNE. ) Dama * e8 $ 500 - 00 - The Clerk of the Sangamon Circuit Court, will issue ii Summons returnable; to the next Term of Mar. Sangamon Circuit Court. October 8th, 1836. A. LINCOLN. It was at the next session of the Legislature, that Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas met for the first time, and little then did these two men think of the important relations they were to hold in after life towards each other. The most prominent act of the session was that of removing the capital of the state from Vandalia to Springfield, and so active a part did Mr. Lincoln take in effecting this measure, that he was solicited to remove his residence to the new capital, which he accordingly did in the spring of 1837, and became a partner in the practice of the law, with his former ad- viser, Major Stuart. This partnership, underthe name of "Stuart & Lincoln." lasted about two years. Mr. Lincoln then formed a business connection with Hon. S. T. Logan, the firm being " Logan & Lincoln," which continued until 1843 The next year he formed his third and last partnership, that of " Lincoln & Herndon," which was only closed by the tragedy of April, '65. Upon the breaking up of Mr. Lincoln's second partnership, caused mainly by both members of the firm having similar political aspirations, he accosted his fut an; partner and best friend, then quite a young and pit her obscure practitioner, with, " Billy, let us go into business together !" which proposi- tion Mr. Herndon thankfully accepted. Mr. Lincoln arranged the terms of partnership, and during the twenty-one years they were partners together, they never kept a separate! account, but held each others money as they did 14 INTRODUCTION. their own, and never suspected nor experienced a wrong, and never had a misunderstanding nor a grievance. When Mr. Lincoln was about to leave for Washington, he went to his friend and partner, and rather mournfully addressing him, as he was wont, with the familiar " Billy," said, " you and I have been together all these years, and have never 'passed a word,' will you let my name stay on the old sign till I come back from Washington '!" The answer need not be repeated, sufflcit to say that it did honor to the heart that fathered it, and to the day of the assassination, all the business of that office was carried on in the name of " Lincoln & Herndon ;" and his name was allowed to stay on the old sign till he came back from Washington, but, alas, how differently was that return, to the way he expected, when he uttered those feeling words. As a lawyer, Mr. Lincoln had a good local reputation among his associates, but the jurisprudence of the West in his day, has entitled few men to enduring honor and distinction. Perhaps the most prominent case in which he was engaged, was McCormick vs. Manny, when he represented the defendant, in one of the numerous cases involving the question of the infringement of the patent of McCormick's celebrated reaper. It is worthy of note, that in this case he was opposed by Messrs. Seward and Stanton, two of his future counsellors and cabinet officers. This reference to a patent cause, a class of cases in which Mr. Lincoln was not infrequently engaged, occasions a good opportunity to refer to a mechanical invention of his own, which was patented and now finds rather a conspicu- ous place among the models in the Patent Office, at Washington. It was for the purpose of enabling steam boats to float over the shoals and snags of the western rivers, and consists simply of a sort of bellows-like apparatus, which being pumped full of air, would give the vessel additional buoyancy when it was required. The idea was quaint but not practical, and like so many other similar attempted appliances of mechanical theories to practical use, only lended its aid in cumbering up the official department, where all such inventions register their birth, and not a few find burial also. In 1838, Mr. Lincoln was re-elected to the legislature of his state, and again in 1840, for the last time. In 1842, having arrived at his thirty-third year, he was married on November 4th, to Miss Mary Todd, a daughter of Hon. Robert S. Todd, of Kentucky. The issue of this union was four sons : Robert Todd, who was graduated at Harvard University, in 1864, and sub- sequently was attached to the staff of General Grant, and is now prac- ticing law in Chicago ; Edward, who died in infancy ; William, wli<> died in Washington during Mr. Lincoln's administration, and Thomas, familiarly known as Tad, his father having conferred this sobriquet upon him while an infant in arms, by playfully calling him Tadpole. He is now with his mother residing abroad. It was a year or two before his marriage that Mr. Lincoln voluntarily placed himself in the position to receive a challenge to fight a duel, from James Shields, afterwards a senator in congress, and-more recently a general in the late war. The story of the recurrence is worthy of being related, as showing the chivalric spirit of the young man. A sharp sarcastic poem appeared in the Sangamon Journal, edited at the time by a man named Simeon Francis, which was obviously addressed to Shields, although his name of course did not appear. He went to the editor and demanded the name of the author, otherwise he would hold him personally responsible. The editor asked for a day to consider whether he would reveal the con- tributor's name, which being granted, he immediately applied to Mr. Lincoln for aid and counsel in the matter, the lines having lieen handed to him in the hand-writing of Miss Todd, who was then su] ] osed to hold a relation to Mr. Lincoln, which after events proved might have had more foundation than at the time appeared. The fact was that she had only copied them from the manuscript of the author, a young lady friend. Mr. Lincoln at once told Francis to say to Shields, that he might hold him responsible for the poem. The result was a challenge from the hot Mooded young Irishman INTROD UCTION. 15 to meet him and cleanse the insult with " honor's sole purifier;" The chal- lenge was promptly accepted, and the choice of weapons being Mr. Lincoln's, he selected broadswords, for the reason as he afterwards gave, that his arms being long, he believed that without- hurting Shields, he could protect him- self. This, however, happily was unnecessary, the interference of friends easily effecting an arrangement of the matter and a reconciliation between the parties, although not until after they had reached the spot selected for the combat, a place called Bloody island, lying in the Mississippi river, between Illinois and Missouri. In 1844, occurred the great presidential campaign between Polk and Clay, and it was as a candidate for presidential elector, that Mr. Lincoln first be- came generally known to the people of his state, outside of his own imme- diate home and circle, and the subsequent defeat of Mr. Clay, was to him a great and sad disappointment. A few years later, Mr. Lincoln had the opportunity of meeting his great political idol and receiving an invitation, to visit him at liis home at Ashland, which was greedily accepted ; but the result of the interview was most unsatisfactory and showed to the worshiper that his " idol was but of clay." In 1846, Mr. Lincoln had his wishes gratified by receiving the nomination for congress, from the Sangamon district. To this position he had aspired at the last election two years before ; but was chosen a delegate to the nomi- nating convention with instructions to vote for the late Edward D. Baker ; in regard to which he said, in a letter to a friend in Kentucky, "in trying to get the nomination for Baker, I shall be ' fixed ' a good deal like the fel- low who is made groomsman to the man who has ' cut him out ' and is marrying his own gal." The election proved successful, and Mr. Lincoln took his seat in the thirtieth congress, December 6th, 1847, the only Whig mem- ber from Illinois. This was perhaps the ablest and stormiest congress that ever assembled in our country. Debate ran high between whigs and demo- crats, on tariffs, rivers and harbor improvements, the rights of petition, the abolition of slavery in the district of Columbia, and last, but far from least, the Mexican war. Mr. Lincoln all through the session, with one exception, voted consistently and religiously with his party, for he was always in the broadest sense a loyal party man. He was opposed to the Mexican wa*r from principle, and on the 22d of December, 1847, introduced a preamble and set of resolutions of inquiry, criticising the messages of the president, and throwing the responsibility for the first aggressions upon the administration, for sending a hostile force across the boundary line in opposition to the ad- vice of General Taylor, who said : " That in his opinion, no such movement was necessary to the defence or protection of Texas." These resolutions laid over under the rule of the house and were not called up again by Mr. Lincoln, but they formed the basis of his first elaborate speech in congress, which was delivered on the 12th of January of the following year. On the first of June, 1848, the National whig convention met at Philadelphia, to nominate a candidate for the presidency, and Mr. Lincoln was among its delegates and gave his voice and vote for General Taylor ; returning to congress, which was still sitting, he made a speech in support of his candi- date, in the course of which he made the remarks regarding General Cass's military career repeated in our reference to the Black Hawk war. Upon the adjournment of congress, which was not until the middle of August, he made a short tour into New England, and spoke several times in favor of the elec- ti'm of General Taylor. It is to meeting him in the streets of Worcester, at this time, that Governor Bullock so felicitously refers in his able eulogy before tin- citi/rns of that town. It was at the second session of this con- gress that the Gott resolutions were brought forward, for the abolition of slavery in the district ot Columbia, and Mr. Lincoln recorded his vote against the measure, together with such men as IVndletoii, Stephens and Toombs. lie subsequently himself ottered a substitute for these resolutions, providing lor the gradual emancipation of the slaves in the district, by the purchase of 16 INTRODUCTION. those then slaves by the government of the United States, for their full value, and the freedom of all subsequently born. No definite action was taken upon this substitute, and it remained among the unfinished business of the session. His action in regard to this matter shows plainly that he regarded slaves as property under the constitution. Slavery was to him, as it was to thousands of his fellow citizens, legally right and morally wrong, and it was on this strong foundation, that its overthrow was so steadily contested ; and it was not until the measure was forced upon him by the necessities of the country, that he overrode those rights guarantied by the constitution and extinguished slavery by one fell blow. Mr. Lincoln's congressional career ended March 4th, 1849, and he was succeeded by his former opponent, the late eloquent and gifted Edward D. Baker, who so gallantly fell at the Ball's Bluft massacre. When General Taylor entered office, Mr. Lincoln was a candidate for the appointment of commissioner of the general land office, but he was unsuccessful ; he was, however, tendered the position of secretary, and then of governor of Ore- gon, both of which he declined. On returning home, Mr. Lincoln entered vigorously upon the arduous duties of his profession, and devoted himself to them during a number of years following, but it is not to be supposed that the great political convulsions of 1850-54 found him indifferent to the re- sult. This period of his career has been so fully brought before the public daring the last decade of years; that the writer does not propose to touch upon it, more than to mention that his first attempt at what might be termed a semi-literary undertaking, was produced at this time, when he was invited to eulogize his old hero, Henry Clay, who had deceased in the month of June, 1852. It was considered we believe a failure, his forte not lying in that direction. Passing over the complimentary vote given to Mr. Lincoln for the nomination of vice-president at the Philadelphia Convention of June, 1856, which nomimated Fremont and Dayton for its candidates in the presidential campaign, which elected Mr. Buchanan, we reach his great senatorial contest of ten years later, with the " little giant," Stephen A. Douglas, which really first brought Mr. Lincoln prominently before the country, and then, it was principally owing to his connection with his great opponent that his name became so universally known. The two candidates canvassed the state together, speaking at the same place on the same day. It was conducted with marked ability on both sides, and awakened consider- able interest. Mr. Lincoln showed himself in debate, not far behind the recognized leader of the democratic party in congress, and the avowed aspirant for the presidential chair ; but there being a democratic majority in the legislature, Mr. Lincoln was of course defeated. On being asked by a friend how he felt after his defeat he said, " Very much like the stripling who had bruised his toe, " too bad to laugh and too big to cry." Mr. Doug- las, in his first speech at the opening of this remarkable campaign, makes this allusion to his antagonist " I take great pleasure in saying that I have known personally and intimately for about a quarter of a century the worthy gentleman who has been nominated for my place, and I will say that I regard him as a kind, amiable and intelligent gentleman, a good citizen, and an honorable opponent, and whatever issue I may have with him will be of principle and not of personalities." In the winter of 1858, Mr. Lincoln wrote in the form of a lecture a comprehensive history of inventions, begin- ning with the early ages, and ending with the latest productions of inven- tive art. This lecture was delivered once or twice, but like his only other attempt of a similar character, his eulogy on Clay, was most unsatisfactory. It was also in this year that Mr. Charles Lanman was preparing for publi- cation his " Dictionary of Congress " and in reply to an application made to Mr. Lincoln for a sketch of his life, received the following concise memo- randum : Born, February 12, 1809, in llardin County, Kentucky. Education detec- tive. Profession, a lawyer. Have been a captain of volunteers in the Black INTRO I) UCTION. 1 7 Hawk war. Postmaster at a very small office. Four times a member of the Illinois Legislature ; and was a member of the lower house of Congress. Yours, A. LINCOLN. Towards the close of the next year, Mr. Lincoln had the opportunity offered him of speaking face to face to an eastern audience, by an invita- tion being extended to him to lecture in Brooklyn, at Plymouth church. He accepted the invitation conditioned on being allowed to make a political speech, and appointed the following 27th of February for its delivery. The speech, which it was finally concluded should be delivered at the Cooper Institute, New York, under the auspices of the Young Men's Republican Union, was by many regarded as the best and most elaborate he ever made. It was very widely circulated and read, and prepared the minds of the people for Ms nomination for the presidency. He spent several days in New York after its delivery, and then made his second visit to New England, speaking in several places on the political questions of the day. The agita- tions in the political world were rapidly increasing and insinuating themselves into the minds of the people more and more, as it became manifest to them that the life and existence of the nation depended upon their action on the new topics now daily arising. Then fast followed the conventions of Baltimore, Richmond and Chicago, each with its own pet party candidate for the presi- dential chair, and as the name of Abraham Lincoln was sent forth as one of the nominees, the inquiring voice of the multitude cried out, " and who is Abraham Lincoln?" At this day, that such could have, been the case, seems almost impossible, but nevertheless it is surely true ; and now no name of the last half century is so widely known and respected. Mr. Lin- coln was at Springfield in the office of the State Journal, when he received a telegraphic dispatch informing him of his nomination. He looked at it in silence while those around him were rending the air with their shouts, and then putting it into his pocket quietly said : " There is a little woman down at our house would like to hear this, I'll go down and tell her." On the 6th of November the election took place throughout the whoie^ country, and what the result was is too well known to need a repetition here. And now began a new life for him ; from this moment to the hour of his death, he knew not what quiet or leisure was ; in accepting the presi- dency he resigned his privacy. He was no longer his own master, but the very servant of those over whom he was a chosen master. On the eleventh of the following February, Mr. Lincoln bade a long farewell to his home in Springfield, and set out on his journey for the national capital. From the platform of the car, j ust as he was starting, he addressed his friends and neighbors these beautiful and touching words : "My friends : No one not in my position can realize the sadness I feel at this parting. To this people I owe all that I am. Here I have lived more than a quarter of a century. Here my children were born and here one of them lies buried. I know not how soon 1 shall see you again. I go to assume a task more difficult than that which has devolved upon any other man sinco the days of Washington. He never would have succeeded except for the aid of Divine Providence, upon which he at all times relied. I feel that I cannot succeed without the same divine blessing which sustained him ; and on the same Almighty Being I place my reliance for support. Ami I hop;- you, my friends, will all pray that I may receive that Divine assistance, without which I cannot succeed, and with which success is cer- tain. Again I bid you all an affectionate farewell." The deep religious feeling which pervades this speech, marked him to the clusc of his life. In nearly all his public messages, proclamations and papers of every kind, he recognized our dependence upon God as individuals and as a nation, not in the formal phrases of his predecessors and successors, l>ut in hr:irt It-It \vonls, showing tin- Christian spirit to be tin- all |>t-rvatiing 3 1 8 INTROD UCTION. mainspring of his life. He had faith in the higher law ; in the higher law- giver. From Springfield Mr. Lincoln went to Indianapolis, and from a brief speech delivered here, the outside world obtained the first glimpse of his intended future policy. Visiting Cincinnati, Columbus, Pittsburgh, Cleve- land, Buffalo, Albany, New York, and Trenton, he arrived in Philadel- phia on the eve of Washington's birth-day 1861. Here it was that the plot to assassinate him during his passage through Baltimore was fully unfolded to him, Mr. Lincoln having listened to the detailed statement of Mr. Allan Pinkerton, chief of the National Police Agency, who with his assistants had been mainly instrumental in discovering the conspiracy, said, that he had promised to raise the American Flag over Independence Hall the following morning, and also had accepted an invitation to a reception by the Pennsyl- vania legislature in the afternoon of the same day " Both of these engage- ments I will keep if it costs me my life. If, however, after I have con- cluded these engagements, you can take me in safety to Washington, I will place myself at your disposal, and authorize you to make such arrangements as you may deem proper for that purpose." The next morning Mr. Lincoln was formally received in Independence Hall, and afterwards performed the ceremony according to his promise of raising the flag over the " birth place of our liberties." In the afternoon of the same day he arrived in Harris- burgh, and attended the reception given him by the legislature of the state. Here he remained till nearly six o'clock in the evening, when accompanied by Colonel Ward H. Lamon he was quietly driven to the depot of the Penn- sylvania Kail Road Company, and took a special train which was in waiting, for Philadelphia, where he arrived in time to take the regular eleven o'clock through night train for Washington, reaching his destination safely at the usual hour, on the morning of Saturday the 23d. The city of Washington was thrown into a flutter of excitement by this unexpected arrival. Mr. Lincoln's opponents ridiculed his fears, and his suppporters felt equally ashamed that their chosen chief should have consented to sneak into the capital "like a thief in the night." But the rapidly developing events soon showed that the proper course had been pursued. Mr. Lincoln, long after- wards in speaking of the occasion, said to the Hon. Isaac N. Arnold, of Illi- nois : " I did not then, nor do I now, believe I should have been assassinated, had I gone through Baltimore as first contemplated, but I thought it wise to run no risk, when no risk was necessary." For a full, graphic and au- thentic statement of the facts pertaining to this event, the author would refer to the" History and evidence of the passage of Abraham Lincoln from Harrisburgh, Pa., to Washington, D. C., on the 22d and 23d of February, 1861," written by the chief agent in its detention, and published at Chicago early in the year 1868. The days preceding the inauguration passed in rapid succession, until the morning of the fourth of March broke beautifully clear, and found the vene- rable generalissimo of the army of the United States prepared for any emergency. All the necessary arrangements for the ceremony having been completed, at a few minutes past one, President Buchanan entered the sen- ate chamber with the president elect. Hon. E. D. Baker then a senator from Oregon, introduced his old friend to the assembly, but there was no very hearty welcome given to Mr. Lincoln as he stepped forward to read his inaugural address. On its conclusion the oath of office was administered by the chief justice of the United States, Hon. Roger Brooke Taney. His ad- dress was marked by a moderate and conciliatory tone, containing no repn >ach to the south, no menace and no threat. On the other hand, it leaned towards them ; it assured them of certain protection of all their old rights onder the constitution, and closed with these words of warning and entreaty : " In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow countrymen, and not mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not assail you, you can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You have no INTRODUCTION. 19 oath registered in heaven to destroy the government, while I have the most solemn one " to preserve, protect and defend it." " I am loth to close. We are not enemies but friends. We must not be enemies. Though pas- sion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mys- tic cords of memory, stretching from every battle field and patriot grave to every living heart and hearth-stone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature." The address delivered, and the oath administered, the august ceremonies of the occasion were concluded, and passing back through the senate chamber, the sixteenth president of the United States was escorted to his future resi- dence, the White House. His first official act was the formation of his cabi- net, and of the seven chosen to be his counsellors, four had been rival candi- dates with him for the presidental nomination. On the 15th of April, 1861, the third day after the bombardment of Fort Sumter was commenced. President Lincoln issued his proclamation and call for seventy-five thousand men, to " suppress treasonable combinations and cause the laws to be duly executed." This proclamation and the imminent danger of the govern- ment united the north. The fall of Sumter, was the resurrection of patriot- ism. Four days later a temperate proclamation of blockade \vas made, and the nation stood calmly on the defensive while the south was making the most strenuous efforts for the aggressive. Seeing this the president con- vened Congress on the fourth of July, 1861, and asked for four hundred thousand men and four hundred million dollars. Congress acted with the utmost promptness and liberality, voting five hundred thousand men, and five hundred million dollars, in aid of the war. Thus not only sustaining the president, but giving him one hundred thousand more men, and one hundred million dollars more money than he called for. It is not the intention of the writer, to follow Mr. Lincoln's career through the various acts and measures which arose out of the exigencies of the times, in which was passed the closing years of his life ; to do so properly would require a volume double the size of the present, and not only this, but our passions and our prejudices have not had sufficient time to regajd the events of those days with that calmness and impartiality needed for the historian's appreciative work. We will, therefore, note but a few leading acts of his official life, and first among them for important results is the pro- clamation of emancipation of the first of January, 1863, and those prelimi- nary steps which brought it forth. On the sixth of March, 1862, President Lincoln sent a special message to congress recommending a joint resolution to compensate all states for their abolition of slavery, as a war measure and a measure of public safety. The resolution to compensate was passed in both houses and signed by the president ; and in his correspondence with both Generals Fremont and Hunter, who had each declared martial law and the abolition of slavery within their districts, he gives as 1 he reason for the revoca- tion of the emancipation part of their military proclamations, the fact that they had transcended the laws of congress which he as executive was to exe- cute and not to obstruct. Next to the fatal mistake of commencing war at all, the refusal of the slave states to accept of this proposition was their awful blunder. On the twenty -second of September following, Mr. Lincoln issued the conditional proclamation of emancipation, freeing the slaves of those slates and those sections of states which should be in rebellion on the 1st of January, 1863, thus leaving it to the slave states to say, whether they would save their pet institutions by returning to their allegiance or not. Two days later the proclamation suspending the writ of habeas corpus was issued. This measure created more universal and well founded dissatisfac- tion than any other ot the administration. It attacked that .dearest right of man, the security of personal liberty. No one knew but that it might he his necessity next to invoke its aid, but invoke it he would in vain. Some of the leading jurists of the day took up their pens in defence of the 20 INTRODUCTION. writ against the action of the executive, while one alone, the Nestor 1 of our bar, cast his argument in the scale, for its support. The works arising out of this subject number many volumes, and are valuable as contributions to the science of Constitutional Law. Time rolled on, the new year fast approached, yet the insurgent states gave no sign of their intention to accept the conditions held out to them in the proclamation of the twenty-second of September. Nay, more, they in- dignantly rejected it. The first of January arrived, and with it came the supplemental final words which sealed the fate of human slavery on this continent forever. The original draft of the emancipation proclamation was purchased by Thomas B. Bryan, Esq., of Chicago, at the north-western fair for the Sanitary Commission held at Chicago in the fall of 1863, and the pen with which it was signed now belongs to the family of the late George Livennore of Cambridge, Mass., it having been presented to Mr. Livermore by President Lincoln soon after the important document was completed, and transmitted to that gentleman through the Hon. Charles Sumner, who has been justly styled " the best informed man on all subjects in this country." At the time of the Philadelphia Sanitary Fair in June, 1864, twenty copies of this proclamation were beautifully printed on parch- ment paper, and signed at the request of two gentleman prominently con- nected with the movement, by the President and Mr. Seward, which signa- tures were afterwards attested as genuine by Mr. Lincoln's private secretary, Colonel John G. Nicolay. One of these very interesting documents is now in the possession of the writer. The year which was heralded in by the proclamation of emancipation saw the defeat at Chancellorsville follow fast upon the still more disastrous repulse at Fredericksburg. This was a sad beginning of the year's opera- tions, and was succeeded a few months later by the invasion of Maryland and Pennsylvania by General Lee and his entire army. This movement began on the 3d of June, and was accomplished so quickly and apparently so easily that the whole country was thrown into a whirl of excitement and fearful apprehension. At this juncture, with the army of the Potomac hast- ening to dispute the enemy's advance, its commander was relieved, and General Meade called to that position. This seemed a most hazardous ex- periment. An army defeated and broken, marching on to battle in death's struggle with a powerful and exultant foe, to have its leader changed when on the very verge of conflict, appeared to be a movement calculated more to dishearten than strengthen it ; but happily the result proved otherwise;. The second day after Meade assumed command, the battle of 'Gettysburg began, and it raged with terrific energy for three days. At the close of the third day Lee having lost nearly forty thousand men in killed, wounded and prisoners, and running short of ammunition, showed that he was too exhausted to resume the fight. The contest was decided, the victory won, northern soil was freed once more from southern tread. While these glad tidings were ringing on the loyal heart of the north, came the welcome news from the far-off city of the west, that the stronghold of the Mississippi had surrendered. Thus the 4th of July, 1863, was celebrated with greater exultation than would have been merely the eighty-seventh anniversary of our independence. The state of Pennsylvania having purchased its great battle-ground, and consecrated it as a National Cemetery for the gallant men who fell in its defence, on the llTth of November following, the public dedication took place with solemn and impressive ceremonies. The formal oration was delivered by tho nation's gifted son Edward Everett, and Mr. Lincoln followed in a brief but appropriate address. The battle of Gettys- burg was in its result one of the most decisive of the war, an.l it. with the victory at Vicksburg, gave great encouragement to the depressed spirits of the people. 1 lion, Horace Ilinncy. now in his ninety-third yi-Jir. INTRODUCTION. 21 In December, 1863, Mr. Lincoln issued his proclamation of amnesty to all those engaged in the rebellion, except such as were in the civil or military service of the confederate government, or had left the civil or military ser- vice of the United States to aid that government. To this proclamation he issued a supplementary one on the 24th of the following March, explaining its full intents, and defining more particularly those cases which might claim its benefit. The time now came when nominations were to be made for the occupant of the presidential chair during the four succeeding years, and on the 8th of June, 1864, the republican convention met in Baltimore, and unanimously chose Mr. Lincoln for re-election. Two months later the Democratic convention assembled in Chicago, and nominated Major General George B. McClellan, for his opponent. Andrew Johnson and George H. Pendleton received respectively the republican and democratic nominations for the vice-presidency. The election of the following November gave Mr. Lincoln an overwhelming majority, and on the 4th of March, 1865, he was re-inaugurated into the presidential office for a second term. His address was very brief but touching ; and the words, " with malice towards none, with charity for all," with which it closed, will fall hereafter into that sacred number of phrases, not scripture, but which men often cite unwittingly, as though they were. The affairs of the rebellion were hurrying to a crisis. Sherman, the ablest and most accomplished soldier of the war, had completed his great march so far as to bring its bearing upon the confederate capital, while Grant was gradually narrowing the circle which his lines formed around the same stronghold. On the 3d of April, Lee was forced to evacuate Rich- mond, and on the morning of the 14th, the federal troops took possession of the burning city, and proceeded to extinguish the flames. This virtually ended the war. President Lincoln, who had been at City Point for several days, visited the city immediately after its capture, in company with his youngest son, and Admiral Porter. He entered it, not as the conquering hero in triumphal car, but as the private citizen with his little boy by the hand. On the 9th he returned to Washington, and there received the news that Grant, who had been pursuing Lee, had forced him to surrender. The othej confederate generals rapidly followed the example of their chief, and on the 26th of May, there was left no organized rebel force anywhere within the ter- ritory of the United States. The five days succeeding Mr. Lincoln's return from City Point were indeed memorable ones. The surrender of the southern forces filled the people with inexpressible joy. Houses were illuminated, bells rung, and salutes fired, and the chief magistrate seemed full of hope and happiness. In the midst of the rejoicings at the capital, it was an- nourrml that the president and General Grant would visit Ford's theatre on the evening of the 14th. Grant declined attending, but the president, never willing to disappoint the people, accepted the invitation, and with Mrs. Lincoln and one or two friends entered the president's box after the performance had begun. He was -greeted with great enthusiasm. As the play progressed, a pistol shot was heard and supposed at the instant to be a part of the performance, until a man with a bloody dagger in his hand leaped to the stage from the box where was the presidential party, ex- claiming, "Sic sei//jit'r ti/i'iutnis The South is avenged," and then escaped behind the scenes. The president had been shot and the assassin had escaped. The ball entered the brain, creating a mortal wound, from which Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth president of the United States, expired on the morning of the 15th of April, 1865, at about the hour of seven. The Hev. Dr. Gurley, who was pastor of the Presbyterian Church in Washington, which Mr. Lincoln usually attended, has given the following beautiful account of the scene at the Presidents' death bed : '' When sum- moned on that sad night to the death bed of President Lincoln, I entered the room fifteen or twenty minutes before his departure. All present were gathered anxiously around him, waiting to catch his last breath. The 22 INTRODUCTION. physician with one hand upon the pulse of the dying man, and the other hand laid upon his heart, was intently watching for the moment when life should cease. He lingered longer than we had expected. At last the physician said : ' He is gone ; he is dead.' Then I solemnly believe that for four or five minutes, there was not the slightest noise or movement in that awful presence We all stood transfixed in our positions, speechless, breath- less, around the dead body of that great and good man. At length the secretary of war, who was standing at my left, broke silence, and said: 'Doctor, will you say anything?' I replied, ' I will speak to God,' said he ' do it just now.' And there, by the side of our fallen chief, God put it into my heart to utter this petition, that from that hour, we and the whole na- tion might become more than ever united in our devotion to the cause of our beloved, imperiled country. When I ceased, there arose from the lips of the entire company, a fervid and spontaneous ' Amen.' " And has not the whole heart of the loyal nation responded " Amen !" Was not that prayer thus offered, responded to in a most remarkable manner? When in our history have the people of this land been found more closely bound together in purpose and heart, than when the telegraphic wires bore all over the country, the sad tidings that President Lincoln was dead ? Yes, his death raised a truce to faction and called forth a unanimity of sentiment that astonished and delighted all. Millions, lately in some degree opposed, were now united in feeling, and vied with each other in honoring his memory. The day following his decease, was that most joyful of all re- ligious festivals, Easter Sunday ; and as each minister ascended his pulpit, he laid aside his carefully prepared sermon for the day, and from the fullness of his heart, gave vent to words of sorrow and consolation for the awful calamity which had befallen the nation and created such a universal feeling of sadness and horror in the breasts of the whole community. But one short week before, the Sunday which opened upon Passion-week, that week of darkness and sorrow which contains the day when our Saviour was crucified and became the one offering for the sins of the world, each congregation had been gathered together to render thanks for the final triumphs vouchsafed our arms, and on that occasion one of the most gifted Episcopal divines selected for his text the words of St. John, " It is expe- dient for us, that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not ;" little thinking that words only coincident with the hallowed day, would so soon have such a literal fulfillment. At noon, on Wednesday of Easter week, was the time appointed for the funeral solemnities of the murdered president at the national capital, and in every parish of the land, simultaneously were held memorial commemo- rative services. A whole people were in tears ; a whole' nation bowed down in mourning ; a whole country draped in woe. The funeral ceremonies wen; very solemn and impressive, and were attended by all holding official posi- tions at the time, in Washington. After the services at the White House, the body was taken to the Capitol, and there exposed to public view during the next day. On the morning of the :> 1st, the funeral cortege moved for his old home, where was to be the final resting place of the late president, taking nearly the same route which he had taken when he came from that home to assume the presidency, four years befoiv. Baltimore, Harrishurg, Philadelphia, New York, Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland, Columbus, Indian- apolis and Chicago, were honored with being the temporary custodians <>f his remains, until at last, on the morning of the third day of May, the funeral procession reached Springfield. Here, for twenty-four hours his old friends and neighbors pressed into the Slate House, where his body was, to gain a last glimpse of that homely but familiar face. At noon of the next day, his followers took up their last march, and conducted the remains to Oak Hidge Cemetery, a beautiful spot about two miles from the city, where with proper and appropriate ceremonies, all that was mortal of Abraham Lincoln was consigned to the earth that gave him. INTRODUCTION. 23 The vice-president, Mr. Johnson, having succeeded immediately on the death of the president to the vacant office, on the 25th of April issued his proclamation recommending Thursday May 25th, " as a day for special hu- miliation and prayer in consequence of the assassination of Abraham Lin- coln, late President of the United States," but that day being Ascension-day he issued a second proclamation postponing the special services until Thurs- day, June 1st, when some of the finest productions of the pulpit were called forth. Each church vied with its neighbor in honoring the martyr presi- dent, and many, very many, sought to perpetuate its action by placing in permanent form the eulogy, sermon or address delivered by its respective minister. It is in no slight degree owing to this laudable ambition that the writer is indebted for the materials for his present work. Mr. Lincoln was certainly a most remarkable man. He was undoubtedly well fitted for the times in which he lived, and the emergency that con- fronted him. He began with a very moderate degree of public confidence and sympathy. A large proportion of the community had at the time of his first election, and for a considerable period afterwards, a painful sense of distrust, as to his qualifications for the position to which he had been called. This distrust was slow to yield. Good things were done, but they were all attributed, on account of this preconceived opinion of his ability, to the ex- cellence of his advisers, while the evils and the mistakes were all laid to him. His physical organization must not be overlooked as one of the sources of his success. The great practical men of the world have been, not necessarily of large, but of strong bodily frames. To the heathen phi- losopher a sound mind in a sound body seemed the greatest good, " mens sana in corpore sana." The discipline of his early life prepared his frame for the laborious duties which were to devolve upon him. It is true that this discipline did not develop his form into a beautiful and graceful one. His warmest friends could not claim that for him, but they could declare that " his large eyes in their softness and beauty expressed nothing but be- nevolence and gentleness," and that a pleasant smile frequently brought out more vividly the earnest cast of his features, which were serious even to sadness. He has been called by one of his best friends " a wiry, awkward giant." He was six feet .four inches high ; his arms were long almost dfe- proportionably so ; his mouth and nose were both exceedingly large; his features were coarse, and his'large hands exhibited the traces of toil. He was not specially attentive to dress, though by no means slovenly. The formal politeness cf fashionable life he had not ; though the gentleness of the unspoiled child of nature he had. He said once that he had never studied the art of paying compliments to women, yet they never received a grander one than he paid when he declared " if all that has been said by orators and poets since the creation of the world in praise of women were applied to American women, it would not do them justice for their con- duct during the war." It has been stated that he had none of the grossness of life. He was not a licentious man. He was not addicted to the use of profane language. He did not gamble. He was temperate and he did not use tobacco in any form. Only those who have known the fearful extent to which these habits prevail among our public men, can appreciate the honor which the absence of them confers upon the late president. His hon- esty passed into a proverb, and his integrity \v;is beyond reproach. It was not called in question, even in the hight of political excitement and vituperation. His qualities of heart were such as commended him to all men. lie was naturally disposed to think well of his race. His prepossessions were generally in favor of a man. He would rather love than hate him; in fact he seemed as if. he could not hate him if he would. The entire absence of vindictiveness, either personal or political, was one of the ripe fruits of his native tenderness. Was lie ever heard to have said a hard thing of his opponents, or known to have uttered a single word showing personal hate or even personal feeling? Between him and 24 INTRODUCTION. his predecessors no parallel can be drawn, for no other president ever held the reins of power through four years of virulent rebellion. It is therefore impossible to say how much better or how much worse others would have done. Not graceful nor refined, not always using the English language correctly, he proved to be a meet and proper man tor the times. He had the greatness of goodness ; not a powerful nor a brilliant intellect, but plain practical good sense ; a sincere purpose to do right ; an eminent catholic spirit that was ready to listen to all sides, and a firm unshaken belief in the expediency of justice. When others with higher and more profound faculties might have failed, he succeeded, guided by his matchless sagacity and prudence, and common sense and native shrewdness. His thoughts were his own ; they were fresh and original, and were clothed with a quaint ness, a directness, a simplicity of style, peculiar to himself. He had a vein of humor which marked him from all other men in his position, and lost him, perhaps, the reputation of official dignity ; and yet this very humor, which in most im- portant emergencies could not refrain from making the witty repartee or telling the pointed anecdote, undoubtedly helped him to endure those fatigues and cares under which he would otherwise have sunken. This story of his life, which the writer has endeavored to tell with truthful simplicity and without any of those adornments usually bestowed so bountifully upon similar works, cannot be more appropriately closed than with the words of Daniel Webster, on the death of President Taylor, which indeed seem almost prophetic of Mr. Lincoln : " He has left on the minds of the country a strong impression : first of his absolute honesty and integrity of character ; next of his sound, practical good sense ; and lastly of the mildness, kindness and friendliness of his temper towards Ixis countrymen." NOTE. The following bibliographical monograph comprises a feature never before in- troduced into a like production, and for its general accuracy the compiler can vouch. It is, the statement appended to each title of the number of copies printed. This has been obtained at vast trouble, and although not entirely complete is so nearly so, as to merit the consideration due to any new step onward in this difficult field of literature It is hoped that the list will be found complete : but that any one noticing inaccuracies or omis- sions will communicate the same to the writer. The titles as printed have all been transcribed from the original works by the compiler himself, with the exception of those marked with an asterisk ; for these and their correctness he is indebted to clivers friends, not the least among whom he has the pleasure of mentioning his publisher and colaboratenr -Mr. Boyd. C. H. H. PHILADELPHIA, April, 1870. jq u tH rr l h< It* N <4I 1 s I'i si 952 -S-S3 r-s o s s is OCCASIONED BY THE DEATH OF ABRAHAM BBOTT. Price 5 cents. The Assassination and Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America, at Washington, on the 14th of April, 1865. Full particulars, with a short account of his life. By Abbott A. Abbott, author of the " Life of Abraham Lincoln." New York : American News Co., 1865. 16mo, pp. 24. ABOTT. Price 15 cents. The Assassination and Death of Abra- ham Lincoln, President of the United States of America, at Wash- ington, on the 14th of April, 1865. By Abott A. Abott, author* of the " Life of Abraham Lincoln." New York : American News Company, 121 Nassau Street. 12mo, pp. 12, Second edition, pp 16. Merely a compilation from the newspapers published immediately after the occurrence. ALBION. Remarks of Hon. R. S. Burrows, and Address by Hon. Noah Davis, on the occasion of the National Obsequies of Pre- sident Lincoln, at Albion, N. Y., April 19, 1865. Rochester, N. Y., C. D. Tracy & Co., Printers, Evening Express Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Edition, 1,000 copies. The cover bears the title, " Address upon the Death of Abraham Lincoln, by Hon. Noah Davis." ALLEN. A Discourse prepared for the National Fast Day, June 1st, 1865, on account of the Murder of our late President, and preached at St. Thomas' Church, Homestead, Baltimore county, Md. By Ethan Allen, Rector. Published at the request of its hearers. Baltimore : Printed by Win. K. Boyle, Successor to John D. Toy, 1865. 12mo, pp 12. Text, Luke xxxiii, 28. Edition, 300 copies. 4 26 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. ANDREW. House No. 227. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. [Address of His Excellency John A. Andrew, Governor, to the Legislature, April 17th, 1865, on the Death of President Lincoln.] [Sine loco, sine anno.~\ 8vo, pp 8. Edition, 800 copies. APPENDIX. Appendix to Diplomatic Correspondence of 1865. The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States of America, and the attempted assassination of William H. Seward, Secretary of State, and Frederick W. Seward, Assistant Secretary, on the Evening of the 14th of April, 1865. Expressions of condolence and sympathy inspired by these events. Washing- ton : Government Printing Office, 1866. 8vo, pp xxxiv, 717. Edition, 21,000 copies, as limited by law. This interesting and complimentary volume was edited and arranged by Mr. John H. Haswell, of the State Department and is furnished with an ample index. For another edition, see Lincoln. ARNAUD.* Abraham Lincoln sanaissance,sa vie samort, avec un recit de la Guerre d'Amerique d'apres les documents les plusauthen- tiques. par Achille Arnaud, Redacteur al'Opinion National. Paris: Charlieu frdres et Huillery, 1865. Folio, pp 96: Illustrations. ASSASSINATION. The Assassination and History of the Con- spiracy, a complete digest of the whole affair from its inception to its culmination, Sketches of the principal Characters, Reports of the Obsequies, etc. Fully illustrated. Cincinnati, J. R. Hawley & Co., 164 Vine Street, 1865. 8vo, pp xi, 163. See Kaufmann for a German translation of the above. ATHEN.ZEUM. Commemorative Proceedings of the Athenreurn Club, on the death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, April, 1865. [New York. Printed by C. S. Westcott & Co., sine anno.] Royal 8vo, pp 36. Portrait. Edition, 650 copies, of which 50 were on large paper. The cover bears the title " In Memoriam, Abraham Lincoln. Athenaeum Club." ATWOOD. In Memoriam. Discourses in commemoration of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, delivered in the South Church, Salem, April 16th, and June 1st, 1865, by the Pas- tor, Rev. E. S. Atwood. Salem, Printed at the office of the Salem, Gazette, 1865. Svo, pp 31. Edition, 500 copies. Bastard Titles. (1). The Nation's Loss. A Discourse delivered on the Sunday Morning after the Assassination of President Lincoln, in the South Church, Salem, April 16, 1865, by Rev. E. S. Atwood, LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 27 Pastor. Text, II Samuel i, 19. (2). The President's Record. A Discourse delivered on the Day of the National Fast, in the South Church, Salem, June 1, 1865. By .Rev. E. S. Atwood, Pastor. Text, Job xvi, 18, 19. BABCOCK. A Discourse on the death of President Lincoln, Preached in the Orthodox Congregational Church in Dedham, by the Rev. Samuel B. Babcock, in accordance with the request of a Committee of Citizens. Wednesday, April 19, 1865. Dedham, Mass. : Printed by John Cox, Jr., 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, II Samuel xix, 2. Edition, 800 copies. BACON. The Life and Administration of Abraham Lincoln. Presenting his Early History, Political Career, Speeches, Messages, Proclamations, Letters r etc., with a General View of his Policy as President of the United States, embracing the leading events of the war. Also the European Press on his death. Compiled by G. W. Bacon. London : Sampson Low, Son, and Marston, Milton House, Ludgate Hill; Bacon & Co., 48, Paternoster Row. 1865. 8vo, pp.183. BADGER. The Humble Conqueror. A Discourse commemora- tive of the Life and Services of Abraham Lincoln, preached to the Cambridgeport Parish, April 23, 1865. By Rev. Henry C. Badger Boston : William V. Spencer, 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Edition, 1,000 copies. BAIN. National Lessons from the Life and Death of President Lincoln. A Sermon preached in The United Presbyterian Church, Canonsburg, Pa , on Fast Day, Thursday, June 1, 1865. By Rev. J. W. Bain, Pastor. Pittsburgh: Printed by W. S. Haven, corner of Wood and Third Streets, 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, II Chroni- cles xxxv, 24, 25. Edition, 500 copies. BAKER. Our Martyr President. [Delivered before the Hamil- ton Library Association of Brooklyn on Monday Evening the 24th of April, 1865.] By John F. Baker. [Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 5. Edition, 150 copies. BALDRIDGE. The Martyr Prince. A Sermon on the Occa- sion of the Assassination of President Lincoln, delivered in the \ Presbyterian Church, Frieudsville, [Wabash Co., Illinois,] Sabbath Morning, April 23d, 1865. By the. Pastor, Rev. S. C. Baldridge. Cincinnati, 0. : Steam Press of Jos. B. Boyd, 25 West Fourth Street, 1865. 8vo, pp. 1. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 500 copies. 28 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. BALTIMORE. Proceedings of the City Council of Baltimore in relation to the Death of Abraham Lincoln late President of the United States, [April 15th, 1865.] [Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 24. Edition, 500 copies. BANCROFT. Memorial Address on the Life and Character of Abraham Lincoln delivered at the request of both Houses of the Congress of America before them in the House of Representatives at Washington, on the 12th of February, 1866. By George Ban- croft. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1866. 8vo, pp 66; and 4to, pp 80. Portrait. Edition, 10,100 copies. Of Mr. Bancroft's oration before Congress one hundred copies were printed in large quarto, to which was added the correspondence between Mr. Ban- croft, Minister Adams and Earl Russell occasioned by Mr. Bancroft's severe strictures upon the conduct of England towards this country during the rebellion. The oration was printed at the Government Printing Office and the correspondence by Mr. Alvord of New York. BANCROFT.* Eloge funebre du President Lincoln, prononce" en seance solennelle du Congres des Etats-Unis d'Ame'rique. Tra- duction de 1'Anglais par Gustave Jottrand. Bruxelles, Verboeckho- ven et C ie , 1866. 8vo, pp 43. Sabin's Dictionary, 3133. BANCROFT. House of Representatives. 39th Congress, 1st Session. Mis. Doc., No. 110. Bancroft and Earl Russell. Letter from George Bancroft, Esq., directed to Hon. E. B. Washburn, Chairman, etc., transmitting Correspondence with Earl Russell rela- tive to a portion of the memorial address on Abraham Lincoln, de- livered before both Houses of Congress, [Washington, May 7th, 1866.] 8vo, pp 6. BARNES. The State of the Country. A Discourse, delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, June 1, 1865, on the day appointed as a day of " Humiliation and Mourning," in view of the Death of the President of the United States. By Albert Barnes. Philadelphia, Henry B. Ashmead, Book and Job Printer, Nos. 1102 and 1104 Sansom Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 74. Text, Isaiah xliv, 24, 25, 28. Edition, 500 copies. BARNES. Discourse on the Death of President Abraham Lin- coln, delivered by Rev. Samuel Barnes, in the Monument Street Methodist Episcopal Church [Baltimore] on the Day appointed by the Municipal Authorities, Wednesday, April 19, 1865. Published by Request of the Leaders Meeting. Baltimore : Printed by John LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 29 D. Toy, 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Text, II Samuel xii, 2. Edition, 500 copies. BARR. A Discourse delivered by the Rev. T. H. Barr, at Canaan Center [Ohio,] April 19, 1865, on the occasion of the Fu- neral Obsequies of our late President, Abraham Lincoln. Published by Special Request. Republican Steam Power Press, Wooster, Ohio, 1865. 12mo, pp 11. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 500 copies. BARRETT. Life of Abraham Lincoln, presenting his early his- tory, political career and speeches in and out of Congress, also, a general view of his policy as President of the United States, with his Messages, Proclamations, Letters, etc., and a History of his eventful Administration, and of the scenes attendant upon his tragic and lamented demise. By Joseph H. Barrett, Commissioner of Pen- sions, Washington, D. C. Cincinnati: Moore, Wilstach & Baldwin, 1865. 8vo, pp x, 842: Illustrations. BEECHER. Presentation Memorial to Working Men. Ora- tion at the Raising of " the Old Flag" at Sumter ; and Sermon on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Text, Deut. xxxiv, 1-5. By the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. [Also a Sketch of Mr. Lincoln by J. H. Estcourt.] Manchester, [England,] Alexander Ireland and Co., 1865. 8vo, pp 57. BENADE. The Death of Abraham Lincoln ; what it represents. A Sermon, preached before the First New Jerusalem Society of Pittsburgh, Penn'a , Thursday, June 1st, 1865, by Rev. W. H. Be- nade. W. G. Johnston & Co., Printers and Stationers, 57 Wood and 105 Third Streets, Pittsburgh. 1865. 8vo, pp 28. Edition, 500 copies. BENEDICT. Our Nation's Sorrow. An Address, delivered in St. Luke's Church, Racine, [Wisconsin,] on the Day of the Fu- neral of President Lincoln, April 19th, 1865, by the Rector, the Rev. A. D. Benedict. 1865. Journal Print, Racine. 8vo, pp 11. Edition, 300 copies. BENJAMIN. Ode on the Death of Abraham Lincoln. By S. G. W. Benjamin. Boston, William V. Spencer, 134 Washington Street, 1865. 12mo, pp 15. Edition, 250 copies. BEVERIDGE. A Discourse on the Assassination of President Lincoln. Delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Lansing- 30 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. burgh, N. Y., on Sabbath Evening, April 16, 1865. By Rev. A. M. Beveridge. Published by Request. Troy, N. Y. : A. W. Scribner, Book and Job Printer, Cannon Place, 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. B1NG-HAM. Trial of the Conspirators for the Assassination of President Lincoln, &c. Argument of John A. Bingham, Special Judge Advocate, in reply to the Arguments of the several counsel for Mary E. Surratt, David E. Herold, Lewis Payne, George A. Atzerodt, Michael O'Laughlin, Samuel A. Mudd, Edward Spangler and Samuel Arnold, charged with conspiracy and the murder of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States. Delivered June 27 and 28, 1865, before the Military Commission, Washing- ton. D. C. Washington : Government Printing Office, 1865. 8vo, pp 122. BINGHAM. The Spoiler spoiled. A Sermon, preached in the Free Presbyterian Churches of Neshauock and Hopewell, [New Jersey,] Thursday, June 1st, 1865. By Rev. J. C. Bingham. Published by the Congregation. Mercer : Printed at the Office of the Whig and Dispatch. [Sine anno.'] 12mo, pp 13. Text, Isaiah xxxiii, 1. I have been informed that the author's name is Bigham ? BINGHAM. National Disappointment. A Discourse occasioned by the Assassination of President Lincoln delivered in Westminster Church, Buffalo, Sunday Evening, May 7th, 1865. By Joel F. Bingham, Pastor of the Congregation. Buffalo : Breed, Butler and Company. 1865. 8vo, pp 36. Text, Isaiah xlii, 16. Edition, 500 copies. BINNS. A Sermon on the Death of President Lincoln preached by the Rev. W. Binns, in the Unitarian Chapel, Birkenheud, [Eng- land,] on Sunday Evening, April 30th, 1865. Reprinted from the " Birkenhead and Cheshire Advertiser." Birkeuhead, J. Oliver, Printer, Market Cross. 1865. 16uio, pp 13. Text, I Maccabees iii, 59-60. BIRRELL. The Ruler of Nations : A Sermon occasioned by the Death of President Lincoln. By the Rev. C. M. Birrell, [in Pem- broke Chapel Sunday Morning, April 30th, 1865.] Liverpool, Henry Greenwood, 32 Castle Street, and may be had through all booksellers. Price two-pence. [Sine anno.~\ 8vo, pp 14. Text, Psalm Ixxxiii, 18. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 31 BLACKBURN. The Crime against the Presidency. A Sermon, delivered Sunday, April 16, 1865, in the Fourth Presbyterian Church, Trenton, N. J., by the Pastor, Rev. William M. Blackburn. Trenton, N. J. Murphy & Bechtel, Printers, opposite the City Hall, 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Text, Jeremiah v, 30 ; Isaiah xxx, 6. Edition, 500 copies. BLAKE. A Sermon on the Services and Death of Abraham Lincoln, preached in Christ Church, Bridgeport, Conn., Easter Sunday, April 16, 1865. Repeated in the North Congregational Church, Bridgeport, April 19, 1865. By Rev. John Falkner Blake. New York, W. H. Kelly & Bro., 1865. 8vo, pp 29. Sabin's Dictionary, 5778. BLISS. " Clarum et Venerabile Nbmen." A Discourse, com- memorative of the Life and Character of AbrahanuLincoln, late President of the United States, delivered April 23, 1865. By Rev. T. E. Bliss, Pastor of the Union Church of Memphis. Memphis, Tenn., W. A. Whitmore, Steam Book and Job Printer, 13 Madison Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Zechariah xii, 12. Edition, 1,000 copies. BOARDMAN. Addresses delivered in the Meeting House of the First Baptist Church of Philadelphia, April 14th, 16th, and 19th, 1865. By the Reverend George Dana Boardman, Pastor. 8vo, pp 64. Edition, 1,000 copies. Bastard titles. 1. An Address in Commemoration of the Re- establishment of the National Flag at Fort Sumter, April 14, 1865. Delivered in the Meeting House of the First Baptist Church of Philadelphia, on the Same Day, by the Reverend George Dana Boardman, Pastor. Philadelphia: Sherman & Co., Printers, 1865. pp 26. 2. ["Man thou pendulum betwixt a smile and a tear."] Death, the Law of Life. A Discourse delivered on the Sunday Morning after the Murder of President Lincoln, in the Meeting-House of the First Baptist Church of Philadelphia, April 16, 1865. By the Reverend George Dana Boardman, Pastor. Philadelphia, Sherman & Co., Printers, 1865. pp 27-45. 3. [In Memoriam.] An Address in commemoration of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, delivered in the Meeting-House of the First Baptist Church of Philadelphia, on the Day of his Funeral at the National Capital, April 19, 1865. By the Reverend George Dana Boardman, Pastor. Philadelphia, Sherman & Co., Printers. 1865. pp 47-C4. 32 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. BOARDMAN. The Death of President Lincoln. A Sermon preached in the Presbyterian Church, Binghamton, Sahbath Morn- ing, April 16, 1865, by George N. Boardman. Published by Request. Binghamton, N. Y., F. M. Chase, Printer and Publisher, Standard Office, 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, II Kings ii, 12. Edition, 500 copies. BOARDMAN. The Peace we need, and how to secure it. A Sermon preached in the Tenth Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, on the Day of National Humiliation, June 1, 1865. By Henry A. Boardman, D. D. Philadelphia, James S. Claxton, successor to William S. and Alfred Martien, No. -606 Chestnut Street, 1865. 8vo, pp32. Text, Ephesians ii, 4. Edition, 1,000 copies. BOG-ARDUS.* Sermon on the Death of our late President preached by the Rev. W. E. Bogardus, April 30, 1865, in the R. P. D. C. at Unionville, Westchester Co., New York. New York, Isaac F. Oliver, 1865. 8vo, pp 13. Sabin's Dictionary, 6125. BOOM. Abraham Lincoln's Character. Sketched by English Travellers, [signed] W. W. B.[oom] Brooklyn, April 30, 1865. [Sine loco, sine anno.~\ 8vo, pp 4. BOOTH. Confession de John Wilkes Booth, assassin du prsi- dent Abraham Lincoln: publiee d'apres le manuscrit original. Traduit de 1'anglais. Paris, E. Dentu, 1865. 18mo, pp 270. Sabin's Dictionary, 6387. BOOTH. Personal Forgiveness and Public Justice. A Sermon preached in the Mercer Street Presbyterian Church, New York, April 23, 1865. By the Pastor, Robert Russell Booth, D. D. Pub- lished by Request of the Young Men's Association of the Church. New York, Anson D. F. Randolph, No. 770 Broadway, 1865. 8vo, pp 23. 'Text, Romans xii, 19; xiii, 1-2. Edition, 1,000 copies. BOSTON. Proceedings of the City Council of Boston, April 17, 1865, on occasion of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, [Seal.] Boston : Published by order of the City Council, 1865. 8vo, pp 35. Edition, 350 copies. Printed only on one side of the page. BOSTON. A Memorial of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, [Seal.] Boston. Printed by order of the City Council, MDCCCLXV. 8vo, pp 153. Edition, 1,350 copies. Of the above, 900 copies were printed in octavo, 150 in royal octavo, 100 in quarto and bound in full turkey morocco, and 200 in quarto with LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 33 the imprint of Ticknor & Fields. The volume has for bastard titles (1) ".Death of the President." (2). " Proceedings of the City Council," [April 17th.] (3). " Meeting in Fanuiel Hall," [April 17th.] (4). " Procession and services," [in Music Hall on the first of June.] '(5). " Mr. Sumner's Eulogy." BOSTON. City Document, No. 64. City of Boston, [Seal.] Proceedings of the City Council on the Reception of an Address from Boston, England, on the Death of President Lincoln. [Sine loco,] 1865. 8vo, pp 6. Edition, 350 copies. BOSTON. Sermons preached in Boston on the Death of Abra- ham Lincoln. Together with the Funeral Services in the East Room of the Executive Mansion at Washington. Boston, J. E. . Tilton & Co., 1865. 8vo, pp 379. Edition, 5,200 copies, of which 200 were on large paper. BOUTWELL. Eulogy on the Death of Abraham -Lincoln, deli- vered before the City Council and Citizens of Lowell, at Huntington Hall, April 19th, 1865. By Hon. George S. Boutwell, Published by Resolution of the City Council [Seal,] Lowell, Stone & Huse, Printers, Courier Office, 21 Central Street, 1865, 8vo, pp 17. Edi- tion, 1,000 copies. BOYD. Abraham Lincoln. Foully assassinated April 14, 1865. A Poem with an Illustration from the London Punch, for May 6, 1865. Republished with an introduction [crest,] by Andrew Boyd, Albany, N. Y., Joel Munsell, Printer, 1868. 4to, pp 13. Editkto, 75 copies. The above poem has been attributed to the Poet Laureate Tennyson, and is here reproduced in a very superior manner, printed on alternate pages. BRADFORD. The Cause of the Rebellion, or what killed Mr. Lincoln. A Discourse delivered in the First Congregational Church in Niagara City, in honor of Abraham Lincoln, April 20th, [19?] 1865. By Rev. B. F. Bradford. Published by Request. Buffalo, A. M. Clapp & Co.'s Steam Printing House, Office of the Morning Express. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 150 copies. BRADLEE. A Sermon for the Church of the Redeemer ; by Rev. C. D. Bradlee of Roxbury. Preached Sunday, April 23d, 1865. [Sine, loco, sine anno.] 8vo, pp 8. Text, Acts xxvi, 8. Edition, 10 copies. " Only ten copies were printed for private distribution." Letter from the Author, April 7, 1866. It has, however, been republished on tinted paper 5 34 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. with the following title ; A Reprint of a Sermon preached two Sundays in succession by Rev. C. D. Bradlee, of Roxbury, Mass., April, 1865, containing remarks upon the Death of Abraham Lincoln. Of which, at the time, only ten copies were printed; and of this special edition, by permission, but four copies are issued, by Andrew Boyd. - Albany, N. ., October, 1869. BRAKEMAN. A Great Man fallen. A Sermon preached in the Methodist Church, Baton Rouge, La., April 23, 1865, on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, by Rev. N. L. Brakeman, Post Chaplain. Preached and Published by Request. Printed at the New Orleans Times Book and Job Office, 1865. 8vo, pp 32. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. BRIGGS. Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln, by George W. Briggs, D. D. June 1, 1865 [Seal.] With the Proceedings of the City Council on the Death of the President. Salem, Mass. 1865. ' 8vo, pp 48. Edition, 1,300 copies, of which some were on large paper. BROCKETT. The Life and Times of Abraham Lincoln, Six- teenth President of the United States, including his Speeches, Mes- sages, Inaugural Proclamations, etc., etc By L. P. Brockett, M.D , author of " Our Great Captains," " History of the Civil War in the United States." " Philanthropic Results of the War," etc., etc. Philadelphia, Bradley & Co. ; Rochester, N. Y., R. H. Curran, Cincinnati, Jones Brothers & Co. ; Chicago, 111., P. H.Randall; 1865. 8vo, pp 750 : Portrait. Edition, 20,000 copies. BROOKS. The Life and Death of Abraham Lincoln. A Ser- mon preached at the Church of the Holy Trinity Philadelphia, Sunday morning, April 23, 1865, by the Rev. Phillips Brooks. Printed at the request of the members of the congregation. Phila- delphia : Henry B. Ashmead, Book and Job Printers, Nos. 1102 and 1104 Sansom Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Text, Psalms Ixxviii, 71, 72, 73. Edition, 1,500 copies. BUENOS AIRES. Tribute to the memory of Abraham Liu- coin by the American Citizens resident in Buenos Aires. Buenos Aires German Printing Office, S. Martin, 111. [/Sine anno.~\ 8vo, pp 25. Contains the proceedings of two meetings held May 29th and 31st, and the Discourse delivered June llth, by Rev. William Goodfellow, from the text, Amos iii, 6, 7. BUFFALO. In Memoriam. Abraham Lincoln assassinated at AV;hington, April 14, 1865: being a brief account of the Proceed- ings of Meetings, actions of Authorities and Societies, Speeches, LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 35 Sermons, Addresses and other expressions of public feeling on recep- tion of the news, and at the Funeral Obsequies of the President, at Buffalo, N. Y. Buffalo : Printing House of Matthews & Warren, Office of the Buffalo Commercial Advertiser. 1865. 8vo, pp 64. Edition, 2,500 copies. Edited by Mr. Henry W. Box of Buffalo. BULKLEY. The Uncrowned Nation. A Discourse commemo- rative of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States : preached, in the First Presbyterian Church of Plattsburgh, N. Y., April 19, 1865, by the Pastor, Rev. Edwin A. Bulkley. Plattsburgh, N. Y.: J. W. Tuttle, Book and Job Printer, 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Lamentations v, 15, 16. Edi- tion, 300 copies. BULLOCK. Abraham Lincoln : the just magistrate, the repre- sentative statesman, the practical philanthropist. Address by Alex. H. Bullock, before the City Council and Citizens of Worcester, June 1, 1865. Worcester : Printed by Charles Hamilton, Palladium Office. [Sine anno.'} 8vo, pp 49. Edition, 2,500 copies. BUNGENER.* Lincoln. Sa vie son ceuvre et sa mort. Par F. Bungener. Lausanne J. Cherluliez Bridel, 1865. 12mo, pp. 160. BURGESS. The Life and Character of Abraham Lincoln, with some Lessons from his Death. A Discourse delivered in the M. E. Church at a Union Meeting of the Baptist, Methodist and Presby- terian Congregations of Panama, [New York] April 30, 1865. By Rev. C. Burgess, Pastor of Presbyterian Church. Published by request. Jamestown, N. Y., -Bishop Brothers, Printers, 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, Isaiah ii, 22 ; Lamentations v, 15. Edition, 300 copies. BURROWS. Palliative and prejudiced judgments condemned. A Discourse delivered in the First Baptist Church, Richmond, Va., June 1, 1865, the Day appointed by the President of the United States for Humiliation and Mourning on account of the Assassination of President Lincoln, together with an extract from a Sermon, preached on Sunday, April 23d, 1865, upon the Assassination of President Lincoln. By J. Lansing Burrows, D.D. Richmond, Va.: Office Commercial Bulletin. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Text, June 1st, Proverbs xvii, 15. April 23d, Job xxiv, 22. Edition, 1,000 copies. 36 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. BUTLER. Funeral Address on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, delivered in the Church of the Covenant, April 19, 1865, by the Rev. C. M. Butler, D.D. Published by Request. Philadelphia : Henry B. Ashmead, Book and Job Printer, Nos. 1102 and 1104 Sansom Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 32. Edition, 750 copies. BUTLER. God's Way of leading the Blind. A Discourse com- memorative of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, delivered by Rev. Henry E. Butler, in the Congregational Church, Keeseville, N. Y., April 23, 1865. Burlington, Vt., Free Press Office, 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Text Isaiah xlii, 16. Edition, 200 copies. BUTLER, The Martyr President. Our grief and our duty. By J. Gr. Butler, Pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Washing- ton, D. C. : McGill & Witherow, Printers and Stereotypers. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Edition, 2,500 copies, of which 500 were on fine paper. Delivered Easter Sunday, April 16th. CANADA. Maple Leaves from Canada, for the Grave of Abra- hamLincoln : being a discourse delivered by Rev. Robert Norton, Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, and address by Rev. Robert F. Burns, Pastor of the Canada Presbyterian Church, at St. Catha- rines, Canada West, April 23rd, 1865. Together with Proceedings of Public Meetings, &c. St. Catharines, Printed at E. S. Leaven- worth's Book and Job Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 39. Text of Mr. Norton, Deuteronomy xxxiii, 48-50. Edition, 300 copies. CAREY. Discourse of Rev. Mr. [Isaac E.] Carey, on the Death of Abraham Lincoln. Preached on the day of his Funeral, April 19th, 1865, in the First Presbyterian Church in Freeport, Illinois. [Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 8. Text, Proverbs x, 7. CAREY. Abraham Lincoln. The Value to the Nation of his exalted- Character. Rev. Mr. Carey's Fast Day Sermon, preached June 1, 1865, in the First Presbyterian Church of Freeport, 111. [Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 8. Text, Hebrews xi, 4; Proverbs xi, 18. CARNAHAN. Oration on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, Six- teenth President of the United States, delivered before the Citizens of Gettysburg, Pa., June 1, 1865. By Rev. D. T. Carnahan, Pastor of the Presbyterian Church. Gettysburg : Aughinbaugh & Wible, Book and Job Printers, Chambersburg Street, near Corner of West, 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Edition, 500 copies. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 37 CARPENTER. Six Months at the White House with Abraham Lincoln. The Story of a Picture. By F. B. Carpenter. New York. Published by Hurd & Houghton, 459 Broorne Street, 1866. 12tno, pp vii, 359. C BAFFIN. The President's Death and its Lessons. A Dis- course on Sunday Morning, April 23d, 1865, before the Second Unitarian Society of Philadelphia, by its pastor, William L. Chaffin. Published by Request. Philadelphia: King & Baird, Printers, No. 607 Sansom Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Text, Psalm cxlv, 17. Edi- tion, 500 copies. CHAMBERLAIN. The Assassination of President Lincoln. A Sermon preached in St. James Church, Birmingham, Ct., April 19th, 1865. By Rev. N. H. Chamberlain. New York. Published by G-. W. Carleton, 413 Broadway, 1865. 12mo, pp 22. Text, Romans xiii, 1-2. Edition, 500 copies. CHASE. An Address on the Character and Example of Presi- dent Lincoln, delivered before the Athenaeum and Everett Societies of Haverford College, by Professor Thomas Chase, on Fifth Day Evening, Seventh Month 6th, 1865. Philadelphia : Sherman & Co., Printers. 1865. 12mo, pp 35. Edition, 500 copies. CHESTER. The Lesson of the Hour. Justice as well as Mercy. A Discourse preached on the Sabbath following the Assas- sination of .the President, in the Capitol Hill Presbyterian Church, Washington, D. C., by the Pastor, Rev. John Chester. Washington Chronicle Print. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, II Samuel i, 19. Edition, 300 copies. CLARK. Memorial Sermon, preached on the National Funeral Day of Abraham Lincoln, Wednesday Noon, April 19, 1865, at Union Chapel, Cincinnati. By Alexander Clark, Pastor. Cincin- nati : Masonic Review Office, 178 Vine Street. [Sine anno.~\ 8vo, pp 16. Portrait. Text, I Samuel xxv, 1. Edition, 1,000 copies. On the last page of cover is a hymn on " National Affliction " by Mr. Clark with music by Hubert P. Main. CLARK. Eulogy on the Life and Character of Abraham Lincoln, before the City Government of Manchester, N. H., June 1st, 1865. By Daniel Clark. Manchester, N. H., Mirror Steam Job Printing Establishment. 1865. 8vo, pp 36. Edition, 1,000 copies. 38 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. CLARK. An Eulogy on the Life and Services of President Lin- coln, pronounced before the Citizens of Poultney [Vt.,] and vicinity, April 19th, 1865. By Henry Clark, Esq. Rutland: Tuttle, Gay & Company. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Edition, 2,000 copies. This address was repeated at Middletown, May 1st, and at Wells June 1st, at the request of the citizens of those towns. CODDINGTON. Eulogy on President Lincoln* by David S. Coddington. Delivered itt the Citadel Square Church, Charleston, S. C., May 6th, 1865, at the request of the officers and soldiers in the Northern District, Department of the South. " He is dead yet Speaketh." New York : Baker & Godwin, Printers, Printing House Square. 1865. 8vo, pp 30. Edition, 500 copies. - COGGESH ALL. Lincoln Memorial. The Journey of Abraham Lincoln, from Springfield to Washington, 1861, as President Elect, and from Washington to Springfield, 1865, as President Martyred. By William T. Coggeshall. Columbus, 0., State Journal Office. 1865. 12mo, pp 327. COIT. "The Sword of the Lord." A Discourse delivered, in St. Paul's Church, Troy, on the National Fast Day, June 1, by the Rev. T. W. Coit, D. D., Rector. Printed, not published. [Sine loco, sine anno.~\ 8vo, pp 14. Text, Jeremiah xlvii, 6. COLFAX. Life and Principles of Abraham Lincoln. By Hon. Schuyler Colfax. Delivered in the Court House Square, at South Bend, [Indiana,] April 24, 1865. Philadelphia: Jas. B. Rodgers, Printer, 52 & 54 North Sixth St. 1865. 8vo, pp 29. Edition, 1,000 copies. COLMAN. Assassination of the President. A Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Delivered at Acton, Mass., April 16th, 1865. Repeated in the Baptist Church, West Acton, June 1st, 1865. By Rev. Geo. W. Colman, Pastor Congregational Church, Acton. Boston : S. Chisni, Franklin Printing House, No. 112 Congress Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, II Samuel iii, 38-39. Edition, 200 copies. CONCEICAO.* As Exquias de Abrahao Lincoln, com um Ks- boxo Biographico do Mesmo offerecido Ao Povo Hrazileiro, pur sen Patricio Jos6 Manoel da Conceicao. The title as above is taken from " The Literary Gazette and Publishers Circular" for November 1, 1865, which says " To the literature connected with President Lincoln we have to add a brochure of forty pages, j ust re- ceived from Rio Janeiro entitled" LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 39 CONSPIRATORS.* Les Proems des Conspirateurs de Washing- ton. New York, H. de Mareil, 1865. 4to. Bartlett's Literature of the Rebellion, 1034. COOKE. A Sermon on the Life and Death of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States. Delivered in Smyrna, Dela- ware, June 1, 1865. By Rev. C. Cooke, D. D. Philadelphia: Printed hy John Richards, No. 122 North Sixth Street. 1865. 12mo, pp 24. Text, Jeremiah xxii, 10. Edition, 300 copies. COOPER. The Death of President Lincoln. A Memorial Dis- course, delivered in the Berian Baptist Church, West Philadelphia, on Sunday, April 16th, 1865, by the Pastor, Rev. James Cooper. Philadelphia : Jas. B. Rodgers, Printer, 52 and 54 North Sixth Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Text, II Samuel i, 19. Edition, 500 copies. CRAIGr. A Sermon on the Fruits of our Bereavement, delivered in the Trinitarian Church, Sunday, April 23d, 1865, by Wheelock Craig. Published by request. New Bedford, Mass. E. Anthony & Sons, Printers, 67 Union Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Text, Genesis 1, 10-12; Exodus xiii, 19; Luke ii, 35. Edition, 500 copies. CRANE. Sermon on the Occasion of the Death of President Lincoln. Preached in the South Baptist Church, Hartford, Conn., Sunday, April 16, 1865. By Rev. C. B. Crane. Hartford : Pres's of Case, Lockwood and Company. 1865. 8vo, pp 29. Text, II Samuel i, 19. Edition, two of 500 copies each. CROCKER. Eulogy upon the Character and Services of Abra- ham Lincoln, late President of the United States. Delivered by invitation of the Authorities of the City of Taunton, on the occasion of the National Fast, June 1, 1865. By Samuel L. Crocker, Jr. Boston : Printed by John Wilson & Son. 1865. 8vo, pp 28. Edition, 550, of which 50 were on large paper. CROSBY. Life of Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States, containing his Early History and Political career, together with the Speeches, Messages, Proclamations and other Official Documents illustrative of his eventful career. By Frank Crosby, Member of the Philadelphia Bar [Motto.] Philadelphia. Published by John E. Potter, 637 Sansoin Street. 1865. 12mo, pp 476 : Portrait. An edition of this work has been published in German translated by Prof. Carl Theo. Eben. 40 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. CROZIER. The Nation's Loss. A Discourse upon the life, services and death of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States. By H. P. Crozier. Delivered at Huntington, L. I., April 19th. 1865. New York. John A. Gray & Green, Printers, 16 and 18 Jacob Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Edition, 500 copies. Second edition, 1866. 8vo, pp 32. Edition, 1,015 copies. The second edition of the above is on fine paper and large type, 15 copies of which were on large paper. CUDWORTH. Eulogy on the Life, Character and Public Ser- vices of the late President Abraham Lincoln, delivered before Coun- cil No. 33, Union League of America, at Sumner Hall, East Boston, May 8, 1865, by Rev. Warren H. Cudworth : with a record of the other proceedings, and a description of the decorations put up for the occasion. Printed by vote of the Council. Boston : Wright & Potter, Printers, 4 Spring Lane. 1865. 8vo, pp 27. Edition, 600 copies. CURRIE.* President Lincoln. An Address delivered in Trinity Church, Covington, Ky., by Rev. C. G. Currie, Rector, April 16th, 1865. [Sine loco, sine anno?~\. 8vo, pp 16. GUSH MAN. Resolutions and Discourse, occasioned by the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Who died at Washington City, April 15, 1865. The discourse delivered in the Congregational Church, of Manchester, Vermont, Wednesday, April 19, 1865, by Rev. R. S. Cushman. Manchester: Printed for the Committee. 1865. 8vo, pp 19. Edition, 500 copies. CUTTER. Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln, delivered at Rocklaud, Maine, April 19, 1865, by request of the citizens. By Rev. Edward F. Cutter. Boston : D. C. Colesworthy, 66 Cornhill. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Edition, 300 copies. DAGGETT. A Sermon on the death of Abraham Lincoln ? April 15th, 1865, preached in the First Congregational Church, Canandaigua, N. Y., Sunday Morning, April 16th, 1865, and again, by request, the following Wednesday Evening, by the Pastor, O. E. Daggett. Canandaigua, N. Y., N. J. Milliken, Printer, Onta- rio County Times Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, I Peter i, 21. Edition, 750 copies. DARLING. Grief and Duty. A Discourse delivered in the Fourth Presbyterian Church, Albany, April 19th, 1865, the Day LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 41 of the Funeral Obsequies of President Lincoln. By Henry Darling, D. D., Pastor of the Church. Albany : S. R. Gray, Publisher. 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Text, Genesis xxxv, 19, 21. Edition, 2,000 copies. This discourse was repeated at the United States Military Hospital Albany, the following Sunday, April 23d. DASCOMB. A Discourse preached by Rev. A. B. Dascomb, to his people at Waitsfield, Vt., in honor of our late Chief Magistrate, on Sunday, April 23, 1865. Published by request. Montpelier : Walton's Steam Printing Establishment. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Text, II Samuel i, 19-20. Edition, 400 copies. DAVIDSON. Address on the death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Delivered before the Lexington Lite- rary Association, New York, April 19, 1865. By John Davidson. New York: John J. Reed, Book and Job Printer, 43 & 45 Center Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Edition, 5,000 copies. DAVIDSONS The Lessons of the Hour. A Discourse upon the Death of President Lincoln, delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Huntington, Long Island, April 19th, 1865, by Rev. Robert Davidson, D. D. Published by Request. Second edition. Huntington : Long Islander Print. [Sine anno."] 8vo, pp 12. Text, II Samuel xix, 2. Edition, 300 copies in all. DAVIS. Jefferson Davis and his complicity in the Assassirra- tion of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, and where the traitor shall be tried for treason. Philadelphia. Sherman & Co., Printers, 1866. 8vo, pp 16. DAY. A Memorial discourse on the character of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, delivered at Hollis, N. H., on the day of the National Fast, June 1, 1865. By P. B. Day, Pastor of the Congregational Church. Published by request. Concord : Printed by McFarland & Jenks. 1865. 8vo r pp 20. Text, II Samuel iii, 32, 38. Edition, 450 copies. DEAN. Eulogy pronounced in the City Hall, Providence, April 19, 1865, on the occasion of the Funeral Solemnities of Abraham Lincoln, before his Excellency, James Y. Smith, Governor of the State of Rhode Island ; Members of the General Assembly ; City Authorities; the Military; Civic Societies, and others. By Rev. Sydney Dean. Providence. H. H. Thomas & Co., Office of the Daily Press. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Edition, 1,000 copies. 6 42 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. DELAHAY. The Life and Character of Abraham Lincoln. A Lecture by Hon. Mark W. Delahay of Leavenworth, Kansas. [Sine loco, sine anno.~\ Folio, pp 5. " I undertook to prepare and deliver a lecture upon the subject you refer to, but finding that it was not my " forte " it never got into the papers. I even went so far as to have it printed in sheets convenient for delivery ; but I found out that it did not come up to my wishes. * * * * I was an old friend of Mr. L., and loved him dearly." Letter from author, Feby. 3d, 1869. DEMING. Eulogy of Abraham Lincoln, by Henry Champion Deming, before the General Assembly of Connecticut at Allyn Hall, Hartford, Thursday, June 8th, 1865. Hartford : A. N. Clark & Co., State* Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 58. Edition, 3,500 copies. DEMUND.* Lamentation on the death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. By Isaac S. Demund. New York. John A. Gray & Green, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. DE NORMANDIE. The Lord Reigneth: A few words on Sun- day Morning, April 16th, 1865, after the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln. By James De Normandie, Minister of the South Parish, Portsmouth, N. H. [Sine loco, sine anno.~\ 12mo, pp 8. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. Proceedings of a Called Meet- ing of Ministers of all Religious Denominations in the District of Columbia, in the First Baptist Church on Thirteenth Street, Mon- day, April 17, in reference to the sore bereavement which the country has suffered in the sudden decease of our beloved Chief Magistrate, Abraham Lincoln, with the remarks of Rev. Dr. Gurley, addressed to the President of the United States, Andrew Johnson, and the reply of the President. Washington, D. C. : McGill & Witherow, Printers and Stereotypers. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Edi- tion, 500 copies. DIX. The Death of President Lincoln. A Sermon preached in Saint Paul's Chapel, New York, oil Wednesday, April 19, 1865. By the Revd. Morgan Dix, ST. D., Rector of Trinity Church. Printed by order of the Vestry. Cambridge: Printed at the Riverside Press. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, II Samuel xxiii, 8 & 4. Edition, 1,000 copies. This is prefaced by the resolution adopted by the Vestry of Trinity Church, April 15th, 1865. DRUMM. Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States: A Sermon preached on the Morning of Easter Sun- LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 43 day, April 16th, 1865, in St. Jame* Church, Bristol, Pa., by the Kev. John H. Drumm, M. D., Rector of the Parish. Wm. Bache, Printer, Bristol. [Sine anno.~\ 8vo, pp 21. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 250 copies. DRUMMOND.* President Lincoln and the American War. A Funeral Address delivered on Sunday, April 30, 1865, by Robert Blackley Drumrnond, B. A. London. Trubner & Co., 1865. 8vo, PP 12. DUANE. A Sermon preached in Saint John's Church, Provi- dence, on Wednesday, April 19, 1865, the day appointed for the Funeral Obsequies of President Lincoln, by the Rev. Richard B. Duane, Assistant Rector. Providence: H. H. Thomas & Co., Office of the Daily Press. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, Romans xiii, 3-4. Edition, 500 copies. DUDLEY. Discourse preached in the South Congregational Church, Middletown, Ct., on the Sabbath Morning after the Assas- sination of President Lincoln. By John L. Dudley, Pastor of the Church. Middletown, D. Barnes. 1865. 8vo, pp 28. Text, Isaiah xxiv, 11. Edition, 800 copies. On the cover " Slavery's last word." DUFFIELD. The Nation's Wail. A Discourse delivered in the First Presbyterian Church of Detroit, on Sabbath, the 16th of April, 1865, the day after receiving the intelligence of the Brutal Murder of President Abraham Lincoln, by a Brutal Assassin. George Duffield, Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Detroit. Detroit: Advertiser and Tribune Print. 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Text, II Chronicles xxxv, 23-25. Edition 600 copies. DUNNING. Concluding Address of Rev. Mr. Dunning on Sabbath Morning, April 16th, 1865, in the New School Presbyte- rian Church, Green and German Streets. [Baltimore, sine anno.] 12mo, pp 3. Text, Psalm Ixxvi, 10. Edition, 100 copies, DUNNING. Address delivered on the occasion of the Funeral Solemnities of the late President of the United States, in the First Constitutional Presbyterian Church, April 19, 1865. By Rev. H. Dunning, Pastor. Baltimore, John W. Woods, Printer, 202 Baltimore Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Edition, 500 copies. DUNNING. The Nameless Crime : A Discourse, delivered in the First Constitutional Presbyterian Church, Sunday Night, April 23, 44 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 1865, by Rev. H. Dunning, Pastor. Printed by request. Balti- more, John W. Woods, Printer, 202 Baltimore Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Edition, 500 copies. DUNNING. The Assassination : its Lessons to Young Men, A Discourse delivered in the First Constitutional Presbyterian Church, May 7, 1865. By Rev. H. Dunning, Pastor. Printed by Request. Baltimore, John W. Woods, Printer, 202 Baltimore Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Text, Proverbs vii, 6-7. Edition, 500 copies. DYER. Discourse occasioned by the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, delivered in the Albany Penitentiary, a Military Prison of the U. S., Wednesday, April 19, 1865, by David Dyer. Albany, Edward Leslie, Printer, 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, Lamentations iv, 24; Psalm Ixxxv, 8. Edition, 600 copies. EDDY. The Martyr President. A Sermon preached before the Baldwin Place Church, April 16, 1865. By Daniel C. Eddy, D.D. Boston : Graves and Young. 1865. 18mo, pp 23. Text, Job ii, 10. Edition, 2,000 copies. EDDY. "The Martyr to Liberty." Three sermons preached in the First Universalist Church, Philadelphia. Sunday, April 16th, Wednesday, April 19th, and Thursday, June 1st, By Richard Eddy, Pastor. Philadelphia: H. G. Leisering & Co., Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 27. Texts, (April 16th), I Samuel xix, 2; (April 19th) I Kings xiv, 18; (June 1st), Psalm cxii, 6. Edition, 350 copies, of which fifty were printed on heavy paper with the imprint of " Horace W. Smith." EDDY. Abraham Lincoln. A Memorial Discourse, by Rev. T. M. Eddy, D. D., delivered at a Union Meeting, held in the Pres- byterian Church, Waukegan, Illinois, Wednesday, April 19, 1865, the day upon which the Funeral Services of the President were con- ducted in Washington, and observed throughout the Loyal States as one of mourning. Published by request. Chicago : Printed at the Methodist Book Depository. Charles Philbrick, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Edition, 1,500 copies. EDGrAR. Three Sermons by Rev. C. H. Edgar, D.D., occasioned by the Assassination of President Lincoln, preached in the Reformed Dutch Church, Easton, Pa., April 16th, 19th and 23d, 1865. Easton, Pa., Printed at the "Free Press" Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, (April 16th), Lamentations v, 15-17; (April 19th), Psaltn xc, 15; (April 23d), Romans xiii, 4. Edition, 200 copies. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 45 EDGAR. Josiah and Lincoln, The Great Reformers. A Tri- bute to the Worth and Work of our Martyr-President, delivered in the Reformed Dutch Church, Easton, Pa., on Fast Day, June 1, 1865, by the Pastor, Rev. Cornelius H. Edgar, D.D. Easton, Pa., Lewis Gordon, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Text, II Chroni- cles xxxv, 24. Edition, 300 copies. EDWARDS. Discourse commemorative of Our Illustrious Mar- tyr, delivered in Congregational Church, South Abington, Fast day, June 1, 1865. By Rev. Henry L. Edwards. Boston, Wright & Potter, Printers, No. 4 Spring Lane. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Acts viii, 2. Edition, 500 copies. EGAR. The Martyr-President. A Sermon preached in the Church of St. Paul, Leavenworth, on the First Sunday after Easter, and again by request on the National Fast-day, June 1st, 1865. By the Rev. John H. Egar, B. D., Rector. Leavenworth, Printed at the Bulletin Job Printing Establishment. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Hebrews xi, 4. Edition, 500 copies. EINHORN. Trauer-Rede, gehalten am 19ten April 1865, als am Tage der Beisetzung des am 15 April entschiummerten Abraham Lincoln Prasident im der Vereinigten Staaten im Tempel der Kene- seth Israel Gemeinte zu. Philadelphia, Von Dr. David Einhorn. Preis 10 cents, zu haben bei Stein und Jones, No. 321 Chestnut Strasse. [Sine anno.] 8vo, pp 8. Text, Genesis xii, 1-4; Isaiah xxi, 11. ELLIS. The Memorial Address on Abraham Lincoln, delivered at the Hall of the Mechanics' Institute, Saint John, N. B., June 1, 1865. At the invitation of the Citizens. By Charles M. Ellis, Esq., of Boston, Mass. Saint John, N. B., J. & A. McMillan, 78 Prince Wm. Street, 1865. 12mo, pp iv, 31. ENGLEHBM.* Les Enfants du Travaie Abraham Lincoln, IT partie. Par Alexandre d' Englehem. Paris Pagnerre, 1865. 12mo. Sera cemplet en 3 livres. Reinwald's Catalogue Annuel for 1865. EVERETT. A Sermon Preached on the Sunday after the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, together with Remarks, made on the day of his funeral, by Charles Carroll Everett, Pastor of the Independent Congregational Church of Bangor. Bangor: Printed by Benj. A. Burr. 1865. 8vo, pp 25. Text, (April 16), II Kings ii, 12. Edition, 600 copies. 46 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. EVERETT. Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, delivered before the Citizens of Bangor, on the Day of the National Fast, June 1st, 1865. By Charles Carroll Everett. Bangor: Printed by Samuel S. Smith. 1865. 8vo, pp 30. Edition, 500 copies. EWING. Argument of Thomas Ewing, Jr., on the Jurisdiction and on the Law and the Evidence in the case of Dr. Samuel A. Mudd, tried before a Military Commission of which Maj. Gen. David Hunter is President, on a charge of Conspiracy to Assassinate the President and other Chief Officers of the Nation. May and June, 1865. Washington: H. Polkinhorn & Son, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 36. Edition, 500 copies. FARQUHAR. The claims of God to recognition in the Assassin- ation of President Lincoln. A Sermon preached on the day of National Humiliation and Prayer, in the Chanceford Presbyterian Church, Lower Chaneeford, York Co., Pa., and in the Prospect Metho- dist Episcopal Church, Fawn, York Co., Pa. By the Rev. John Far- quhar, Pastor of the Former Church. Lancaster, Pa., Pearsol & Geist, Printers, Daily Express Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Text, Psalm xlvi, 10. Edition, 1,000 copies. FERREIRA.* A Morte de Lincoln. Canto Elegiaco por Felix Ferreira. Rio de Janiero. 1865. 18mo, pp 10. FIELD. Address on the Life and Character of Abraham Lin- coln, by the Hon. Richard S. Field. Delivered before the Legisla- ture of New Jersey, February 12, 1866. Trenton, N. J., Printed at the " State Gazette" Office. 1866. 8vo, pp 40. Edition, 1,000 copies. FLEMINGTON. Discourses Memorial of Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States, Delivered in Fleming- ton, N. J., by the Pastors of the different Churches, on Wednesday, April 19th, 1865. Published by the Citizens. Lambertville, N. J., Clark Peirson, Printer, "Beacon" Office 1865. 12mo,pp22, 16, 13. Texts, (1st, by Rev. Thomas Swaim, Pastor of the Baptist Church), II Samuel i, 19; (2d, by Rev. J. L. Janeway, Pastor of the Presbyterian Church), Isaiah xlv, 7 ; (3d, by Rev. J. P. Dailey, Pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church). Edition, 400 copies. LINCOLN BIBLIOGEAPHY. 47 FOWLER. Character and Death of Abraham Lincoln. A Discourse preached at Auburn, N. Y., April 23, 1865. By Rev. Henry Fowler, Pastor of the Central Presbyterian Church. Pub- lished by Request. Auburn, N. Y., Wm. J. Moses, Steam Press Establishment, No. 16 Clark Street; New York, Sheldon & Co. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Genesis xxii, 15. Edition, 500 copies. FOWLER. An Address on the Death of President Lincoln, de- livered at the request of the Citizens of New-Rochelle, Westchester Co., N. Y., by John Fowler, Jr., Thursday Ev'g, April 20, 1865, in the Old Episcopal Church, New Rochelle. New York : John A. Gray & Green, Printers, Cor. Frankfort and Jacob Streets. 1865. 8vo, pp 28. Edition, 930 copies. FRELINGHUYSEN. Obsequies of Abraham Lincoln, in New- ark, N. J., April 19, 1865. Oration by Frederick T. Frelinghuy- sen, Esq. Newark, N. J., Printed at the Daily Advertiser Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Edition, 500 copies. FULLER. A City or House Divided Against Itself. A Dis- course delivered by Rev. Richard Fuller, D.D., on the First Day of June, 1865, being the day of National Fasting and Humiliation. Baltimore : J. F. Weishampel, Jr., Bookseller & Stationer, No. 8, Under the Eutaw House. 1865. 8Vo, pp 20. Text, Matthew xii, 25. GADDIS. Sermon upon the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, by Rev. M. P. Gaddis, Pastor Sixth street M. P. Church. Deli- vered in Pike's Opera House, April '16, 1865. Washington the Father, Lincoln the Savior of our Country. Cincinnati : Times Steam Book and Job Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, II Samuel Hi, 38. Edition, 3,000 copies. GARFIELD. Remarks of Hon. Jas. A. Garfield, of Ohio, in the House of Representatives, April 14, 1866, in Memory of Abra- ham Lincoln. Washington, D. C.* Hudson Taylor, Printer. 1866. 8vo, pp 4. GARRISON. The Teachings of the Crisis. Address delivered in St. Paul's Church, Camden, N. J., on the occasion of the Fune- ral of Abraham Lincoln, April 19, 1865. By Rev. J. F. Garrison, M.D Second Edition. Camden, N. J., Printed by S. Chew, at the Office of the "West Jersey Press." 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, 48 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Hebrews xi, 6. Edition, 1,100 copies : 500 of the first, and GOO of the 2d. The first edition had on the title " Published hy Request," t where the above has " Second Edition." GASTINEAUX.* Benjamin Gastineaux. Histcire de la sou- scription populaire h, la me'daille Lincoln. Sa Medaille dela liberte* avec des Lettres de Feocen, Edgar Quinet, Victor Hugo, Schaelehor, Louis Blanc et la vie d'Abraham Lincoln. Prix 50 centimes. Paris, Lacroix, Verbcechoven & Co. (180). Printed at Nantes par Ed. Mangin. 12mo, pp 34. GEAR. The Nation's Grief for its fallen Chief. A Sermon preached in the First Congregational Chapel, Philadelphia, Sabbath Evening, April 23d, 1865, by the Pastor, Rev. D. L. Gear. Pub- lished by request. Philadelphia, Ringwalt & Brown, Steam-Power Printers, 111 and 113 S. Fourth street. 1865. 8vo, pp 8. Text, Zechariah xi, 2. [GIBBONS.] The Truth Plainly Spoken. [Remarks of the Hon. Charles Gibbons before the Union League, April 17, 1865.] \_Sineloco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 4. Edition, 1,000 copies. GILLETTE. God Seen Above all National Calamities. A Ser- mon on the Death of President Lincoln, April 23, 1865. By A. D. Gillette, D.D., Pastor of the First Baptist Church, Washington, D. C. Washington, D. C., McGill & Witherow, Printers and Stereo- typers. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, Isaiah vi, 1. Edition, 2,500 copies. GLOVER. The Character of Abraham Lincoln. A Discourse delivered April 23d, 1865, at Strawn's Hall, Jacksonville, 111., by Rev. L. M. Glover, D.D.. Pastor 1st Presbyterian Church. Jack- sonville : Printed at the Journal Book and Job Office. 1865. 8vo,"pp 21. Text, II Samuel i, 19; iii, 38. Edition, 500 copies. GOODSPEED. Funeral Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, preached Sunday, April 23d, 1865, in the Second Baptist Church, Chicago. By Rev. E. J. Goodspeed, Pastor. [Motto.] Chicago: Printed by the Trustees. 1865. 8vo, pp 37. View of the Church. Edition, 500 copies. The same pamphlet contains Mr. Qoodspeed's sermon on June 1st, from the text, Numbers xxxii, 23. GORDON. The Sin of Reviling and its Work. A Funeral Ser- mon, occasioned by the Assassination of President Lincoln, April LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 49 14th, 1865. By W. R. Gordon, D.D., Pastor of the Ref. Prot. Dutch Church of Schraalenberg, N. J. Preached on May 7, 1865. Pub- lished by Request of Consistory. New York pJohn A. Gray & Green, Printers, 16 & 18 Jacob street. 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Text, Acts xxiii, 5. Edition, 800 copies. GRATER. A Discourse, respectfully dedicated to a grateful people. In Memory of the Worth of Our Lamented Chief Magis- trate, Abraham Lincoln, delivered April 21st, 1865, by Rev. Abra- ham Grater. Copied by several German newspapers and translated from the German. Skippackville, Pa., Printed by J. M. Schuene- mann. 1865. For Sale: by I. Kohler, No. 202 North 4th St., Philadephia. Neutralist Office, Skippackville, Montg. County, Pa. Price: Single copy 5 cts. ; 30 copies $1. Sent to any address free of postage. 8vo, pp 8. Text, John xi, 49-50. Edition, " 8,000 copies were printed, 6 in English and 2 thousand in German." I rather think this was originally written in German and the large edi- tion includes the newspaper. GURLEY. The Voice of the Rod. A Sermon preached on Thursday, June 1, 1865, in the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, Washington, D. C., by the Rev. P. D. Gurley, D.D., Pastor of the Church. Washington, D. C., William Ballantyne, Bookseller. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Micah vi, 9. Edition, 1,000 copies. GUTHRIE. Oration on the Death of Abraham Lincoln. Ad- dressed to the American People. By Dr. W. E. Guthrie. Phila- delphia : John Pennington & Sons, 127 South Seventh street. 1865. 18mo, pp 9. Delivered before the American Literary Union, April 25, 1865. HALL. A Mournful Easter. A Discourse delivered in the Church of the Epiphany, Washington, D. C., on Easter Day, April 19, 1865, by the Rector, Rev. Charles H. Hall, D.D. Being the second day after the Assassination of the President of the United States, and a similar attempt upon the Secretary of State on the night of Good Friday. Washington: Gideon & Pearson, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, St. John xi, 25. Edition, 500 copies. The date of the month " 19th," is a misprint for " 16th." HALL. President Lincoln's death; its Voice to the People. A Discourse by Gordon Hall, D.D., Pastor of the Edwards Church. Preached in the First Church, Northampton, April 19, 1865. 7 50 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Northampton, Mass., Trumbull & Gere, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Psalms xlvi, 10; xxxvi, 6; Job xxvi, 14. Edition, 1,200 copies. HALL. A Sermon on the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Preached at Surrey Chapel, London, Sunday, May 14, 1865. By Rev. Newman Hall. Boston : Bartlett & Halliday. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Psalm xix, 9. Edition, 500 copies. HAMILL. President Lincoln, a faithful son. An Address de- livered before the High School, at Lawrenceville, N. J., by Samuel M. Hamill, D.D., June 1st, 1865. Trenton : Murphy & Bechtel, Printers, opposite the City Hall. 1865. 8vo, pp 11. Edition, 500 copies. HAMMOND. A Sermon on the Life and Character of Abra- ham Lincoln, Preached at Monson, at the United Service of the Congregational and Methodist Churches, on the occasion of the Na- tional Fast, June 1, 1865. By Charles Hammond, Principal of Monson Academy. Springfield : Samuel Bowles and Company, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 21. Text, II Samuel iii, 34. Edition, 300 copies. HAMMOND. Abraham Lincoln; A Eulogy delivered at Ana- mosa, Iowa, on the day of the State Fast, April 27, 1865. By William G. Hammond. Published by Request. Davenport : Pub- lishing House of Luse & Griggs. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Edition 400 copies. HANAFORD. Our Martyred President. By Mrs. P. A. Hanaford. Author of" The Young Captain," etc. Abraham Lin- coln, Born February 12, 1809 ; Died April 15, 1865. [Motto.] Boston : B. B. Russell and Company, 55 Cornhill. 1865. Small 4to, pp 24. Portrait. Edition, 2,000 copies. HANAFORD.* Abraham Lincoln, his Life and Public Ser- vices. By Mrs. P. A. Hanaford, author of " Our Martyred President," "The Young Captain," &c. Boston. 1865. 12mo. Portrait and illustrations. Edition, 20,000. Of the above edition, 5,000 were iii German, for which see Wiirzburger. HARBAUGH. Treason and Law. A Discourse, delivered at Clearspring, Maryland, June 1, 1865, the Day of National Mourn- ing. By H. Harbaugh, D.D., Professor of Theology at Mercers- LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 51 burg, Pa. Published by request of the audience. Philadelphia : Jas. B. Rodgers, Pr., 52 & 54 North Sixth street. 1865. 12mo, pp 31. Text, Titus iii, 1. Edition, 500 copies. HARDINGE. The Great Funeral Oration on Abraham Lin- coln, by Miss Emma Hardinge. Delivered Sunday, April 16, 1865, at Cooper Institute, New York, before upwards of Three Thousand Persons. New York American News Company, Nassau street. Twenty-five Cents. 8vo, pp 28. Edition, 2,000 copies. HATHAWAY. A Discourse occasioned by the Death of Abra- ham Lincoln : Preached at Coxsackie, on Wednesday, April 19, 1865, by Warren Hathaway. Albany : J. Munsell, 78 State Street- 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Text, II Samuel i, 19; xix, 2. Edition, 1,000 copies. HAVEN. Memorial Proceedings in honor of the lamented President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln, held in Ann Arbor, Michigan; [April 19th, 1865.] With the Address of Rev. E. 0. Haven, D.D., LL.D., President of the University of Michigan. Ann Arbor: Printed at the (- Peninsular Courier" Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 11. Edition, 500 copies. HAVEN. The Uniter and Liberator of America. A Memorial discourse on the Character and Career of Abraham Lincoln : deliv- ered in the North Russell Street M. E. Church, Boston, Sunday, April 23, 1865, by Gilbert Haven [Motto.] Boston : James P. Magee, No. 5 Cornhill. 1865. 8vo, pp 32. Text, Psalm xviii, 35; Matthew xxvii, 42; Psalm Ixxii, 17. Edition, 500 copies. HAWLEY. Truth and Righteousness Triumphant. A Dis- course commemorative of the Death of President Lincoln: preached in the Washington Avenue M. E. Church, April 20, 1865, by B. Hawley, D.D. Albany, N. Y. : J. Munsell, 78 State Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, Psalm ii, 1-4. Edition, 500 copies. HAYDEN. Our Country's Martyr. A Tribute to Abraham Lincoln, our beloved and lamented President. By Mrs. Caroline A. Hayden. Boston : Press of Dakin and Metcalf, No. 37 Cornhill. 1865. 12rno, pp 23. Edition, 2,000 copies. The cover lias " Boston, W. L. Hayden, 33 Court street," and the fly-leaf " A Poem." This was written, published, and five hundred copies sold, in five days. HAYDEN. A Brief Abstract of remarks by Rev. Wm. B. Hay- den, at the New Jerusalem Church, on the Funeral of the President, 52 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. April 19, 1865. Cincinnati : Mallory, Power & Co., Printers, 135 Main street. 1865. 8vo, pp 10. Edition, 250 copies. HEPWORTH. Two Sermons Preached in the Church of the Unity, April 23, [16th ?] 1865. I. On the Death of Abraham Lincoln. II. Duties suggested by the National Grief. By George H. Hepworth, Pastor of the Society. Boston: Printed for the So- ciety, by John Wilson and Son. 1865. 12mo, pp 27. Texts (1), Matthew ix, 15: (2). Acts xiv, 22. Edition, 2,000 copies. HIBBARD. In Memory of Abraham Lincoln. A Discourse delivered in the First Congregational Unitarian Church in Detroit, Mich., Sunday, April 17th, 1865, by A. G. Hibbard, Pastor of the Church. Published by request. Detroit: 0. S. Gulley's Steam Book and Job Printing Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Text, II Samuel i, 19. Edition, author says 2,000 copies; printer says, 500 copies ? The date of the month is a misprint for 16th. HINGELEY. The Character and Greatness of Abraham Lin- coln. A Discourse, delivered April 23, 1865. By Rev. E. Hinge- ley, Pastor of the M. E. Church, Monongahela City, Pa. [Sine loco, sine anno.] 8vo, pp 15. HITCHCOCK. God acknowledged, in the Nation's bereave- ment. A Sermon delivered in Hudson, Ohio, on the day of the Obsequies of Abraham Lincoln, April 19th, 1865, by Henry L. Hitchcock. Cleveland : Fairbanks, Benedict & Co., Printers, Her- ald Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Text, Job i, 21. Edition, 1,000 copies. HOCHHEIMER. Predigt, gehalten am 19. April 1865, als am Tage des Leichenbegangnisses des Prasidenten der Ver. Staaten, Abraham Lincoln's, von H. Hochheimer, Rabbiner der Oheb- Israel-Gemeinde in Baltimore. Auf Verlangen deui Druch iiberge- ben. Gedrucht bei Th. Kroh. 12ino, pp 8. Text, Leviticus x, 6. Edition, 350 copies. HOCHHEIMER. Fest und Fasttag. Predigt am 1. Juni 1865, (dem zweiten Tage Schebuoth), als an dem, von dem Prilsi- denten der Vereinigten Staaten angeordneten Busz-und Bettage, zum Gedachtnisse des ermordeten Prasidenten Abraham Lincoln, gehalten von H. Hochheimer, Rabbiner der Oheb-Israel-Gemeinde in Baltimore. Zuui Besten des Lincoln-Monuments. Gedrucht bei LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 53 Th. Kroh. 12mo, pp 9. Text, Deuteronomy xvi, 9. Edition, 350 copies. HOFFMAN.* The Martyr President. A Sermon preached in Grace Church, Brooklyn Heights, N. Y., by the Rev. Eugene Augs. Hoffman, D.D., Rector, on Thursday, 20 April, A. D. 1865, being the Day of Mourning appointed by the Governor of the State after the death of President Lincoln. Printed by request. New York, C. A. Alvord, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, Psalm xix, 9. Edition, 500 copies. HOLLAND. Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, pronounced at the City Hall, Springfield, Mass., April 19, 1865. By J. G. Holland. Springfield ; Published by L. J. Powers. 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Edition, 5,000 copies. HOLLAND. The Life of Abraham Lincoln. By J. G. Hol- land, Member of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Springfield, Mass. Gurdon Bill. 1866. 8vo, pp 544. Portraits. Edition, 80,000 copies up to Jan'y, 1867. HOPKINS. A Discourse, on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, Delivered in the 1st Presbyterian Church in Bloomington, Indiana, April 19th, 1865, By Rev. T. M. Hopkins. [Sine loco, sine anno.] 8vo, pp 7. Text, Joshua i, 2. Edition, 350 copies. HORNBLOWER. Sermon occasioned by the Assassination of President Lincoln. Delivered April 16th, 1865. In First Pres- byterian Church, of Paterson, N. J., by W. H. Hornblower, Pas- tor. Paterson, N. J., Printed by Chiswell & Wurts, " Press " Office, cor. Broadway & Main street. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, II Samuel i, 19. Edition, 1,000 copies. HOWLETT. The Dealings of God with our Nation. A Dis- course delivered in Washington, D. C., on the Day of Humiliation and Prayer, June 1, 1865, by Rev. T. R. Hewlett, Pastor of the Calvary Baptist Church. Washington, D. C., Gibson Brothers, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 7. Text, Psalm cxlvii, 20. HYLTON. The Pnesidicide : A Poem, by J. Dunbar Hylton, M.D., Author of " Lays of Ancient Times," " The Bride of Gettys- burg," &c. &c. Philadelphia. MDCCCLXVIII. 16mo, pp 194. Edition, 500 copies. The author lays his scene in the barn in which Booth, the assassin of President Lincoln, hid himself before he was killed. As a literary curiosity this production may pass, but as apoem, " the least said about it the better." 54 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. ILLINOIS. Death of Lincoln. Proceedings in the Supreme Court of Illinois. Presentation of the Bar Resolutions in regard to Mr. Lincoln's decease. Chicago: J. W. Middleton & Co., Pub- lishers, 196 Lake Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 17. IRVIN.* A Sermon preached on Sabbath Morning, April 16, 1865, the day after the Death of President Lincoln. By the Rev. Wm. Irvin, Pastor of the Presbyterian Church, Rondout, N. Y. New York : John A. Gray & Green, Printers, 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, II Samuel, iii, 34, 38. Edition, 250 copies. IVES. Victory turned into Mourning. A Discourse, on occasion of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, preached at Castine, [Maine, April 16th, 1865,] by Alfred E. Ives. Published by Request. Bangor : Wheeler & Lynde, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Text, II Samuel, xix, 2. Edition, 250 copies. JEFFERY. The Mission of Abraham Lincoln. A Sermon preached before the Fourth Baptist Church, Philadelphia, Thurs- day Morning, June 1st, 1865. By R. Jeffery, D.D. Philadelphia: Bryson & Son, Printers and Stationers, No. 8 North Sixth Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 28. Text, Esther iv, 14. Edition, 1,000 copies. JOHNSON. a God's ways unsearchable." A Discourse, on the Death of President Lincoln, preached before the Third Presbyterian Congregation, in Mozart Hall, Pittsburgh, Pa., Sunday, April 23d, 1865. By Rev. Herrick Johnson, Pastor. Published by Request. W. G. Johnston & Co., Printers, Stationers and Blank Book Makers, 57 Wood Street, Pittsburgh. [Sine anno.'] 8vo, pp. 11. Text, Romans, xi, 3336. JOHNSON. An Argument to establish the Illegality of Mili- tary Commissions in the United States, And Especially of the One Organized for the Trial of the Parties Charged with Conspiring to Assassinate the Late President, and others. Presented to that Com- mission on Monday, the 19th of June, 1865, and prepared by Re- verdy Johnson, one of the Counsel of Mrs. Surratt. Baltimore : Printed by John Murphy & Co., Publishers, Booksellers, Printers and Stationers, 182 Baltimore Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 31. JOHNSON. A Discourse preached on the day of the National Funeral of President Lincoln, Wednesday, April 19, 1865. By Samuel Johnson, Minister of the Free Church at Lynn, [Mass.] LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 55 (Printed not Published). [Sine loco, sine anno."] 8vo, pp 10. Edition, 15 copies. Printed on one side of the page only. " Only a very few copies were printed in a private way at my own ex- pense, a printer offering to get out 15 copies of my sermon for $3." Letter from author, October 31, 1865. JOHNSON. Our Martyred President. A Discourse on the Death of President Lincoln, preached in Still water, N. Y., April 16th, 1865, by Rev. William M. Johnson. Published by Request. Troy N. Y. Daily and Weekly Times Printing House, 211 River Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Text, II Samuel, i, 19. Edition, 200 copies. JOHNSTON. Sermon delivered on Thursday, June 1st, 1865, the day of Special Humiliation and Prayer in consequence of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln ; at the Second English Evangeli- cal Lutheran Church, Harrisburg, Pa. By Rev. E. -S. Johnston. Theo. F. Scheifer, Printer. 1865. 8vo,ppll. Text, Daniel iv, 25. JORDAN. Death of Abraham Lincoln. A Discourse delivered on the Day of the National Fast, June 1, 1865, at the Congrega- tional Church, Cumberland Centre, Me. By Rev. E. S. Jordan. Published by Request of the Congregation. Portland : Printed by David Tucker. 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Text Psalm cxii, 6. Edition, 275 copies. KAUFMANN. Die Ermordung Abraham Lincoln's ; und die Geschichte der Grossen Verschworung. Eine vollstandige Besch- reibung dieses Ereignisses von seinem Aufange bis zum Ende, Skizzen der hauptsachlichsten Theilnehmer, Berichte iiber das Leichenbegangniss u. s. w. Rach dem Englischen von J. L. Kauf- mann. Vollstandig illustrirt. Cincinnati, Ohio. Herausgegeben von J. R. Hawley & Co., 164 Vine Strasse. 1865. 8vo, pp 184. This translation contains an account of the trial not in the English pamphlet, titled Assassination. KEELINGr. The Death of Moses. A Sermon preached in Trinity (P. E.), Church, on Sunday Evening, April 23, 1865, By Rev. 'R. J. Keeling, Rector, as a Tribute of Respect to the Memory of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, and Assassinated in the City of Washington, on Friday night, April 14, 1865. Washington, D. C., W. H. & 0. H. Morrison. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Deuteronomy xxxiv, 7-8. Edition, 500 copies. " Perhaps it will enhance the interest of the sermon to know that it was delivered at night, to an intensely crowded audience tumultuous with excite- 56 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. ment, and under circumstances connected with my parochial position and southern birth, that called for all the prudence and preparation possible to bring to the occasion." Letter from the author, October 27, 1865. KEITH. An Address delivered at the Funeral Solemnities of the late President Lincoln at the Church of our Saviour, Jenkintown, Wednesday Noon, April 19th, 1865. By Rev 0. B. Keith, Rec- tor. Philadelphia : King & Baird, Printers, 607 Sansom Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 8. Edition, 250 copies. KIP. Address delivered at Hombourg-les-Bains, Germany, on the First Day of June, 1865, being the day appointed by the Pre- sident of the United States, as a day of Humiliation and Prayer ; by the Right Rev. Wm. Ingraham Kip, D.D., Bishop of California. Frankfort-on the-Main. 1865. 8vo, pp 11. KRAUTH. The Two Pageants. A Discourse delivered in the First Eng. Evan. Lutheran Church, Pittsburgh, Pa. Thursday, June 1st, 1865. By Charles P. Krauth, D.D. [Motto.] Pitts- burgh : Printed by W. S. Haven, corner of Wood and Third Streets. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. KREBS. Rede zum Andenten an Abraham Lincoln, President der Vereinigten Staaten von Nord-Amerika. Ermordet am Char- freitage, April 14, 1865, A. D. Evang. Luc. xxiv., Vers 21 und 5. Gehalten am 19. April 1865, dem Tage des Leichenzuges, 12 Uhr Mittags, in der Kirche zum Heiligen Gieste in St. Louis, von Ernst Hugo Krebs, Pastor und Doktor der Philosophic. [Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp J- KREBS. A Sermon in Memory of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America. Assassinated on Good Friday, April 14, 1865 A. D. Luke xxiv, 21st, & 5th. Delivered April 19, 1865, at noon in the Church of the Holy Ghost in St. Louis, Mo. From the German of the Rev. Dr. Hugo Krebs. Translated by a Lady Hearer. [Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 8. LAMB. Sermon on the Death of President Lincoln Preached in the Congregational Church of Rootstown, [Ohio.] By Rev. E. E. Lamb, Sabbath Morning, April 23, 1865. [Published by Re- quest.] [Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 14. Text, I Samuel i, 25. Edition, 200 copies. LANGE.* Abraham Lincoln der Weiderhersteller der Nord Amerikanischen Union und der grosze Kampf der Nord und Siidstaa- ten wahreud der Yahre 1861-1865. Herausgegeben von Dr. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 57 Max Lange rait 70 in den Text, gedruchtea Illustrationen, dem Bildnisse Abraham Lincoln's, in Stahlstich, von A. Weger sowie ocht Portraits herroorogender Atnerikanischer Staatsmanner und Feld- herren nebst einer Orientirungs. Karte tiber den Kriegsschauplatz der Vereinigten Staaten. Leipsig Verlag von Otto Spaner. 1866. 8vo, pp xx, 260. Map. LAURIE. Three Discourses, preached in the South Evangelical Church, West Roxbury, Mass., April 13th, 19th and 23d, 1865, By Thomas Laurie. Published by Request. Dedharn, Mass., Printed by John Cox, Jr. 1865. 8vo, pp 40. Texts, (April 19th,) I Samuel iii, 18; (April 23d.) Genesis v, 5. Edition, 600 copies. LESPERUT.* Abraham Lincoln. Par A. Lesperut. Paris, Dentu. 1865. 8vo, avec portr. photogr. Reinwald's Catalogue Annuelfor 1865. LINCOLN. Order of Services at Indiana-Place Chapel, on Easter Sunday, April 16, 1865; being the Sunday after the Assassin- ation of Abraham Lincoln. Boston : Walker, Fuller and Com- pany, 245 Washington street. 1865. 12mo, pp 24. Edition, 1,000 copies. Contains the sermon by Rev. James Freeman Clarke, from Text, II Timo- thy i, 16, LINCOLN. [The Pulpit and Rostrum. Nos. 34 & 35. Extra Number with Portrait Hon. George Bancroft's Oration, pronounced* in New York, April 25, 1865, at the Obsequies of Abraham Lincoln. The Funeral Ode. by William Cullen Bryant. President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, January 1, 1863. His last Inaugural Address, March 4, 1865. A correct Portrait of the late President Lincoln.] New York: Schermerhorn, Bancroft & Co., 130 Grand street: Philadelphia, 512 Arch Street. American News Company, New York. June. 1865. 12rno, pp 23. LINCOLN. In Memoriam. Trent, Filmer & Co., 37 Park Row, New York. [Sine anno ] Small 4to, pp 11. Printed on one side only. LINCOLN.* Gems from Abraham Lincoln. Born February llth, 1809, in Hardin County, Ky. Died April 15th, 1865, at Washington, D. C. Published by Trent, Filmer & Co., and Derby & Miller, New York. 4to, pp 16. Printed on one side only. 5 8 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAP11 Y. LINCOLN. President Lincoln. From the Princeton Review, July, 1865. [Sine loco, sine anno.~] 8vo, pp 435-458. By Rev. Charles Hodge, D.D. LINCOLN.* Constitution of the Educational Monument Associa- tion, to the Memory of Abraham Lincoln. Organized May 16, 1865. Washington, I). C., McGill & Witherow, Printers. 1865. 12mo, pp 9. LINCOLN.* Celebration by the Colored People's Educational Monument Association in Memory of Abraham Lincoln on the Fourth of July, 1865, in the Presidential Grounds, Washington, D. C. Printed by order of the Board of Directors, L. A. Bell, Recording Secretary. Washington, D. C. McGill & Witherow, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 33. LINCOLN. Poetical Tributes to the Memory of Abraham Lin- coln. Philadelphia, J. B. Lippincott & Co. 1865. 8vo, pp xii, 306. Portrait. Edition, 1,500 copies. Collected and arranged by J. N. Plotts of New York. LINCOLN.* The President's Word^ : a Selection of passages from the Speeches, Addresses and Letters of Abraham Lincoln, [Motto.] Boston: Walker Fuller & Co. 1865. 18mo, pp viii, 186. Edition, 4,000 copies. Edited by Rev. Edward Everett Hale. LINCOLN. Lincolniana. In Memoriam. Boston : William V. Spencer. 1865. 4to, pp vi, 346. Edition, 250 copies. This volume contains a collection of thirty-nine sermons, eulogies, ad- dresses, letters, etc., and a list of some three hundred publications on the death of Mr. Lincoln. LINCOLN. The Martyr's Monument. Being the Patriotism and Political Wisdom of Abraham Lincoln, as exhibited in his Speeches, Messages, Orders and Proclamations from the Presidential Canvass of 1860, until his Assassination, April 14, 1865. [Motto.] New York : American News Company. [Sine anno.'] 12mo, pp iv, 297. Edition, 1,200 copies. Edited by Dr. Francis Leiber. LINCOLN.* Abraham Lincoln. A Study. Entered at Sta- tioners Hall. Right of Translation reserved. Liverpool : McKown and Finglass. 1865. 12mo, pp 32. Signed " R. Y., 8th Sept. 1865." LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 59 LINCOLN.* A Poetical Description of Lincoln's Assassination by Jones. Greater than Washington, Jackson or Milton ! ! ! Reigns the immortal President Lincoln ! ! ! Valparaiso, La Patria, Print- ing office. 1865. 8vo, pp 58. Dedicated to Lady Lincoln. LINCOLN. A Sketch of the Life and Times of Abraham Lin- coln. (To accompany a portrait). Philadelphia, Published by Bradley & Co. [Sine anno.~] [1865.] 12mo, pp 60. View of Lincoln's Home. Written by Miss Bassett of New Britain, Ct., and published to accom- pany a large steel portrait. LINCOLN.* Abramo Lincoln. Com'ei visse, qual'opera compie qual fu la sua rnorte. Firenze Tipografia Claudiana via Maffia 33. 1866. 12mo, pp 88. LINCOLN.* Von der Holzart zum Prasidenten stuhl oder Leb- insgeschichte der Volksmannes, Abraham Lincoln, Prasidenten der Veriuigten Staaten von un Nordamerika. Mit den Portraits von Lincoln und Seward. Preis 2J Sgr. Berlin : C. F. Conrad 1865. 12mo, pp 32. 9 LINCOLN. La Mort de Lincoln Poeme Dramatique. [Motto.] Seconde edition augmentee de notes sur la vie du carbouaro Amand Bazard. Prix: 1 Franc. Paris. Librairie des Auteurs, 10, Rue de la Bourse Janvier 1868, La traduction la reproduction, meine par* tielles, de ce poeme sont absolument interdites. 8vo, pp 32. LINCOLN. Complete and Unabridged Edition. Containing the whole of the Suppressed Evidence. The Trial of the Alleged Assas- sins and Conspirators at Washington City, D. C., May and June, 1865. for the Murder of President Abraham Lincoln. Full of illustrative engravings. Being a full and verbatim Report of the Testimony of all the Witnesses examined in the whole Trial, with the Argument of Reverdy Johnson on 4he Jurisdiction of the Commis- sion, and all the Arguments of Counsel on both sides, with the clos- ing Argument of Hon. John A. Bingham, Special Judge Advocate, as well as the Verdict of the Military Commission; with a Sketch of the Life of all the Conspirators, and Portraits and Illustrative Engravings of the principal persons and scenes relating to the foul murder and the Trial. It also contains items of fact and interest, not to be found in any other wopk of the kind published. The whole being complete and unabridged in this volume, being pre- 60 LINCOLN B1BLIOGRAPJ1 J . pared on the spot by the Special Correspondents and Reporters of the Philadelphia Daily Inquirer, expressly for this edition. Phila- delphia : T. B. Peterson & Brothers, 306 Chestnut Street. [Sine anno.] 8vo, pp 203. LINCOLN. Notes on the Lincoln Families of Massachusetts, with some account of the Family of Abraham Lincoln, late Presi- dent of the U. States. . By Solomon Lincoln, of Hingham. [Re- printed from the Historical and Genealogical Register for Octo- ber, 1865.] Boston : David Clapp & Son, Printers, 334 Washington St. 1865. 8ro, pp 10. Edition, 50 copies. LORING. The Present Crisis. A Speech delivered by Dr. Geo. B. Loring, at Lyceum Hall, Salem, Wednesday Evening, April 26, 1865, on the Assassination of President Lincoln. Dr. Loring's letter to the Salem Gazette on Reconstruction. Published by Request. South Danvers : Printed at the Wizard Office, by Charles D. Howard. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Edition, 2,000 copies. LOVE. Smitten, but not as our Enemies. " Special Humilia- tion and Prayer, in consequence of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln." A Sermon: by William de Loss Love, Delivered at the Spring Street Congregational Church, Milwaukee, June 1st, 1865. Published by a vote of the Society. Milwaukee : Daily Wisconsin Book and Job Printing Establishment. 1865. 8vo, pp 8. Text, Isaiah xxvii, 7. Edition, 1,000 copies. LOWE. Death of President Lincoln : A Sermon delivered in the Unitarian Church in Archdale Street, Charleston, S. C. Sun- day, April 23, 1865. By Rev. Charles Lowe, of Massachusetts. Published by Request of the Congregation. Boston : American Unitarian Association. 1865. 12rao, pp 24. Text, Ezekiel xxi, 7. Edition, 1,500 copies. LOWRIE. The Lessons of our National Sorrow. A Discourse delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, of Fort Wayne, Indiana, on the Sabbath Morning, April 16th, 1865, succeeding the death of Abraham Lincoln. By John M. Lowrie, Pastor of the Church. Fort Wayne : Jenkinson & Hartman, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Isaiah ii, 22. LUDLOW. Sermon commemorative of National Events, deli- vered in the First Presbyterian Church, Albany, N. Y., April 23d, 1865, by the Pastor, Rev. James M. Ludlow. Albany : Weed, Par- LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 61 sons and Company, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 27. Text, Psalms, cxvi, 12-14. Edition, 500 or 1,000 copies. LUDLOW.* President Lincoln, self portrayed. By John Mal- colm Ludlow. London : A. W. Bennett. 16mo,pp240, Portrait. McCABE.* A Sermon preached in the First Presbyterian Church, Peru, Ind., April 19, 1865. By the Pastor, Rev. Francis S. McCabe. Lafayette: James P. Luse & Co., Book & Job Print- ers. 1865.. Texts, II Samuel ix, 2; Proverbs xxi, 30. Edition, 300 copies. McCARTY. Lessons from the Life and Death of a good Ruler. A Discourse delivered on the Day of National Mourning, June 1, 1865, in Christ Church, Cincinnati. By Rev. John W. McCarty, A.B., Rector of the Parish. Cincinnati: Printed by Jos. B. Boyd, 25 West Fourth Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Text, II. Samuel iii, 38. Edition. 500 copies. McCAULEY. Character and Services of Abraham Lincoln : A Sermon preached in the Eutaw Methodist Episcopal Church, on the Day of National Humiliation and Mourning, appointed by the President of the United States, Thursday, June 1, 1865, By Rev. Jas. A. McCauley. Baltimore : John D. Toy, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Hebrews vii, 4. Edition, 500 copies. McCLINTOCK. Discourse delivered on the Day of the Funeral of President Lincoln, Wednesday, April 19, 1865, in St. Paufs Church, New York, by John McClintock, D.D. LL.D. Reported by J. T. Butts. New York : Press of J. M. Bradstreet & Son. 1865. 8vo, pp 35. Text, Hebrews xiii, 7. Edition, 2,500 copies. MAC DONALD. President Lincoln; his Figure in History : A Discourse delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Princeton, New Jersey, June 1st. 1865. By James M. Macdonald, D.D. New York : Charles Scribner & Co., 124 Grand Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Edition, 250 copies. MAC EL'REY. The Substance of Two Discourses, occasioned by the National Bereavement, the Assassination of the President. The Position, the Lesson, and the Duty of the Nation. Delivered in the St. James Episcopal Church, Wooster, Ohio, Easter Day, 1865, by the Rector, Rev. J. H. Mac El'Rey, M.D. [Motto.] Republican Steam Power Press, Wooster, Ohio. 1865. 12mo, pp 24. Texts, Exodus xii: St Luke xxi, 22, 28, 32, 34; Isaiah 62 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPU ) '. xxxv, 3-4; II Chronicles xxxii, 3, 5, 9, 13, 15, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23; Hebrews x, 36; Ephesians vi, 12-13. Edition, 400 copies. MARSHALL. The Nation's Grief: Death of Abraham Lin- coln. A Discourse delivered in the Chapel of the Officer's Division of the United States General Hospital, near Fort Monroe, Va.., Sunday^ April 29th, 1865, and repeated by special request in St. Paul's Church, Norfolk, Va., By James Marshall, Chaplain U. S. Army. Published by Battery " F" 3 D. Pa. H Artillery. Syra- cuse, N. Y.: The Daily Journal Steam Book and Job Printing Office. 1855. 8vo, pp40. Text, II Samuel i, 19, 25 ; Actsviii, 2. MAYO The Nation's Sacrifice; Abraham Lincoln. Two Discourses, delivered on Sunday Morning, April 16, and Wednes- day Morning, April 19, 1865, in the Church of the Redeemer, Cin- cinnati, Ohio. By A. D. Mayo, Pastor. Cincinnati : Robert Clarke & Co., 55 West Fourth St. 1865. 8vo, pp 28. Texts, (April 16th), Hebrews ix, 22; (April 19th), Psalms cxii, 6. Edi- tion, 1,000 copies. MILLER. Life and Character of Abraham Lincoln. A Memo- rial Oration by S. F. Miller, delivered at Franklin, N. Y., June 1st, 1865. Delhi : Sturtevant & Mclntosh, Printers, Republican Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Edition, 1,000 copies. MITCHELL. Presbyterian Church of Harrisburg, April 19, 1865. In Memoriam. An Address by the Pastor, Rev. S. S. Mit- chell. Harrisburg : Singerly & Myers. Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. MORAIS. An Address on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, delivered before the Congregation Mikve Israel of Philadelphia, at their Synagogue in Seventh Street, by the Rev. S. Morais, Minister of the Congregation, On Wednes- day, April 19, 1865. Philadelphia: Collins, Printer, 705 Jayne Street.. 1865. 5625. 8vo, pp 7. Text, Joel-ii, 17. Edition, 500 copies. MORAIS. A Discourse delivered before the Congregation Mikve Israel of Philadelphia, at their Synagogue in Seventh Street, on Thursday, June 1, 1865, the day appointed for Fasting, Humili- ation and Prayer, for the Untimely Death of the Late Lamented President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. By the Rev. S. Morais, Minister of the Congregation. Philadelphia : Collins, Printer, 705 Jayne Street, 5625. 1865. 8vo, pp 8. Text, xxiv, 16. Edition, 250 copies. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 63 MOREHOUSE. Evil its own Destroyer. A Discourse deli- vered before the United Societies of tlie Congregational and Baptist Churches at the Congregational Church, in the city of East Sag- inaw, April 19th, 1865, on the Occasion of the Death of President Abraham Lincoln. By H. L. Morehouse, Pastor of the First Baptist Church, East Saginaw, Mich. Published by Request. 1865. Enterprise Print, East Saginaw, Mich. 12nio, pp 16. Text, Luke xxii. 53. Edition, 1,000 copies. MORGAN. [In, Memoriam. (1). Joy Darkened. Sermon preached in St. Thomas' Church, New York, Easter Sunday Morn- ing, April 16th, 1865, by the Rector. [Rev. William F. Morgan, D.D.] (2). Order of Services in St. Thomas' Church, New York, Wednesday, April 19th, the Day appointed for the Funeral of President Lincoln. (3). The Prolonged Lament. Sermon preached in St. Thomas' Church, New York, on the 1st Sunday after Easter, April 23d, 1865, by the Rector. Baker & Godwin, Printers, No. 1 Spruce Street, N. Y.] 8vo, pp 47. Texts, (April 16th), Isaiah xxiv, 11; (April 23rd), II Samuel iii, 34. Edition, 300 copies. MORRIS.* Memorial Record of the Nation's Tribute to Abra- ham Lincoln. Motto. Compiled by B. F. Morris. Washington, D. C.: W. H. & 0. H. Morrison. 1865. 8vo, pp 272. Illustra- tions. MURDOCK. Death of Abraham Lincoln. A Sermon, preached in the Congregational Church in New Milfdrd, Conn., April 23, 1865. By Rev. David Murdock. Published by Request. Mil- ford: Northrop's Gallery of Art. 1865. Svo, pp 16. Texts, Amos viii, 9-10; Psalms Ixxxix, 19; Jeremiah xlvi, 28. Edi- tion, 500 copies. MYERS. Abraham Lincoln. A Memorial address delivered by Hon. Leonard Myers, June 15th, 1865, before the Union League of the Thirteenth Ward. Philadelphia : Published by King & Baird, No. 607 Sansom Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Edi- tion, 5,000 copies. NADAL. National Reconstruction. A Discourse delivered at Wesley Chapel, Washington, D. C., on the 1st day of June, 1865. By the Pastor, B. H. Nadal, D.D. Washington, D. C. Wm. H. Moore, Printer, 484 Eleventh Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, Psalm Ixxxv, 10. 64 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. NASON. Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln, Late President of the United States, delivered before the New England Historic-Gene- alogical Society, Boston, May 3, 1865. By Rev. Elias Nason, Member of the Society. [Motto.] Boston : William V. Spencer. 134 Washington Street. 1865. 8vo, pp28. Edition, 1,000 copies. " I think a thousand copies of my eulogy on Mr. Lincoln were printed. It was written in phonographic short hand in about three hours on Satur- day evening the day after the assassination ; it was delivered the next day in Chelsea, then a few days afterwards to one of the largest audiences ever convened in Exeter, N. H., and subsequently in Boston." Letter from Au- thor. The above has printed with it a Dirge on " The Burial of Abraham Lincoln " by John H. Sheppard, read on the. same occasion. NAYLOR. A Discourse delivered at the Christian Church in Salem, Indiana, April 19th, 1865. On the Occasion of the Funeral Obsequies of the Late President, Abraham Lincoln. By Rev. H. R. Naylor, (of the Methodist E. Church). Also an Address by Rev. I. I. St. John, (of the Presbyterian Church), on the same occasion. Published by J. P. & T. H. Cozine, Salem, Indiana. 1865. 16mo, pp 9, 3. Text, (1), II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 1,000 copies. NELSON. The Divinely prepared Ruler, and the fit End of Treason. Two Discourses delivered at the First Presbyterian Church, Springfield, Illinois, by invitation of the Session, on the Sabbath following the burial of President Lincoln, May 7, 1865, by Rev. Henry A. Nelson, Pastor First Presb'n Church, St. Louis. Springfield, Ills. : Steam Press of Baker & Phillips. 1865. 8vo, pp 39. Texts, (1), Psalms Ixxviii, 70-72; (2), II Samuel xviii, 32. Edition, 250 copies. [NEWELL.] The Martyr President. New York: Carleton, Publisher. MDCCCLXV. 12mo, pp 43. Edition, 500 copies. Signed " R. H. Newell " (Orpheus C. Kerr). This poem was written in a single night. NEW LONDON. Funeral Observances at New London, Con- necticut, in honor of Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States, Wednesday, April 19, 1865, including the Public Addresses of Rev. Gr. B. Willcox, and Rev. Thomas P. Field, D.D. New London: C. Prince, No. 4 Main Street. Starr & Farnhani, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 34. Edition, 300 copies. NEW YORK. In Memoriam His Excellency, Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America. Died at \Y;ishington, District of Columbia, Saturday, the 15th of April, LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 65 Anno Domini, 1865. Tribute of Respect of Subordinate Council Number Three, 19th Ward, City of New York, of the Union League of America. Preamble and Resolutions, April 24th, 1865. Press of Wynkoop & Hallenbeck, 113 Fulton Street, N. Y. [Sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 4. Edition, 250 copies. NEW YORK. Obsequies of Abraham Lincoln in Union Square New York, April 25, 1865. Printed for the Citizens' Com- mittee. D. Van Nostrand, 192 Broadway. 1865. Ry. 8vo, pp 32. Portrait. Edition, 500 copies. NEW YORK. Our Martyr President. Abraham Lincoln. Voices from the Pulpit of New York and Brooklyn. Oration by Hon. Geo. Bancroft. Oration at the Burial by Bishop Simpson. Tibballs & Whiting. New York. 1865. l-2mo, pp viii, 420. NEW YORK. Legislative Honors to the Memory of President Lincoln. Message of Gov. Fenton to the Legislature, communicat- ing the Death of President Lincoln. Obsequies of President Lin- coln in the Legislature. Printed under direction of J. B. Cushman, Clerk of Assembly. Albany : Weed, Parsons and Company, Prin- ters. 1865. 8vo, pp 118. Edition, 4,000 copies. NEW YORK. Obsequies of Abraham Lincoln in the City of New York, under the Auspices of the Common Council. By David T. Valentine, Clerk of the Common Council. New York : Edmund Jones & Co. 1866. Ry. 8vo, pp xxii, 254. Portrait and Illustra- tions. Edition, 25,000 copies. NICCOLLS. In Memoriam. A Discourse on the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, delivered in the Second Presbyterian Church, of St. Louis, April 23, 1865, by Rev. Samuel J. Niccolls. Published by Request. St. Louis : Sherman Spencer, Printer, No. 28, Market Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Judges xix, 30. Edition, 1,000 copies. NILES. Address of Rev. H. E. Niles, on the Occasion of President Lincoln's Funeral Obsequies in York, Pa. Printed by Hiram Young. York, Pa. [Sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 8. Edition, 300 copies. NOBLE. Sermon delivered in the United States Naval Aca- demy, on the Day of the Funeral of the Late President, Abraham Lincoln, by Mason Noble, Chaplain U. S. N. Newport: George T. Hammond, Printer. 1865. 8vo,"pp 16. Text, Psalm Ixxv, 6-7. 9 66 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. NORTHROP. A Sermon upon the Assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, at Washington, April the 14, A. D., 1865. Preached at Carthage, Illinois, on Wednesday, April the 19th, A. D. 1865. By Rev. H. H. Northrop, Pastor of the First Bap- tist Church, Carthage. Carthage, Ills.: The Carthage Republican Print. 1865. 8vo, pp 8. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. PADDOCK. A Great Man Fallen ! A Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln. Delivered in St. Andrew's Church, Phila- delphia, Sunday Morning, April 23, 1865. By the Rev. Wilbur F. Paddock. Philadelphia: Sherman & Co., Printers. 1865. &vo, pp 24. Text, II Samuel iii, 34, 38. Edition, 2,000 copies. PARKE. The Assassination of the President of the United States, overruled for the Good of our Country. A Discourse preached in the M. E. Church, Pittston, Penna., June 1st, 1865. Rev. N. G. Parke, A. M. Pittston, Pa.: Gazette Office Print. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, Genesis 1, 2f. Edition, 500 copies. PARKER. Discourse the Day after the Reception of the Tid- ings of the Assassination of President Lincoln, preached in the South Congregational Church, Concord, N. H., April 16, 1865. By the Pastor, Rev. Henry E. Parker. Concord : Printed by Mc- Farland & Jenks. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, John xi, 53. PASCAL.* Abraham Lincoln sa vie, son caracte"re son, admin- istration par Ce"sar Pascal. Paris : Grassart. Libraire Editeur. 1865. 12mo, pp 232. PATTERSON. Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln, delivered in Portsmouth, N. H., April 19, 1865. By Adoniram J. Patterson, Minister of the Universalist Church. Portsmouth : C. W. Brew- ster & Son, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 30. Edition, 1,000 copies. On the cover in addition to the above is the following : " And an account of the obsequies observed by the city." PATTERSON. Memorial Address on the Life and Character of Abraham Lincoln, delivered at Concord, New Hampshire, June 1, 1865, at the Request of the State Authorities. By Hon. James W. Patterson. Concord : Printed by Cogswell & Sturtevant. 1865. 8vo, pp 24. PATTERSON. The Character of Abraham Lincoln. By Robert M. Patterson, Pastor of the Great Valley Presbyterian Church. Philadelphia: James S. Claxton, Successor to Wm. S. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 67 & Alfred Martien, No. 606 Chestnut Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 44 Edition, 250 copies. This was a sermon preached on the National Fast Day, June 1st, 1865. PATTON. The Nation's Loss and its Lessons. An occasional discourse on the Assassination of President Lincoln, by A. S. Pat- ton, Minister of the Tabernacle Baptist Church, Utica, N. Y. Utica, N. Y. : Curtiss & White, Printers, 171 Genesee Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Text, Jeremiah xlviii, 17. Edition, 500 copies. Delivered Sunday, April 23rd, 1865. PIERCE. An Address on (lie Death of President Lincoln, de- livered in the Universalist Church, North Attleboro, Mass., April 19, 1865. By J. D. Peirce, Pastor of the Universalist Church and Society. Boston : Printed by Davis & Farmer, 18 Exchange Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Edition, 500 copies. PENNSYLVANIA. Historical Society of Pennsylvania. [Re- solutions on the Death of President Lincoln, April 24, 1865. Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 4. PENNSYLVANIA. Addresses on the consideration of Resolu- tions relative to the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, delivered in the House of Representatives of Penn- sylvania, January 23, 1866, together with the last Inaugural Ad- dress of President Lincoln. Harrisburg: Singerly & Myers, State Printers. 1866. 8vo, pp 24. Edition. 2,000 copies. PHILADELPHIA. Proceedings of the Union League of Phil- adelphia, regarding the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, Presi- dent of the United States. Philadelphia : Henry B. Ashmead, Book and Job Printer, Nos. 1102 and 1104 Sansom Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 22. PHILLIPS. An Address, delivered in Tremont Temple, Bos- . ton, April 19, 1865, By Wendell Phillips. Worcester : Printed by Chas. Hamilton, Palladium Office. [Sine annoJ] 8vo, pp 8. Edition, 2,000 copies. PITMAN.* Assassination of President Lincoln and the Trial of the Conspirators. Compiled and arranged by Benn. Pitman, Recorder to the Commission. Cincinnati. 1866. 8vo, pp 423. Portraits. 68 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. PITTSBURGH. Memorial Sermon and Address on the Death of President Lincoln, St. Andrew's Church, Pittsburgh, Sunday, April 16, and Wednesday, April 19, 1865. Published by the Con- gregation. Pittsburgh : Printed by W. S. Haven, corner of Wood and Third Streets. 1865. 8vo, pp 38. Edition, 750 copies. Bastard titles. (1.) April 16th. Sermon. The Nation's Be- reavement, By Rev. Wm. A. Sniverly, Assistant Minister. Text, II Samuel i, 19. (2.) April 19. Address on the Day of the Obse- quies. By Rev. Wm. Preston, D.D. Rector. POORE.* The Conspiracy Trial for the Murder of the President and the attempt to overthrow the Government by the Assassination of its principal officers. Edited with an introduction by Ben. Perley Poore. Boston: Tilton & Co. 1865. 2 vols., 12mo, pp 480, 552. POST. Discourse on the Assassination of President Lincoln, preached in Camp by Rev. Jacob Post, Chaplain of the 184th Regiment, N. Y. V., At Harrison's Landing, Virginia, April 23d, 1865. Oswego: S. H. Parker & Co., Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 11. Text, Romans vi, 26. Edition, 500 copies. POTTER. The National Tragedy. Four Sermons delivered before the First Congregational Society, New Bedford, on the Life and Death of Abraham Lincoln. By William J. Potter. New Bedford, Mass : Abraham Taber & Brother. 1865. 8vo, pp 67. Edition, 500 copies. (1.) April 16th. "The Assassination of the President. Texts, Jeremiah viii, 15; Psalm xxxvii, 15, (2.) April 19th. "Discourse on the Day of the Funeral rites." (3.) June 1st. "The Capacity and Historical Position of President Lincoln." Text, Wisdom of Solomon iv, 1-2. (4.) June 4th. " The Dramatic Element in the Career, of Abraham Lincoln." Text, Hebrews ix, 16-17. POWELL. Sermons on Recent National Victories, and the National Sorrow. Preached April 23d, 1865, in the Plymouth Church, by the Pastor, E. P. Powell. Adrian, Mich., Smith & Foster, Printers, opposite Lawrence Hotel. 1865. 8vo, pp 27. Edition, 500 copies. (1.) Morning. " Sermon, appropriate to the Obsequies of Abra- ham Lincoln." Text, John xi, 50. (2!) Evening. " Sermon, appro- priate to the Obsequies of Jefferson Davis and the Southern Confederacy. Text, Romans ix, 17. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 69 PRIME. A Sermon delivered in Westminster Church, Detroit, on Sabbath Morning, April 16, 1865, after the Death of President Lincoln, by Rev. G. Wendell Prime. Detroit: Advertiser and Tribune Print. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Psalm xxxix, 4. Edi- tion, 500 copies. PROVIDENCE. Proceedings of the City Council of Providence on the Death of Abraham Lincoln : with the Oration delivered before the Municipal Authorities and Citizens, June 1, 1865. By William Binney, Esq. [Seal.] Providence : Knowles, Anthony & Co., Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 56. Edition, 1,500 copies. A private edition of thirty copies in quarto with photographs of Presi- dent Lincoln and Mr. Binney was published by Mr. George W. Paine of Providence. v PURINTON. A Discourse on the Death of President Abra- ham Lincoln, delivered in the Baptist Church in- Smithfield, Fayette County, Pa., June 1st, 1865. By Rev. J. M. Purin- ton, D.D. Philadelphia: J. A. Wagenseller, Printer, 23 North Sixth St. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Psalm xcvii, 2. Edition, 500 copies. PUTNAM. City Document, No. 5. An Address delivered before the City Government, and Citizens of Roxbury, on Occasion of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, April 19, 1865. By George Putnam, D.D. Printed by order of the City Council. Roxbury : L. B. & 0. E. Weston, Printers, Guild Row. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Edition, 1,000 copies. QUINT. National Sin must be Expiated by National Calamity. What President Lincoln did for his Country. Southern Chivalry, and what the Nation ought to do with it. Three sermons preached in the North Congregational Church, New Bedford, Mass., Fast- day, April 13, and Sunday, April 16, 1865. By Alonzo H. Quint, Pastor. New Bedford : Mercury Job Press, 92 Union Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 45. Texts, April 16th, Morning, Deuteronomy xxxii, 52 : Afternoon, Isaiah xxviii, 15, 18-19. RANDALL. An Address on the Occasion of the Funeral Obse- quies of the late President Lincoln, delivered before the Citizens of Randolph, Vt., April 19, 1865. By Rev. E. H. Randall. Mont- pelier : Walton's Steam Printing Establishment. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Edition, 200 copies. 70 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. RANKIN. Moses and Joshua. A Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, preached in the Winthrop Church, Charlestown, Wednesday Noon, April 19, 1865. By Rev. J. E. Rankin, Pastor. Boston; Press of Dakin & Metcalf, No. 37 Cornhill. [Sine anno."] 8vo, pp 16. Text, Joshua i, 1-2. Edition, 700 copies. RAY. A Sermon : preached before the United Congregations of Wyoming, N. Y., on the Death of President Lincoln, by the Rev. Charles Ray, Pastor of the Presbyterian Church. April 19th, 1865. Buffalo: A. M. Clapp & Co.'s, Steam Printing House. Office of the Morning Express. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 500 copies. This pamphlet contains also " Resolutions of the Citizens " and poem by John Mclntosh " The Mission of Death." RAYMOND. The Life and Public Services of Abraham Lin- coln, Sixteenth President of the United States. Together with his State Papers, including his Speeches, Addresses, Messages, Letters and Proclamations, and the Closing Scenes connected with his Life and Death. By Henry J. Raymond. To which are added Anec- dotes and Personal Reminisences of President Lincoln. By Frank B. Carpenter. With a steel Portrait and other Illustrations. New York: Derby & Miller. 1865. 8vo, pp 808. REED. A Discourse delivered upon the Occasion of the Funeral Obsequies of President Lincoln, April 19, 1865. By Rev. S. Reed, Pastor, M. E. Church, Edgartown, Mass. Boston : Press of Geo. C. Rand & Avery, 3 Cornhill. 1865. 8vo, pp 24. Text, Genesis xviii, 25. Edition, 500 copies. REED.* The Conflict of Truth. A Sermon preached in the First Presbyterian Church, Camden, N. J., April 30, 1865, by Rev. V. D. Reed, D.D. Camden: S. Chew, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 29. . Text, Matthew x, 34. Edition, 500 copies. REYNOLDS. Sermon in Commemoration of the Virtues of Abraham Lincoln, delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Meadville, Pa., June 1, 1865, by Rev. J. V. Reynolds, D.D. Meadville, Pa.: R. Lyle White, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 36. Texts, Psalms xlvi, 10 : Ixxxiii, 18. Edition, 750 copies. RHODES. The Nation's Loss. A Poem on the Life and Death of the Hon. Abraham Lincoln, Late President of the United States, Who departed this life in Washington, D. C., April 15, LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 71 1865. By Jacob Rhodes. [Motto.] Newark, N. J.: F. Star- ruck, Printer, 123 Market Street. 1866. 12mo, pp 18. Edition, 1,000 copies. The poem occupies but eight and a half pages of this pamphlet and con- tains one hundred and seventy-two lines ; being followed by several papers from Mr. Lincoln's pen. The alleged author is a colored man, a gardener residing in Newark, and the same poem has been published in broadside with the name of " Rev. Peter W. Brister " as author, but without any printer's name, place or date. Was Rhodes or Brister the veritable author, or neither of them ? RICE. The President's Death Its Import. A Sermon, preached in the Second Presbyterian Church, Lafayette, Indiana, April 19, 1865, on the Day of President Lincoln's Funeral, by the Pastor, Rev. Daniel Rice. [Sine loco, sine anno.] 8vo, pp 7. Texts, II Samuel iii, 33,35, 28; Matthew vii, 2; Judges -i, 7; Samuel xv, 33; Isaiah xxxiii, 1; Job v, 12-13; Psalm Ixxix, 12; Isaiah Ixv, 16; Deuteronomy xxxii, 43. Edition, 1,000 copies. RICE. Sermon on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, late Presi- dent of the United States. Preached on the occasion of the National Funeral, Wednesday, April 19, 1865, by N. L. Rice, D.D., Pastor of the Presbyterian Church in Fifth avenue, cor. 19th St., N. Y. New York : Wm. C. Bryant & Co. Printers, 41 Nassau street, cor. of Liberty. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Psalm xlvi, 10. Edi- tion, 500 copies. ROBBINS. A Discourse, on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, Delivered in the G-reenhill Presbyterian Church, on Sunday Evening, April 23, 1865. By the Rev. Frank L. Robbins, Pastor of the Church. Philadelphia : Henry B. Ashmead, Book and Job Printer, Nos 1102 and 1104 Sansom Street. 1865 8vo, pp 21. Edition, 500 copies. " Published by request of the congregation for private distribution." ROBINSON. The Martyred President: A Sermon preached in the First Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., By the Pastor, Rev. Chas. S. Robinson, on the morning of April 16th, 1865. New York: John F. Trow, Printer, 50 Green street. 1865. 8vo, pp 31. Text, Luke xxiii, 50 Edition, 2,000 copies. ROBINSON. The Unvailing of Divine Justice in the Great Rebellion. A Sermon by Rev. T. H. Robinson : June 1, 1865. Harrisburg : Ambrose Taylor, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 35. Text, Job xxxvii, 23. Edition, 500 copies. 72 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. RUSSELL. Our Great National Reproach and the Counsel of Ahithophel Turned into Foolishness. Two Sermons preached in St. James' Church, Eckley, Penna., By Rev. Peter Russell, Rector. The first on the occasion of the Funeral Solemnities of President Lincoln. The second on the late Fast-Day (June 1st). Published by request of Members of the Congregation. Philadelphia : King & Baird, Printers, 607 Sansom street. 1865. 8vo, pp 30. Texts, (1), Lamentations of Jeremiah v, 1; (2), II Samuel xvii, 14. Edition, 250 copies. SABINE. " The Land Mourneth " the Death of Abraham Lin- coln, President of the United States., A Sermon, delivered in the Church of the Covenant, on Sunday Evening, April 16th, 1865, by Rev. William T. Sabine, Rector. Philadelphia : W. P. Atkinson, Printer, 449 North Third street. 1865. 18mo, pp 18. Text, Joel i, 10. Edition, 1,000 copies. SALISBURY. Sermon; preached at West Alexandria, Ohio, April 30th, 1865, by Rev. S. Salisbury, * on the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the U. S. (Printed by request of the hearers.) Eaton, 0. : Eaton Weekly Register, Hand Power Press Print. 1865. 8vo, pp 11. Text, Matthew viii, 27. Edi- tion, 500 copies. SAMPLE. The Curtained Throne : A Sermon suggested by the Death of President Lincoln. Preached in the Presbyterian Church of Bedford, Pa., April 23, 1865, and repeated April 30, 1865. By Rev. Robert F. Sample. Philadelphia : James S. Claxton, Successor to William S. & Alfred Martien, 606 Chestnut street. 1865, 8vo, pp 32. Text, Psalm xcvii, 2. Edition, 500 copies. SANBORN. A Discourse on the terrible, irresistible, yet sub- lime Logic of Events, as suggested by the Assassination of President Lincoln, and the Attempted Assassination of Secretary Seward ; Delivered in the Universalist Church, Ripon, Wis , Sunday Evening, April 23d, 1865, By Rev. R. S. Sanborn. [Sine loco, sine anno."] 8vo, pp 7. Text, Psalms Ixxvi, 10. Edition, 500 copies. " Universalist " in the title should be " Unitarian." SARMIENTO.* Vida de Abram Lincoln Decimo-sesto Presidente de los Estados Unidos. Precidida de una introduccion por D. F. Sarmiento. New York: D. Appleton & Co. 1866. 12mo, pp xlviii, 306. Bartlett's Literature of the Rebellion, 2750. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 73 SAUNDERS. An Oration on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States. By Rolfe S. Saunders. De- livered on Island 40, April 25, 1865. Memphis : W. A. Whitmore, Steam Book and Job Printer, No. 13 Madison street. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Edition, 2,000 copies. SAVANNAH. Tribute to the late President Lincoln. Report of the Great Mass Meeting in Savannah, The Largest Ever Held in the City, at which between eight and ten thousand persons were pre- sent, on Saturday, April 22, 1865. Savannah : S. W. Mason & Co., Printers " Savannah Daily Herald." 1865. Small 4to, pp 15. SEARING. President Lincoln in History. An Address Deli- vered in the Congregational Church, Milton, Wisconsin, on Fast Day, June 1st, 1865, by Edward Searing, A.M., Professor of Languages in Milton Academy. Janesville : Veeder & Devereux, Book and Job Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Edition, 300 copies. SEARS. The People's Keepsake; or, Funeral Address on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, late lamented President of the United States, with the Principal Incidents of his Life. Delivered by Rev. Hiram Sears, A.M., in the city of Mount Carmel, 111., Sunday, April 23, 1865, and dedicated to the Loyal Men, Women and Children of all parties in the Country. Cincinnati : Poe & Hitch- cock. R. P. Thompson, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. . Edition, 500 copies. SEDGWICK. An Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln Sixteenth President of the United States, pronounced by the Hon. Charles B. Sedgwick, on the occasion of the Obsequies at Syracuse, April 19th, 1865. Syracuse : The Daily Journal Steam Book and Job Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Edition, 1,000 copies. SEISS. The Assassinated President, or the Day of National Mourning for Abraham Lincoln, at St. John's (Lutheran) Church, Philadelphia, June 1st, 1865. The Pastor, Joseph A. Seiss, D.D., officiating. For sale at No. 42 North Ninth street, Philadelphia. 1865. 8vo, pp 43. Text, Deuteronomy xxxiii, 7-8. SERMENT.* Sur une Gravure, Stances 11 Abraham Lincoln, par J. H. Serment. Paris. Meyrueis, 174 Rue de Rivoli. Dentu, Palais Royal. [Sine anno.] 8vo, pp 32. Addressed to the memory of Mr. Lincoln, and suggested by a painting of a slave scene by M. Bicard. The verses are dated Dec., 1864, and the pre- face Oct., 1865. 10 74 LINCOLN BIBL10GBAPHY. SHEA. The Lincoln Memorial : A Record of the Life, Assas- sination and Obsequies of the Martyred President. Edited by John Gilmary Shea, LL.D., Editor of the Historical Magazine, etc. New York : Bunce & Huntington, 540 Broadway. 1865. 8vo, pp 288. Portrait and plate. SHERMAN. Eulogy upon President Lincoln. Delivered April 19, 1865, at the U. S. A. General Hospital, Grafton, West Va., by Surg. S. N. Sherman, U. S. V. (in charge). Grafton : D. F. Shriner, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. SIMONTON.* A Discourse on the Occasion of the Death of President Lincoln. Delivered by Rev. A. G. Simonton, at a special Divine Service held May 21st, 1865, and published at the request of the American Residents in Rio de Janeiro. Rio de Janeiro : Zewzinger, Printer, 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Text, Psalm xlvi, 1-3. SIMPSON. Funeral Address delivered at the Burial of Presi- dent Lincoln, at Springfield, Illinois, May 4, 1865. By Rev. Matthew Simpson, D.D., one of the Bishops of the Methodist Epis- copal Church. New York : Published by Carlton & Porter, 200 Mulberry-street. 1865. 12mo, pp 21. Edition, 2,000 copies. SLATER. The Nation's Loss. A Sermon upon the Death of Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States. Preached April 19, 1865, at the time of the Obsequies at Washing- ton, in the presence of Brig. Gen. S. Meredith, and the officers and soldiers of his command, and also a large concourse of citizens, at Paducah, Ky. By Edward C. Slater, D.D. Paducah, Kentucky : Blelock & Co. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, II Samuel iv, 38. Edi- tion 1,000 copies. SMITH. The Religious Sentiments proper for our National Crisis.. A Sermon delivered on Sabbath evening, April 23, 1865. By Henry Smith, D D., Pastor of the North Presbyterian Church, Buffalo, N. Y. Buffalo : Printing House of Matthews & Warren, Office of the Buffalo Commercial Advertiser. 1865. 8vo, pp 32. Text, I Samuel iii, 9. Edition, 1,500 copies. SOUTHGATE.* The Death of Lincoln. April 15th, 1865. Some of the Religious Lessons which it Teaches. A Sermon preached in Zion Church, New York, on the First Sunday after Easter, April 23, 1865, by the Rector, the Right Rev. Horatio Southgate, D D. New York: John W. Amerrnan. 1865. 8vo. pp 14. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 75 SPATH. Rede bei der Begrabniszfeier des Prasidenten Abraham Lincoln, (geb. den 12. Februar 1809, gest. den 15. April 1865) von Pastor A. Spath. Gehalten in der Evaugelisch Lutheriscben Zions- kircbe zu Philadelphia, Mittwoch, den 19. April 1865. Mit einer Zugabe ans der Osterfest-Predigt am 14. April. Auf verlangen dem Druck iibergeben. Philadelphia. Berlag von C. W. Widmaier, 453 Nord Dritte Stras'se. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Text, Job xiv, 8. Edi- tion, 300 copies. SPEAR. The Punishment of Treason. A Discourse preached April 23d, 1865, in the South Presbyterian Church, of Brooklyn, by Rev. Samuel T. Spear, D.D., Pastor. Published by request. Brooklyn : " The Union " Steam Presses, 10 Front street. 1865. 8vo, pp 38. Text, Psalm Ixxxix, 14. Edition, 3,000 copies. ' SPEED. Opinion on the Constitutional Power of the Military to Try and Execute the Assassins of the President. By Attorney General James Speed. Washington : Government Printing Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. SPRAGUE. President Lincoln's Death. A Discourse delivered in the Presbyterian Church in Caldwell, N. J., on the day of National Mourning, June 1st, 1865, By T. N. Sprague, Pastor. Published by request. Newark, N. J.: ^Printed at the Daily Advertiser Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, Genesis i, 7-11. Edition, 500 copies. ~. SPRAGUE. A Discourse delivered in the Second Presbyterian Church, Albany, April 16, 1865, the Sunday morning immediately succeeding the Assassination of the President of the United States. By William B. Sprague, D.D. Albany : Weed Parsons and Company, Printers. 1865. 12mo, pp. 18. Text, Joel ii, 2. Edition, 100 copies. SPRINGFIELD.* The Nation Weeping for its Dead. Observ- ances at Springfield, Massachusetts, on President Lincoln's Funeral Day, Wednesday, April 19, 1865, including Dr. Holland's Eulogy. From the Springfield Republican's Report. Springfield, Mass : Samuel Bowles & Co., L. J. Powers. 1865. 8vo, pp 32. Edi- tion, 1,000 copies. STARR. The Martyr President. A Discourse delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Penn Yan, N. Y., Sabbath morning, April 16th, 1865, on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, by the Pastor, Rev. Frederick Starr, Jr. Repeated by request in the North Pres- byterian Church, St. Louis, Mo.. Sabbath morning, May 14, 1865. 76 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. By the Pastor elect. Solicited for publication. St. Louis : Sherman Spencer, Printer, No. 28 Market street. 1865. 8vo, pp 19. Texts, II Samuel iii, 38; Job i, 21; II Samuel in, 31-34. STEELE. Victory and Mourning. A Sermon occasioned by the Death of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States; preached in the First Reformed Dutch Church, New Brunswick, N. J.. June 1st, 1865, by Rev. Richard H.. Steele, Pastor of the Church. New Brunswick, N. J. : Terhune & Van Anglen's Press, Albany St. 1865. 8vo, pp 27. Text, II Samuel xix, 2. Edition, 1,000 copies. STEINER. Abraham Lincoln : the Lessons Taught by his Life and the Obligations Imposed by his Death. An Address delivered at "The Glades," Frederick County, Maryland, April 23d, 1865. By Lewis H. Steiner, Frederick city, Md. Philadelphia : Jas. B. Rodgers, Printer, 52 and 54 North Sixth Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 15. Edition, 155 copies. STERLING. The Martyr President. A Sermon delivered in the Court House in Williamsport [Penna.], by Rev. William Stir- ling, on Sunday, April 23, 1865. " Bulletin" Print, Third street. [Sine loco, sine anno."] 8vo, pp 8. Text. II Samuel iii, 38. STEWART. Our National Sorrow. A Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, containing the substance of two sermons de- livered in the Presbyterian Church, Johnstown, [N. Y.,] April 16 and 19, 1865. By Rev. Daniel Stewart, D.D. Johnstown : J. D. Hough taling, Printer. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, Lamentations v, 15. Edition, 500 copies. STODDARD. Abraham Lincoln. An Horatian Ode. By Richard Henry Stoddard. New York : Bunce & Huntington, Pub- lishers, 540 Broadway. [Sine a/mo.] 8vo, pp 12. Edition, 1,500 copies. "I know it cost me (the verses) three days hard work, and that it paid me ' narry red.' The measure you will remember has not often been used in English verses, my model, in a sense, was old Andrew Marvell's ' Hora- tian Ode on Cromwell,' a very grand psalm." Letter from the Author. STONE. A Discourse occasioned by the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America, who was assas- sinated in Washington, Friday, April 14th, 1865. Preached in the Park Street Church, Boston, on the next Lord's Day, by Andrew L. Stone, D.D. 300 copies printed for J. K. Wiggin. Boston : 1865. 8vo, pp 21. Text, Lamentations v. 15-16. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 77 STORKS. An Oration commemorative of President Abraham Lincoln; Delivered at Brooklyn, N. Y., June 1, 1865, by Richard S. Storrs, Jr., D.D., at the request of the War Fund Committee. Published by the Committee. Brooklyn : " The Union " Steam Presses, No. 10 Front street. 1865. 8vo, pp 65. Edition, 1,600 copies. Of the above edition, one hundred copies were printed on large paper for private distribution, and embellished with a portrait. STRONG. The Nation's Sorrow. A Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, delivered in the Larkin Street Presbyterian Church, San Francisco, April 16th, 1865. By Rev. J. D. Strong, Pastor. Published by the Larkin St. Congregation. San Francisco : George L. Kenny & Co. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Text, Isaiah iii, 26. STURZ. Reden gehalten bei der Berliner Todtenfeier fur den Prasidenten Lincoln von amerikanischen, englischen und deutschen Geistlichen. Ein Ausspruch der Kirche iiber Sklaverei und freie Arbeit. Herausgegeben von J. J. Sturz. Berlin, 1865. C. G. Luderitz'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. A Charisius. Schoneberger- strasse 7. 8vo, pp 39. Edition, 1,600 copies, of which 100 were on fine paper. An English translation of this is said to have been published. SUMNER. The Promises of the Declaration of Independence. Eulogy on Abraham Lincoln, Delivered before the Municipal Au- thorities of the City of Boston, June 1, 1865, By Charles Sumner. [Motto.] Boston : J. E. Farwell and Company, Printers to the City, 37 Congress street. 1865. 8vo, pp 67. Ticknor & Fields published an edition on poor paper of 3,000 copies. SURRATT. 39th Congress, 2d Session. House of Representa- tives. Ex. Doc., No. 9. John H. Surratt. Message from the President of the 'United States, transmitting a report of the Secre- tary of State, relating to the discovery and arrest of John H. Sur- ratt. [December 8, 1866. Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp. 33. SURRATT. 39th Congress, 2d Session. House of Representa- tives. Ex. Doc., No. 25. John H. Surratt. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting further copies of papers in answer to Resolution of the House of 3d ultimo, relating to the arrest of John H. Surratt. January 3, 1867. [Sine loco, sine anno.'] 8vo, pp 23. 78 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. SURRATT. Trial of John H. Surratt in the Criminal Court for the District of Columbia. Hon. George P. Fisher, President. Washington : Government Printing Office. 1867. 8vo, pp. 1383, in 2 vols. SUTPHEN. Discourse on the occasion of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, preached in the Spring Garden Presbyterian Church, Philadelphia, by the Pastor, Rev. Morris C. Sutphen, April 16th, 1865. Philadelphia; Jas. B. Rodg- ers, Printer, 52 & 54 North Sixth street. 1865. 8vo, pp 19. Text, Job xiv, 19. Edition, 750 copies. SWAIN. A Nation's Sorrow. A Sermon preached on the Sabbath after the Assassination of President Lincoln, In the Central Congregational Church, Providence, April 15, 1865. By the Pas- tor, Rev. Leonard Swain. .[Sine loco, sine annoJ] 8vo, pp 11. Text, Lamentations i, 12. Edition, 1,000 copies. It \vill be seen that the date of the month is a misprint. SWEETSER. A Commemorative Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln. By Seth Sweetser, Pastor of the Central Church. Worcester, Massachusetts, MDCCCLXV. 8vo, pp 29. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 600 copies. This discourse was delivered April 23d, and of the above edition 100 were on fine paper. SWING. The Death of the President. Sermon by Rev. David Swing. Preached in the Presbyterian Church at Hamilton, 0., April 16, 1865. 1865. Hamilton Telegraph Print. 16mo, pp 18. Text, Psalm xcvii. Edition, 800 copies. The author informed us that he also delivered a discourse at Oxford, Ohio, at the hour of the funeral ceremonies at Washington, of which 1,000 copies were printed, but he had not a single copy from which he could trans- cribe the title. SYMMES. " To what purpose is this Waste ? " Address before the Loyal Leagues of South Brunswick and Monroe, June 1, 1865, by Rev. Joseph G. Symmes, Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Cranbury, N. J. Published by request of the Leagues. New Brunswick, N. J. : Printed at the Fredonian Book and Job Office, August, 1865. 8vo, pp 29. Edition, 600 copies. SZOLD. Vaterland and Freiheit. Predigt bei derErinnerungs- feier des verstorbenen Prasidenten, Abraham Lincoln, am 1. Juni 1865, (dem zweiten Tag Schabnoth) gehalten von Benjamin Szold, Rabbiner der Oheb-Schalom Geineinde in Baltimore. ( Der Reiner- LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 79 los 1st fur die Ungliichlichen im Suden bestimmt). Gedrucht bei B. Polrnyer, G. D. Ecte von Baltimore u Gaystr, 1865. 12mo, pp 10. TANSEY. From the Cabin to the White House. An Address at the obsequies of the late President Lincoln, by Rev. J. Tansey, of New Harmony, Ind. Evansville : Evansville Journal Co., Steam Printers and Binders. 1865. 8vo, pp 19. Edition, 200 copies. TAPLEY. Eulogy of Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States, pronounced by Rufus P. Tapley, Esq., April 19, 1865, at Saco, Maine. Including the report of the proceedings of the town of Saco, consequent upon his death. Biddeford : Printed at the Union and Journal Office, 1865. 8vo, pp 27. Edition, 1,500 copies. TAPPAN.* A Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States of America. Delivered Tues- day, May 2, 1865, in the Dorothean Church, Berlin, by Henry P. Tappan, D.D., LL.D. Berlin : Gr. Lange. [Sine loco, sine -anno.] 8vo, pp 46. Text, Psalm xlvi, 10. TAPPAN.* Abraham Lincoln. Rede bei der Gedachtin szfrir in der Dorothunkirch un Berlin, 2 Mai, 1865, gehalten von Dr. H. P. Tappan corresp. mit glieb der franzosifehun Acadimie Autonseste Urberseung. Frankfort au Main : H. Keller. 1865. 8vo, pp iv, 36. TAYLOR. Our Fallen Leader. A Discourse delivered on Thursday, June 1, 1865, in the Brfdge Street Presbyterian Church, Georgetown, D. C. By Rev. A. A. E. Taylor, Pastor-elect. Pub- lished by request of the congregation. Philadelphia : James S. Claxton, Successor to William S. & Alfred Martien, No. 606 Chestnut Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, Luke xxiv, 21. Edi- tion, 1,000 copies. THOMAS. Our National Unity Perfected in the Martyrdom of our President. A Discourse delivered in the Chapel of the Filbert Street U. S. General Hospital, on the Day of the Obsequies, at Washington, of our Late President, April 19th, 1865. By Rev. A. G. Thomas, Hospital Chaplain, U. S. A. Philadelphia: Smith, English & Co., 23 North Sixth Street, 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Genesis xxxv, 29. Edition, 500 copies. THOMPSON. In Memoriam. A Sermon delivered on Sunday, April 16, 1865, in the Reformed Prot. Dutch Church of Peapack, N. J. By Rev. Henry P. Thompson. New York: John F. Trow, 80 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Printer, 50 Greene Street. 1865. 12mo, pp 16. Text, Isaiah xxi, 11-12. Edition, 500 copies. " Pulpit and Rostrum, No. 36." THOMPSON. In Memoriam. A Discourse upon the Character and Death of Abraham Lincoln. Preached in Pottstown Presbyte- rian Church, on the Day of National Humiliation, June 1, 1865. By Rev. John C. Thompson. Philadelphia : Stein & Jones, Print- ers, No. 321 Chestnut Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 500 copies. ~ THOMPSON. Abraham Lincoln ; His Life and Its Lessons. A Sermon, preached on Sabbath, April 30, 1865, by Joseph P. Thompson, D.D., Pastor of the Broadway Tabernacle Church. New York : Published by the Loyal Publication Society. 1865. 8vo, pp 38. Text, II Samuel xxiii, 3-4. Edition, 2,000 copies. THRALL. The President's Death a National Responsibility. The President's Character a Treasure of Memory. A Sermon de- livered in Christ Church, New Orleans, Sunday Morning, April 23, 1865, at a Memorial Service held in that Church, on the Request of the Officers of the Army and Navy. By Rev. S. C. Thrall, D.D., Rector of the Church of the Redeemer, New York, New Orleans : Printed at Rea's Steam Press, 48 Magazine Street. 1865. 4to, pp 11. Text, I Samuel iii, 2. Edition, 1,000 copies. TIMLOW. A Discourse occasioned by the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Delivered at Rhinebeck, N. Y., April 19, 1865, at a Public Demonstration of the Citizens. By Rev. Heman R. Timlow. Rhinebeck, N. Y. 1865. 16mo, pp 42. Edition, 400 copies. TOWNSEND. The Life, Crime and Capture of John Wilkes Booth, with a full sketch of the Conspiracy of which he was the Leader, and the Pursuit, Trial and Execution of his Accomplices. By George Alfred Townsend, A Special Correspondent. New York : Dick & Fitzgerald, Publishers. [Sine anno.] 8vo, pp 64. Illustrations. Edition, 40,000 copies? This account of the " trial and execution " was published at the com- mencement of the trial, May 18, 1865. TOWNSEND. The Real Life of Abraham Lincoln. A Talk with Mr. Herndon, his late law partner. By George Alfred Town- send. With cabinet Portrait and Mr. Lincoln's favorite poem. New York : Publication Office, Bible House. James Porteus, Gene- ral Agent. 1867. 8vo, pp 15. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 81 TKOY. A Tribute of Respect by the Citizens of Troy, to the Memory of Abraham Lincoln. Albany, N. Y. : J. Munsell, 78 State Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 342. Edition, 575 copies. This volume was edited by Hon. Benjamin H. Hall, and an edition of 250 copies printed with the imprint of " Troy, N. Y. : Young & Benson, 8 & 9 First Street." 1865. and 75 on large quarto. TUCKER. A Discourse in Memory of our Late President, Abraham Lincoln, delivered in the First Parish Church, Holliston, Mass., Thursday, June 1, 1865. by J. T. Tucker, Pastor. Hollis- ton: Plimpton & Clark. 1865. 8vo, pp 21. Text, Lamentations iv, 20. Edition, 500 copies. TWOMBLY. The Assassination of Abraham Lincoln : A Dis- course delivered in the State St. Presb. Church, by Rev. A. S. Twombly, Sunday Morning, April 16, 1865. Albany, N. Y.: J. Munsell, 78 State Street. 1865. 4to, pp 18. Text. Psalm Ui, 1-3. Edition, 250 copies. TYLER. The Successful Life. A Discourse, on the Death of President Lincoln, delivered April 19, 1865, at the Center Church, Brattleboro, by the Pastor, Rev. G. P. Tyler. Published by Re- quest. Brattleboro : Printed at the Vermont Record Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Text, II Timothy iv, 7-8. Edition, 500 copies. TYNG. Victory and Re Union. A Commemorative Sermon, preached in St. George's Church, New York, April 20, 1865. By Stephen H. Tyng, D.D., Rector. New York : John A. Gray^ & Green, Printers and Stereotypers, 16 and 18 Jacob Street. 1865. 18mo, pp 46. Text, II Kings vi, 21. UMSTEAD. A Nation humbled and exalted. A Discourse on the Death of President Lincoln, with its Providential Lessons, de- livered in the Fagg's Manor Presbyterian Church, on the Day of National Humiliation, June 1st, 1865. By the Pastor, Rev. Justus T. Umstead. Published by Request of the Congregation. West Chester : Republican & Democrat Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 18. Text, I Peter v. 6-7. Edition, 500 copies. The "a" in the author's name is an error. VINCENT. A Sermon on the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Troy, on Sunday Morn- ing, April 23, 1865. By the Pastor, Rev. Marvin R. Vincent. Second Edition. Troy, N. Y. : A. W. Scribner, Book and Job Printer, Cannon Place. 1865. 8vo, pp 44. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 2,000 copies. 11 82 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. WALDEN. The National Sacrifice. A Sermon preached on the Sunday before the Death of the President, and Two Addresses, on the Sunday and Wednesday following, in St. Clement's Church, Philadelphia, by the Rev, Treadwell Walden, the Rector. Philadel- phia : Sherman & Co., Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 41. Edition, 1,000 copies. The text of the sermon delivered on the Sunday preceding the President's death, was the singularly prophetic one taken from St. John, Ch. xi, 50 ver : " It is expedient for us that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not." WALLACE. " A Prince and a Great Man has fallen." Fu- neral Address, on the occasion of the Funeral Obsequies in Memory of Abraham Lincoln, Late President of the United States. Deli- vered at Placerville, Cal., April 19th, 1865, by Rev. .C.'C. Wallace. Placerville : Printed at the Office of the Tri-weekly News. 1865. 8vo, pp 8. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 1,000 copies. WAYMAN. The passing away of Human Greatness : A Ser- mon on the Death of President Lincoln, preached on Sunday Even- ing, May 7, 1865, in the Newington Chapel, Renshaw Street. By the Rev. James Wayman. Liverpool : Henry Young, 12 South Castle Street. Price one Penny. [Sine anno.'] 8vo, pp8. Text, II Samuel i, 19. WEBB. Memorial Sermons. The Capture of Richmond. Some of the results of the War. The Assassination of the President. By Edwin B. Webb, Pastor of Shawmut Church, Boston : Boston, Press of Geo. C. Rand & Avery, 3 Cornhill. 1865. 8vo, pp 61. Edition, 1,000 copies. The sermon on " the Assassination " preached Sunday Morning, April 16th, from the text, Isaiah, xxi, 11, 12, occupies the last nineteen pages. WEBSTER. The Foe unmasked ; or the spirit of the Rebellion disclosed in the Assassination. The Character of the Martyr Presi- dent. [Motto.] Respectfully dedicated to the Union League of America, by Jackson Clay Webster. New York : 1865. 12mo, PP 28. A poem in blank verse ; the name given as the author's, it will be per- ceived at a glance is merely a patriotic combination. WELLS. Victory turned to Mourning. A Memorial Sermon on the occasion of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States, April 14, 1865. Preached in the Reformed Dutch Church, Bayonne, N. J, Sabbath, April 23, 1865. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 83 By Theodore W. Wells. Published by Request of the Congrega- tion. Jersey City: Printed at the Daily Times Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 23. Text, II Samuel xix, 2. Edition, 500 copies. " At the time I preached the sermon whose title I have given you, I was not a licensed minister, but a theological student. I consented to the pub- lication of the same only after receiving $100 for the manuscript. I thought if the people were bound to have it I might as well consent." Let- ter from the author, Dec. 5, 1866. WENTWORTH. A Discourse on the Death of President Lin- coln delivered in St. Mark's Methodist Episcopal Church, and re- peated (by request) at the Lafayette St. Presbyterian Church, Buf- falo, April 23, 1865. By Rev. J. B. Wentworth, D.D., of the Genesee Conference. Buffalo : Printing House of Matthews & War- ren, Office of the Buffalo Commercial Advertiser. 1865. 8vo, pp 32. Text, II Samuel iii, 38. Edition, 1,000 copies. WESTALL. In Memoriam. By John Westall. Read before the Municipal Authorities and Citizens of Fall River, at the Memo- rial Services in view of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, held in the City Hall, June 1st, 1865. Fall River : Almy, Milne & Co. 1865. 8vo, pp 8. Edition, 185 copies. This is in verse. WHITE. The Personal Influence of Abraham Lincoln. A Sermon preached on the National Fast-day, Thursday, June 1st, 1865, by Erskine N. White, Pastor of the Presbyterian Church, New-Rochelle, N. Y. Published by Request. New York : John A. Gray & Green, Nos. 16 and 18 Jacob Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 25. Text, Psalm Ixxviii, 72. WHITE. A Sermon occasioned by the Assassination of Abra- ham Lincoln, President of the United States. Preached at Coven- try, Vt., April 23, 1865, by Rev. Pliny H. White, acting Pastor of the Congregational Church. Brattleboro : Printed at the Ver- mont Record Office. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, II Samuel xix. 2. Edition, 150 copies. WILLIAMS. "A Time to Weep/' A Sermon on the Death of President Lincoln, delivered April 29th, 1865, in the Presbyterian Church, Frederick, Md., by the Pastor, Rev. Robert H. Williams. Frederick, Md.: Schley, Reefer & Co. 1865. 8vo, pp 11. Text, Ecclesiastes iii, 4. Edition, 250 copies. The date as printed is an error for " 19th." 84 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. WILLIAMS. " God's Chosen Kuler." A Sermon : delivered on a Day of National Humiliation and Prayer, in the Presbyterian Church, of Frederick City, Md., by the Pastor, Rev. Robert H. Williams. Frederick, Md. Schley, Keefer & Co. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. Text, I Kings ii, 15. Edition, 500 copies. WILLIAMS. Eulogy on the Life and Public Services of Abra- ham Lincoln, late President of the United States, delivered by public request, in Christ M. E. Church, Pittsburgh, Thursday, June 1, 1865. By Hon. Thomas Williams. Pittsburgh : Printed by W. S. Haven, corner of Wood and Third Streets. 1865. 8vo, pp 40. Edition, 1,000 copies. WILLIAMS. Eulogy on the Life and Public Services of Abra- ham Lincoln. Delivered Thursday, June 1, 1865. In Christ M. E. Church, Penn street, by Hon. Thomas Williams. General Meade: his share in the victories of Virginia. Pennsylvania's General vin- dicated. [Sine loco, sine anno.] 12mo, pp 32. At the end " Virtue & Co., Printers, City Road, London." WILLIS. Sermon on the Death of the late Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Delivered Sunday, April 23, 1865, in the Post Chapel, Citadel Square, Charleston, S. C. Repeated, by request of officers and friends, on the day of Humiliation and Prayer, May 2d. By Rev. Samuel B. Willis, Post Chaplain, 127th N. Y. Vol. New York: F. Somers, Printer, 32 Beekman street. 1865. 8vo, pp 8. Text, Psalm xcviii, 2 WILSON. The Death of President Lincoln. A Sermon preached in St. Peter's Church, Albany, N. Y., on Wednesday, April 19, 1865. by the Rev. William T. Wilson, M. A., Rector. Albany : Weed, Parsons and Company, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 25. Edition, 1,000 copies. WINDSOR. "The Surety of the Upright." A Discourse preached on the occasion of the National Fast, June 1, 1865, in the First Parish Meeting- House, Saco, Maine, by the Pastor. [Rev. John H. Windsor.] Published by special request. Biddeford : Printed at the office of the Union and Journal. 1865. 8vo, pp 20. Text, Proverbs x, 9. Edition, 500 copies. WINDSOR. Justice and Mercy : A Sermon preached at a united service held in the Methodist Episcopal Church, of Davenport, Iowa, on the National Fast Day, June 1st, 1865, by William Wind- sor, Pastor of the Edwards Congregational Church. Published by LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 85 request. Davenport, Iowa : Printed at the Gazette Steam Book and Job Rooms. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. Text, Micah vi, 8. Edition, 300 copies. WOODBURY. The Son of God calleth the Dead to Life. A Sermon suggested by the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, preached in the Westminster Church, Providence, R. I., Sunday, April 16, 1865, by Augustus Woodbury. Providence. Sidney S. Rider and Brother. 1865. 12mo, pp 27. Text, John v, 25. Edition, 300 copies and 25 on large paper. WOODBURY. A Sketch of the Character of Abraham Lincoln : A Discourse preached in the Westminster Church, Providence, R. I , Thursday, June 1, 1865, by Augustus Woodbury. Providence: Sidney S. Rider and Brother. 1865. 12mo, pp. 28 Text, Romans xiv, 7. Edition, 300 copies and 25 on large paper. WORCESTER. Abraham Lincoln. A Discourse delivered on the National Fast Day, June 1, 1865. By Thomas Worcester. [Sine loco, sine innoJ] 8vo, pp 14. Edition, 200 copies. Reprinted from the " New Jerusalem Magazine." WORTMAN. A Discourse on the Death of President Lincoln, delivered in the First Reformed Dutch Church, of Schenectady, N. Y. By Rev. Denis Wortman, Pastor Elect. Sabbath Evening, April 16, 1865. Albany : Weed, Parsons & Company, Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 22. Text, II Samuel, i, 25. Edition, 1,000 copies. WURZ BURGER.* Abraham Lincoln, sein leben und sein bffurtlichen dienste. Nach dem Englischen frei bearbeitet von J. W. Wiirzburger. New York. 1865. 12mo. Edition, 5,000 copies. This is a translation of Hanaford's book. YARD. The Providential Significance of the Death of Abraham Lincoln : A Discourse delivered in the Central M. E. Church, Newark, N. J., on the day of National Humiliation. June 1st, 1865. By Rev. Robert B. Yard, Pastor of Clinton St. M. E. Church : late Chaplain of 1st Regiment N. J. Volunteers, 6th corps. [Motto.] Published by request of the audience. Newark, N. J.: H. Harris, Publisher and Stationer, 288 Broad street. [Sine anno.] 8vo, pp 23. Texts, Psalm xlvi, 10; Numbers, xxvii, 12-13; Hebrews, xi, 4. Edition, 800 copies. 86 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. YOUNG. The Lesson of the Hour. [By Rev. Edward J. Young of Newton, Mass. Sine loco, sine anno.~\ 8vo, pp 9. Edition, 50 copies. Signed " E. J. Y.," and reprinted from " The Monthly Religious Maga- zine," May, 1865. YOURTEE. A Sermon, delivered in the Central M. E. Church, Springfield, Ohio, April 19th, 1865, on the occasion of the Funeral of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. By Rev. S. L. Yourtee, A. M., of the Cincinnati Conference. Springfield, Ohio : News and Republic Job Printing Rooms. 1865. 8vo, pp 16. Text, Zechariah, xiv, 6-7. Edition 500 copies. ADDENDA TO THE PRECEDING TITLES. Titles omitted in their proper places. BOTTA.* Resolutions on the Death of President Lincoln, oflered by Professor Vincenzo Botta, at the Meeting of the Italian Residents of New York, April 23, 1865. [Sine loco, sine anno.'} 8vo. pp. 4. Sabin's Dictionary, 6822. BUNGENER.* Lincoln. Zijn leven werk en dood. Naar het Fransch. Utrecht: J. J. H. Kremer, 1866. 8vo, pp. 4, 118. Sabin's Dictionary, 9165. BUSH.* Death of President Lincoln. A Sermon Preached in Grace Church, Orange, N. J., Easter, April 16, 1865. By the Rector, James S. Bush, M.A., Orange, N. J. E. Gardener, Printer, 1865. 8vo, pp. 8. Sabin's Dictionary, 9534. PART II. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY: BEING AN ACCOUNT OF BIOGRAPHIES, EULOGIES, ENGRAVINGS, MEDALS, ETC., PUBLISHED UPON ABRAHAM LINCOLN ANDREW BOYD. N.B. Titles and large paper copies mentioned in the preceding pages, are here omitted. PART II. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. NOTE. Titles, and large paper copies, mentioned in Part I, are here omitted. ADDERUP. Lincolniana, or the Humors of Uncle Abe. Sec- ond Joe Miller. " That reminds rne of a little Story." Pres. Lin- coln. By Andrew Adderup, Springfield, 111. (cut of a serpent). New York : Published by J. F. Feeks, No. 26 Ann street. 12ino, pp 91, illustrated cover and frontispiece. AGNEW. The Presidential Election of 1864, By J. Holmes Agnew. (American Monthly, N. Y., for Dec., 1864). AGNEW. The President's Speech. By J. Holmes Agnew. (In the American Monthly, N. Y. May, 1865. In the same num- ber 2 pages are devoted to " The President's Death "). ALBANY. No. 10. Papers from the Society for the Diffusion of Political Knowledge. Reply to President Lincoln's Letter of 12th June, 1863. 8vo, pp 8. (From the Albany committee, June 30th, on the Vallandigham case). ALL The Year Round. London, England, Aug. 7, 1869. A true story of President Lincoln. AMES. Stand by the President, an address delivered before the National Union Association of Cincinnati, March 6, 1863, by Rev. Charles G. Ames. Published by order of the Association (here follows a long quotation from Washington's Farewell Address). Philadelphia : King & Baird, Printers, 607 Sansoin Street. 1863. 8vo, pp 15. ANDERSON President's Ball, by A. Anderson. 5 versec, 8vo page. Philadelphia, Pa., 1863 12 90 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. ANDREW. Commonwealth of (State arms) Massachusetts. By His Excellency John A. Andrew, Governor. A Proclamation for a day of Special Humiliation and Player, June 1st, 1865, in recog- nition of the bereavement by the death of Abraham Lincoln. Printed on a sheet 27$ by 20. ARNOLD (Hon. Isaac N.), Chicago, Til. "The Life, Speeches, State Papers and Writings of Abraham Lincoln " is the probable title of a work now in course of preparation by Mr. Arnold. ARNOLD (Hon. Isaac N). In his address at the annual meet- ing of the Chicago Historical Society, Nov. 19, 1868, gives " An Incident "in Mr. Lincoln's life in 1832, relating to his having been a private in the Black Hawk war. The " Incident " and a note from Capt. lies, to whose company Mr. Lincoln belonged, oc- cupies 6 pages of the Society's Report. ARNOLD. Reconstruction. Liberty the corner-stone, and Lin- coln the architect. Speech of Hun. Isaac N. Arnold, of Illinois, delivered in the House of Representatives, March 19, 1864. Se- cond edition. Washington : Printed by L. Towers & Co. 1864. 8vo, pp 14. ARNOLD. Sketch of the life of Abraham Lincoln. Compiled in most part from the History of Abraham Lincoln, and the over- throw of Slavery. Published by Messrs. Clark and Co., Chicago. By Isaac N. Arnold. John B. Bachelder, Publisher, 59 Beeknian street, New York. 1869. 8vo, pp 75, with a portrait, bound in cloth, gilt edge and cover. ARNOLD. The History of Abraham Lincoln, and the overthrow of Slavery. By Isaac N. Arnold, late Member of Congress from Illinois. Chicago: Clark and Co., Publishers. 1866. 8vo, pp 736. Portrait of Mr. Lincoln. . ART JOURNAL. London, Eng., Jan., 1868. The Freeduien's Monument to Abraham Lincoln, with an illustration. ASSASSINS. Trial of the Assassins and Conspirators for the Murder of Abraham Lincoln, and the attempted Assassination of Vice President Johnson and the whole Cabinet. The most intensely interesting Trial on Record, containing the evidence in full, with arguments of Counsel on both sides, and the verdict of the Mili- tary Commission, correct Likenesses and graphic History of all the Assassins, Conspirators, and other persons connected with their LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 91 arrest and trial. Philadelphia : Barclay & Co., 602 Arch street. 8vo, pp 102. Illustrated. ATLANTIC Monthly, Boston, Mass. March, 1863. Pericles and President Lincoln. . The same. June, 1865. Late Scenes in Richmond ; and the place of Abraham Lincoln in History. . The same. July, 1865. Assassination. . The same. Oct., 1865. Abraham Lincoln. Summer, 1865. A poem of 116 lines. BAKER. Re-eligibility of President Lincoln, by John P. Baker. New York. 8vo. [BANCROFT.] A printed invitation dated Washington Feb. 5, 1866, to attend the Hall of the House Feb. 12, on the occasion of the exercises in honor of the Memory of Mr. Lincoln, attached are the autographs of L. F. S. Foster, Prest. of the Senate, and Schuyler Colfax, Speaker of the House. (Hon. Q-eo. Bancroft delivered the Oration). BANCROFT. Mr. Bancroft's Eulogy, Feb. 12. 1866. A card of admission to the Gallery of the House on the occasion of Hon. Geo. Bancroft's Eulogy on Mr. Lincoln. Signed by Solomon Foot, and E. B. Washburne, Chairmen of Committees. ~ [BARBER.] War Letters of a Disbanded Volunteer, embracing his Experiences as Honest old Abe's Bosom Friend and unofficial, Advisor. " Our lives have been like twin flowers upon a Lily's stem ; and let us, when we must fall, together fall like them." New York : Frederick A Brady, Publisher, No. 22 Ann street. 1864. 12mo, pp 312. Frontispiece. (Joseph Barber). [BARNARD]. Letter to the President of the United States, by a Refugee. New York : C. S. Westcott & Co., Printers, No. 79 John Street. 1863. 8vo, pp 32. (F. A. P. Barnard, LL.D. Pres. of Columbia College). BARNETT. President Lincoln, being XVI preliminary pages, with a portrait and two frontispieces from a work entitled the Mar- tyrs and Heroes of Illinois, by J. Barnett of Chicago. 1866. 8vo. BARRETT. Barrett's Authentic Edition. Life of Abraham Lincoln (of Illinois), with a condensed view of his most important 92 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. speeches ; also a sketch of the life of Hannibal Hamlin (of Maine). By J. H. Barrett. Cincinnati : Moore, Wilstach, Keys & Co., 25 West Fourth street. 1860. 12mo, pp 216, portrait. BARRETT. Life of Abraham Lincoln, presenting his Early History, Political Career, and Speeches in and out of Congress; also a general view of his policy, as President of the United States ; with his Messages, Proclamations, Letters, etc., and a concise History of the War. By Joseph H. Barrett. Cincinnati : Moore, Wilstach & Baldwin, 25 West Fourth street. 1865. 12mo, pp 518, portrait. . The same in German. BARRETT. History of " Old Abe/' the live War Eagle of the Eighth Regt. Wisconsin Volunteers. By Joseph O. Barrett, " Ah ! that Eagle of Freedom ; when cloud upon cloud," &c., &c., Pub. by Alfred L Sewell, 138 Lake St. Chicago : Dunlop, Sewell & Spalding Printers. 1865. 8vo, pp 71. (Dedicated to Mr. Lincoln, after whom the bird was named ; contains also a Note referring to Mr. Lincoln's death). BARTLETT. (Authorized Edition). The Life and Public Ser- vices of Hon. Abaham Lincoln, with a portrait on Steel. To which is added a Biographical Sketch of Hon. Hannibal Hamlin. By D. W. Bartlett, Washington Correspondent of the New York Indepen- dent and Evening Post, and Author of" Lives of Modern Agitators," " Life of Lady Jane Grey," " Joan of Arc," etc. New York : H. Dayton, publisher, No 36 Howard street. 1860. 12ino, pp 357, portrait. BARTLETT. (Authorized Edition). The Life and Public Services of Hon. Abraham Lincoln, by D. W. Bartlett, Washington Correspondent of the New York Independent and Evening Post, and Author of " Lives of Modern Agitators," " Life of Lady Jane Grey, " Joan of Arc," etc. New York : H. Dayton, Publisher, No 36 Howard street. 1860. 12mo, pp 150, portrait on cover. (25 cent edition). BARTLETT. Leben, Wirken und Reden des Republikanischen Praesidentschafts, Candidaten Abraham Lincoln. Nack den besten Amerikanischen Quellen : D. W. Bartlett, Reuben Vose u. A. deutsch bearbeitet. New York, 1860. Bei Friedrick Gerhard. 12mo, pp 106. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 93 BARTOL. The Significance of Abraham Lincoln as Man and President. A sermon preached in the West church on Fast day June 4, (1st), 1865. By C. A. Bartol. (In the Monthly Religious Magazine, Boston, July, 1865). BERGEN. Meeting in Bergen (N. J.), April 19, 1865. In commemoration of the death and burial of Abraham Lincoln. (Order of exercises). 8vo, 1 page. BIDWELL. Abraham Lincoln, by W. H. Bidwell (with a portrait, in the Eclectic Magazine of Literature*, New York, July 1865.) [BIONARDI] Abramo Lincolin Prisedente della Republica Stati Unite d'amerria. Italia Dalla tipografia di Guiseppe Chianton Pissstoota 1862. 8vo pp 16. (On the Cover) " Ad Abrami Lin- colin. Cauyone Dell'al Jacopa Bionardi." BIRCH, (Rev. E. P). The Devil's Visit to " Old Abe." Written on the occasion of Lincoln's Proclamation for prayer and fasting after the battle of Manassas. Revised and improved expressly for La Grange, Reporter, by the author. 18mo, pp 8. BIRD. The Victorious. A small Poem on the Assassination of President Lincoln. By M. B. Bird, Wesleyan Missionary, Port au Prince, Hayti. M. DeCordova, McDougall & Co., JBooksellers, Stationers, and Publishers, Kingston, Jamaica. 1866. 12mo, pp xvii 57. * BLAIR. Comments on the Policy inaugurated by the President, in a Letter and two Speeches', by Montgomery Blair, Postmaster General. New York : Hall, Clayton & Medole, Printers, 46 Pine Street. 1863. 8vo, pp. 20. BLAKE. See Falkner. BOKER. Our Heroic Themes. A Poem read before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard University, July 20, 1865. By George H. Boker (monogram T. and F.). Boston : Ticknor & Fields. 1865. 12mo, pp 20. BONDI. Charakterestik Abraham Lincolns, dangestellt in einer Trauer, Predigt : gehalten am 19 April 1865, von Jonas Bondi in des Synagage des Geineinde Poel Zedek, Ecke 29 Strasse und 8th Avenue. New York, 93 William st. 1865. 8vo, pp 12. 94 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. BOOTH. Wilkes Booth's Private Confession of the Murder of Lincoln, etc., etc., etc., published in pamphlet form, price 2d. By the News Agents Company, 147 Fleet St., London, 1865, (adv't in English paper). BOSTON, Mass. Proceedings of the City Council of Boston, April 17, 1865, on occasion of the death of Abraham Lincoln, presi- dent of the United States. (City seal). Boston : published by order of the City Council. 1865. 4to, heavy paper, pp 35. Printed on alternate pages, gilt edge, bound in muslin, with gilt title on front cover. BOYD. Assassination of President Lincoln and Secretary Sew- ard. War. Havoc of War. From Andrew Boyd's Directories. 1865. 8vo, pp 7. (Albany, N. Y). BRADBURY. Hold on Abraham ! Uncle Sam's Boys are coming right along. By Wm. B. Bradbury. Wm. A. Pond & Co., New York. . The same on an 8vo page. Johnson, Publisher. Phila- delphia, Penn. BRISTER. The Nation's Loss. A Poem on the Life and Death of the Hon. Abraham Lincoln, (portrait), late President of the United States, who departed this life, in Washington, D.C. April 15, 1865. By Rev. Peter W. Brister. 168 lines printed on a broadside with " The Emancipation Proclamation of 1862 and 1863," Four lines omitted in this which alludes to Mr. Lin- coln's successor. A. J. See note to Rhodes, page 70. BROOKS. The Two Proclamations. Speech of the Hon. James Brooks, before the Democratic Union Association, Sept. 29th, 1862. 8vo, pp 8. .BROUGH (Hon. John) Speech at Dayton, 0., July 4th, 1863. "President Lincoln on the arrest of C. L Vallandigham. President Lincoln's Reply to the Committee of Democrats, June 29, 1863. 8vo, pp 31. Cincinnati : Ohio, Moore, Wilstach & Co. 1863. . The same in German. BROUGHTON'S Monthly Planet Reader. Numbers for June, Sept., and Dec., 1860, May and June, 1861. (Pub. in Phil.), Oct., Nov., and Dec., 1864, and July, Aug , and Sept., 1865. Pub- lished in New York. L. D. Broughtou. Contains portraits with sketches on the Nativity and Fate of Mr. Lincoln. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 95 [BROWN.] De Histori ov Magnus Maha'rba and ae Blak Dra- gon. Bai Kristof'ur Kadmus. Let evuri Letur hav its <5n Sound, and let evuri Sound hav its on Letur. Old Maksim. Nu York. Printed for ae Filolojikal Gemdna, mdccclxvi. 12mo, pp 122. The author of this interesting little work is Rev. Nathan Brown. An edition in English has been published. The following is its title. [BROWN.] The History of Magnus Maharba and the Black Dragon. By Kristofur Kadmus. From the Original Manuscripts. New York. Printed for the Proprietor, 1867. 12mo, pp 105. BROWNSON'S Quarterly Review, N. Y., Jan., 1863. The Pre- sident's message. . The same, Jan., 1864. The President's message and Pro- clamation. . The same. April, 1864. The Next President. . The same. July, 1864. Lincoln or Fremont. . The same. Oct., 1864. Mr Lincoln and Congress in 4 articles, 31 pages. Also an article " Chicago, Baltimore and Cleve- land," (Presidential candidates). 17 pages. BRYANT. We are coming Father Abraham, 600,000 more, words by J. (Wm.) Cullen Bryant, music by D. A. Warden, John- son, publisher, Phil., Pa. 8vo, pp 1. BUECHEL. We Mourn our Country's Loss. Marcia Funerale in memory of our late President Abraham Lincoln, composed and re- spectfully dedicated to Mrs. Abraham Lincoln by Augustus Buechel. P. A. Wundermann. New York. 1865. BUNGAY. The Bobolink Minstrel : or Republican Songster, for 1860. Edited by George W. Bungay, author of " Crayon Sketches, etc. " Lincoln and Liberty." May every man who feels and thinks the time of triumph is at hand, repeat the song of bobolinks, Now ringing through our happy land : Now I'll drink on, drink on, driuk on, From soft flower cups filled with dew : Cousin Lincoln, Lincoln, Lincoln, Here are my best respects, to you. New York : O. Hutchinson, publisher, 272 Greenwich Street. 1860. 12mo, PP 72. BUNKER HILL. Proceedings of the Bunker Hill Monument Association at the Annual Meeting, June 17, 1865, with the Presi- dent's Address. The Resolutions of the Corporation, and other 96 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. incidents of the Anniversary. (Cut of monument). Boston : Bun- ker Hill Monument Associations, MDCCCLXV. 8vo, pp 82. 2 por- traits of Mr. Everett. This handsomely gotten up Report contains Resolutions on the Death of Abraham Lincoln and other mention of him. BUNTLINE. The Parricides ; or, the Doom of the Assassins. The Authors of a Nation's Loss. By Ned Buntline. New York : Hilton & Co., Publishers, 128 Nassau Street. 1855. 8vo, pp 94, illustrated cover and portrait of the assassin. CHICAGO. By Authority of the M. W. Grand Master, F. & A. M. State of Illinois. One page note ; relative to the Masonic fraternity taking part in the funeral ceremonies, May 1st. CHICAGO. Union Service of the Methodist Episcopal Churches of Chicago on the day of the funeral of President A. Lincoln, in the First Church, on Wednesday, April 19th. 1865. At 12 M. Geo. C. Cook, Esq., presiding. 4to, 1 pp. CHRISTIAN Examiner. Boston. Nov., 1864. The President- ial Election. . The same, May, 1865. The Eighth of Nov. : The Fourth of March : The Nation's Triumph and its Sacrifice. . The same, March, 1865. The Fourth of March ; A Review. . The same, January, 1865. The eighth of Nov., a Review. CLARIGUY (C). The election of Mr. Lincoln. A Narrative of the contest in 1860, for the presidency of the U. S. Translated by Sir W. Jones. London : J. Ridgeway. 1861. pp 90. CLARK. Dedicated to Mrs. Lincoln. The Martyr of Liberty, in memory of President Lincoln, Poetry and music by James G. Clark. C. M. Tremaine. New York. 1865. CLARK. The Boatman's Dream, by James G. Clark. Poem of 152 lines printed on an 8vo/page. COGGERSH ALL ( Wm. T). The journey of Abraham Lincoln. 1865. See p. 38. . The same bound in paper cover, on the front of which is the title and on the inside a poem of 34 lines : on the back cover is printed an account of a meeting held in the City Hall in Columbus, LUfCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 97 0., April 25th, 1865, in regard to a statue to Mr. Lincoln and a monument to deceased Ohio soldiers; the inside page is filled with an appeal to the Ohio people in behalf of the object. CONCORD, N. H. In Memory of Abraham Lincoln. City of Concord, N. H. Resolutions of the Common Council and Board of Aldermen. April 29, 1865. 4to, pp 1. CONSPIRACY. The Great Conspiracy, A Book of Absorbing Interest, Startling Developments, Eminent Persons implicated. Full secret of the Assassination Plot. John H. Surratt and his mother, with Biographical sketches of J. B. Booth and John Wilkes, and the life of and extraordinary adventures of John H. Surratt, the conspirator. Philadelphia : Published by Barclay & Co., 602 Arch street, (1866). 8v'o, pp 201. Illustrated. CONTINENTAL Monthly, N. Y. May, 1863. National Ode. Suggested by the President's Proclamation of Jan. 1st, 1863. CONWAY, M.D., Personal Recollections of President Lincoln. The Fortnightly Review, May 15, 1865. London, England. COOPER. Loyal Publication Society, 863 Broadway. No. 23. Letter of Peter Cooper, on Slave Emancipation. New York, Janu- ary, 1862. 8vo, pp 8. (Addressed to President Lincoln). . CORNWELL. Lincoln, died April 15th, A. D. 1865. Henry S. Cornwell, New London, Conn. A poem of 124 lines. Quarto- page. CULL. We are coming Father Abraham six hundred thousand more. Composed and arranged by Professor A. Cull. Horace Waters. New York. 1862. (Words from the N. Y. Evening Post). CURTIS. Executive Power. By B. R. Curtis. Boston : Lit- tle, Brown and Company. 1862. 12mo, pp 29. DALE. (By order of the Committee for the Campaign of 1860). The Young Men's Republican Vocalist (portrait) " By their songs ye know them." Ours are of Freedom. Composed and selected by William P. Dale. New York : Published by A. Morris, 435 Broad- way, price 8 cents; 75 cts. per dozen ; $6.00 a hundred; forwarded by mail free of postage. I 6mo, pp 36. DAVIDSON. Oration delivered before the Legislature of New Jersey, upon " Our Sleeping Heroes," February 22d, 1866. By 13 98 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. John Davidson, Esq., ofiElizabeth, N. J. Trenton, N. J., Printed at the State Gazette office. 1866. 8vo, pp 27. DAVIS (A. J.) Psychometrical Examination of Abraham Lin- coln. The Friend of Progress. New York, July, 1865. DAVIS (Hon Noah). Address at Albion, N. Y. See Albion, page 26. DEAN. The Emancipation Proclamation and Arbitrary Arrests ! ! Speech of Hon. Gilbert Dean of New York, delivered in the House of Assembly February 12, 1863. Albany : Atlas and Argus Print. 1863. 8vo, pp 15. DELPHINE. Solon, or the Rebellion of '61. A Domestic and Political Tragedy by Delphine, &c., &c. (D. Baker, editor National Banner), Chicago, 111. : S. P. Rounds, printer. 1862. 8vo, pp 74. DEMO REST'S Illustrated Monthly. Mme. Demorest's Mirror of Fashion. New York, June, 1865. Contains music with words. "The Nation in Tears, with a Portrait of President Lincoln, and graphic illustration of the funeral procession in Broadway, N. Y." DEVLIN & Co., New York. Printed card of admission to their building, April 25, 1865, to view the funeral procession on Broadway. DEXTER. What ought to be done with the Freedmen and with the Rebels. A sermon preached in the Berkeley street church, Boston (Mass.) on Sunday, April 23, 1865. By Henry Martyn Dex- ter. Boston : Published by Nichols & Noyes. 1865. 8vo, pp 36. DOWNING. Letters of Major Jack Downing, of the Downing- ville Militia. " The Constitution is a Dimmycratic machine, and it's got to be run as a Dimmycratic machine, or it won't run at all !" Major Jack Downing to Lincoln. Third Edition. New York : Van Evrie, Horton & Co., No. 162 Nassau Street, Printing House Square. 1866. 12mo, pp 254, illustrated. (Mr. Horton now deceased of the above firm was the author). DRAKE. The Proclamation of Emancipation. Speech of Charles D. Drake, delivered in Turner's Hall, St. Louis, January 28, 1863. 8vo, pp 7. DUGANNE. The Heroic Succession. Oration by Col. Aug. J. H. Duganne. Delivered at Cooper Institute, April 15th, 1867, on the Second Anniversary of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, com- memorated by the German Radical Republican Central Committee LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 99 of the City of New York. New York : K. M. De Witt, Publisher. 1867. 8vo, pp 8. DYE. History of the Plots and Crimes of the Great Conspiracy, containing also, biographies of Lincoln, Grant and Sherman. Por- traits, &c., &c. By John Smith Dye, N. Y. 8vo, near 400 pp. DYE. The Adder's Den ; or secrets of the great conspiracy to overthrow liberty in America. Depravity of Slavery : Two presi- dents secretly assassinated by poison. Unsuccessful attempts to murder three others; the evidence conclusive, and the facts esta- blished. Together with the dying struggles of the Great Southern Rebellion, by John Smith Dye. New York: published by the au- thor, No. 32 Beekman Street. 1864. 8vo, pp 128. EDGE. President Lincoln's Successor. By Frederick Milnes Edge. London: William Ridgway, 169 Piccadilly, W. 1864. Price, one shilling. 8vo, pp 34. EDINBURGH Review. (Scotland). Election of President Lincoln and its consequences, in 4 articles. April, 1861. [EGERTON.] Letter of a Citizen of Indiana to the Hon. John J. Crittenden on the Anti-Slavery policy of President Lincoln and the duty of the National Democracy. 1862. 8vo, pp 8. (Hon. J. K. Egerton). EVEREST. Lincoln's National Funeral March, by Everest. EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT. (Rewards offered for the arrest of Jefferson Davis and others, May 2, 1865). By the Presi- dent of the United States of America. A Proclamation. Whereas it appears, from evidence in the Bureau of Military Justice, that the atrocious murder of the late President Abraham Lincoln, and the attempted assassination of the Honorable William H. Seward, secre- tary of state, were incited, concerted, and procured by and between Jefferson Davis, late of Richmond, Virginia, and Jacob Thompson, Clement C. Clay, Beverly Tucker, George N. Saunders, William C. Cleary, and other rebels and traitors against the government of the United States, harbored in Canada : Now therefore, to the end that justice may be done. I, Andrew Johnson, &c. (Here follows the amount offered for the arrest of each, &c., $210.000, altogether. Dated May 2d, 1865 Printed on a folio page). FALKNEU A sermon by Rev. John Falkner Blake will be found on page 31. The gentleman has since changed his name to John Blake Falkner. ] 00 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. FARGO. Death Knell is Tolling. Quartette, by J. F. Fargo. FARGO. Requiem to the memory of Lincoln, by J. F. Fargo. FISKE. Requiem March for President Lincoln, by Fiske. FORT SUMTER. The Trip of the Steamer Oceanius to Fort Sumter and Charleston, S. C., April 14th, 1865. Brooklyn : The Union " Steam Printing House, 10 Front Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 172. Illustrated. (Mr. Lincoln is repeatedly mentioned, and there is a short address upon his death by Rev. T. L. Cuyler). FOWLER. The Country Saved. A Thanksgiving Sermon, preached at the First Presbyterian Church, Dec. 7, and repeated by request at the Central Church, December 31, 1865. By Rev. Henry Fowler, Pastor Central Presbyterian Church, Auburn. N. Y. Au- burn ; Daily Advertiser and Weekly Journal Steam Printing House. 1866. (Contains oft repeated mention of Mr. Lincoln). FRANK LESLIE'S Illustrated Newspaper, containing numerous accurate engravings made on the spot by his special artists, of the assassination of President Lincoln, and of the Funeral ceremonies, in Washington, Philadelphia, New York, Albany, Buffalo, Spring- field, etc., with a full description of everything connected with that melancholy event. New York. Frank Leslie, 537 Pearl Street. 1865. (A special edition of the several papers bound in paper cover with the above printed title page). FRANK LESLIE'S Pictorial Life of Abraham Lincoln. Ame- rican News Company's agents. New York. Price 15 cents. 8 pp, medium, with 14 illustrations. 1865. FRENCH. Address delivered at the dedication of the Statue of Abraham Lincoln, erected in front of the City Hall, Washington, D. C- By invitation of Hon. Richard Wallach, Noble D. Larner, Esq., and Asbury Lloyd, Esq., Managers of The Lincoln Monument Association. By Benjamin B. French. Washington City : McGill and Witherow, Printers and Stereotypers. 1868. 8vo, pp 16. (This dedication took place Wednesday, April 15, 1868). FRIEND of Progress. New York, June, 1865, April 19, 1865, by Rev. John Weiss. In Memoriam, (poetry), By Cora L. V. S. Hatch. The Murdered President, By Rev. 0. B. Frothingham. GAY. Abe Lincoln's Battle Cry. By James D. Gay. Phil., Pa. 1864. 7 verses. 8vo page. At the top is a portrait sur- rounded with figures and wreaths. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 1Q1 GAY. Death of President Lincoln. By J. D. Gay, Philadel- phia, Pa. 1865. 4 verses. 8vo page. . The same on 4to page, with portraits, flags, and tomb, and a soldier and female on their knees. GAY. The old Union Wagon. By J. D. Gay, Philadelphia, Penn. 1864. 8 verses. 8vo, page. GETTYSBURG. Address of Hon. Edward Everett, At the Con- secration of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg, 19th November, 1863, with the Dedicatory Speech of President Lincoln, and the other Exercises of the occasion ; Accompanied by An account of the origin of the undertaking and of the arrangement of the Cemetery Grounds, and by a map of the battle-field and a plan of the Ceme- tery. Published for the benefit of the Cemetery Monument Fund. Boston : Little, Brown & Company. 1864. 8vo, pp 88. GETTYSBURG. An Oration delivered on the Battle-field of Gettysburg, November 19, 1863, at the consecration of the Cemetery prepared for the interment of the remains of those who fell in the Battles of July 1st, 2d, and 3d, 1863. By Edward Everett. To which is added interesting reports of the dedicatory ceremonies; de- scriptions of the Battle-field ; Incidents and details of the Battles, etc. New York : Baker & Godwin, printers and publishers, Print- ing House Square, opposite City Hall. 1*53. (Contains Mr. Lincoln's dedicatory address). 8vo, pp 48. GODEY'S Lady's Book, Jan., 1864. Going to the President's Levee; How I Went. 4 pages with three illustrations. GOOKINS. How Mr. Lincoln became an Abolitionist. By S. B. Gookins. Written in verse. (In the Continental Monthly. N. Y.,June, 1863). GRAY. Life of Abraham Lincoln, for the young man and the Sabbath School. By Wm. C. Gray. : ' Having chosen our course, without guile and with pure purpose, let us renew our trust in God, and go on without fear and with manly hearts." Message, July 5, 1861. (Trade mark). Cincinnati : Western Tract and Book So- ciety. 1869. 12mo, pp 200, illustrated. GRRENE. Thrilling Stories of the Great Rebellion : comprising heroic adventures and hairbreadth escapes of soldiers, scouts, spies, and refugees, &c. Together with an account of the death of Presi- dent Lincoln ; fate of the assassins ; capture of Jefferson Davis, and 102 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. end of the war. By Lieutenant Colonel Charles S. Greene, late of the United States Army. With illustrations. Philadelphia : Pub- lished by John E. Potter & Co., No. 617 Sansom street. 12mo, pp 494. GROBE. We are coming Father Abra'am six hundred thousand more, with brilliant variations by Chas. Grobe. Horace Waters, New York. 1863. HAASE. In Memoriam, by Haase. HACO. J. Wilkes Booth. The assassinator of President Lin- coln. By Dion Haco, Esq., Author of " Osgood, the Demon Refu- gee," " Chetham, or the Swamp Dragons," " Perdita, the Demon Refugee's Daughter," " Larry, the Army Dog Robber," " Rob. Cobb Kennedy, the Incendiary Spy," etc., etc., etc., etc., New York : T. R. Dawley, publisher for the Million, 13 and 15 Park Row. 1865. 12mo, pp 106. The cover bears an illustration in colors of the shooting of Mr. Lincoln. HACO. The Private Journal and Diary of John H. Surratt. the Conspirator, Edited and arranged by Dion Haco, Esq., Author of " Booth, the assassin," the " War Novels," " Lives of Grant, Sher- man, Sheridan, Lincoln, Butler," " Grant and his Generals," &c., &c. " Murder most foul" Shakespeare. New York : Frederic A. Brady, publisher, 22 Ann street, near Nassau. 1866. 12mo, pp 104. Illustrated cover. HAMILTON. Letter of Gen. A. J. Hamilton, of Texas, to the President of the United States. 8vo, pp 18. (July 28, 1863). HARMON. Columbia mourns for President Lincoln. Song by A. W. Harmon. HARPERS' New Monthly Magazine, New York, July, 1865. (Illustration, Abraham Lincoln at Home). Personal Recollections of Abraham Lincoln, (by Hon. Noah Brooks?). . The same. June, 1868. The Baltimore Plot to assassin- ate Abraham Lincoln. HARRIS. Lincoln's Grave. Translated from the Welsh of Rev. J. P. Harris, by William B. Jones. This poem occupies 2 pages of a note sheet, one side printed in the Welsh language and the other in English. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 103 HASTED. Copy of a letter written from Buffalo, state of N. Y. Dec. 21, I860. To the Honorable Abraham Lincoln, President elect of the United States of North America. 8vo, pp 8. (Con- tains letters to Horace Greeley, Jefferson Davis. To the Reader, &c., by Frederick Hasted). HAVEN. Te Deum Laudamus. The cause and consequence of the election of Abraham Lincoln. A Thanksgiving Sermon delivered in the Harvard St. M. E. Church, Cambridge, Sunday Evening, Nov. 11, 1860, by Rev. Gilbert Haven. But as we were allowed of God to be put in trust with the Gospel, even so we speak j not as pleasing men, but God, which trieth our hearts. 1 Thess. ii, 4. Boston: J. M. Hewes, Printer, 81 Cornhill. Sold by J. P. Magee, No. 5. Cornhill, 1860. 8vo, pp 44. HAWTHORNE. A Nation Mourns her Martyred Son. Words by Alice Hawthorne Music by Sep. Winner. Philadelphia, Penn. 1865. . The same printed on 8vo page. A. W. Auner, song pub- lisher, Philadelphia, Penn. HfJERMANS. War Power of the President, Summary Impri- sonment. By J. Heermans. No 32 Loyal Publication Society, N. Y. 8vo. HELMSMULLER. "president Lincoln's Grand March, by F. B. Helmsmuller. Horace Waters, New York. 1862. Illuminated title. HERNDON. 5 Lectures on Lincoln, by Hon. Wm. H. Herndon, Springfield, 111. (Former law partner of Mr. Lincoln. This gen- tleman is preparing a Biography of Mr. Lincoln). HESS. To the Nation. Lincoln's Funeral March, as played by Menter's Band. Composed in commemoration of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. The Savior of his country. By Charles Hess. A. C. Peters & Bros. Cincinnati. 1865. HOFFMANN. Prasident Lincoln's Marsch, fur das Pianoforte arrangirt von F. Hoffmann. Pr. 10 Ngr. Eigenthum der Perleger, Bremen, Praeger & Meier. Leipzig, bei Augt. Whistling. (Con- tains a portrait inside occupying a whole page). HOURS at Home. New York, June, 1865. In memoriam. (By F. B. Carpenter). Abraham Lincoln. (By E H. Gillet, D.D). 104 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. HOURS at Home. July, 1865. The American Sabbath and the National Government, by Philip Schaff, D.D. A Nation on its Knees, by.E. B. Gillett, D.D. British Sympathy in our affliction, by Dr. Macleod. HOWARD Maj. General 0. 0. Oration at the laying of the corner stone of the monument in the Soldiers National Cemetery at Gettysburg, July 4, 1865. Gives Mr. Lincoln's dedicatory speech at the same place Nov. 19, 1863, and pays just tribute to his memory. Aughinbaugh & Wible, printers. Gettysburg, Pa. 1865. HOWELLS. Lives and Speeches of Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin. Columbus, 0. : Follett, Foster & Co.; 1860. 12mo, pp 406. Illustrated. (Mr. Lincoln's Biography is written by Win. D. Howells, and Mr. Hamlin's by John L. Hayes). HUTCHINSON. Hutchinson's Republican Songster, for the Campaign of 1860, edited by John W. Hutchinson, of the Hutchin- son family of singers. " Lincoln and Liberty." New York : 0. Hutchinson, publisher, 67 Nassau street. 186'), 12mo, pp 72. IN MEMORIAM. (Small portrait with five verses and date of birth and death printed on a card 6x4). INTERIOR Department, Washington, April 18, 1865. Order from the secretary to wear mourning for six months. 1 page, note size. JAGGAR. A sermon by the Rev. Thomas A. Jaggar at the Anthon Memorial Church on Easter Sunday, April 16th, 1865. Published by request. New York : R. C. Root, Anthony & Co., printers and stationers, No. 16 Nassau street. 1865. 8vo, pp 14. JAMES. The Two Epistles. The Angel's Address, or The Glorious Message, commanded to be sent to Abraham Lincoln, July 21, 1864. By James James. u Hath he said it, and will he not do it? Hath he spoken, and will he not perform?" 8vo, pp 8. JANVIER. The Sleeping Sentinel. By Francis De Haes Jan- vier, author of " The Skeleton Monk," " The Voyage of Life," " The Palace of the Caesars," and other Poems. Philadelphia : T. B. Peterson & Brothers. 1863. 12mo, pp. 19. (Harper's Weekly for Feb., 1870, gave an illustration of this poem ; the place and time of execution, with President Lincoln approaching rapidly in a carriage bearing the pardon of the young soldier). LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 105 JERMON. Abram Lincoln and South Carolina. By J. Wag- ner Jermon, Esq. Philadelphia : D. E. Thompson, Printer, south- west corner Seventh and Market Streets. 1861. 8vo, pp 15. JOURNAL of the Institute of Reward for Orphans of Patriots. In Meinoriam Abraham Lincoln. Vol. I, No~. 2. New York. KECKLEY. Behind the Scenes. By Elizabeth Keckley, for- merly a slave, but more recently Modiste, and friend to Mrs. Abra- ham Lincoln, or Thirty years a Slave, and Four years in the White House. New York : G. W. Carleton & Co., Publishers, MDCCC- LXVIII. 12ino, pp 371, portrait of the author. (See also Mrs. Lin- coln for pamphlet titled Behind the Seams). KELLER. Requiem to the Memory of Lincoln ; music by M. Keller. KELLEY. The Character of Abraham Lincoln. The annexed extracts from the speech of Hon. Judge Kelley, before the Girl's High and Normal School of Philadelphia, give a clear insight into the Character of our lamented and beloved President. (8 pages with a portrait in The Union Almanac for 1866. King & Baird, Printers. Philadelphia. Contains also life of Gens. Meade and Grant). KINGSTON, Canada. Funeral obsequies of the 'late President Lincoln. Mayor's Chambers, April 19th, 1865. Circular issued by Mayor John Creighton, containing Resolutions of the city council re- questing business to be suspended during the funeral ceremonies at Washington. 8vo, 1 page. KIRKLAND. A Letter to Peter Cooper on " The Treatment to be extended to the Rebels Individually," and " The Mode of restoring the Rebel States to the Union." With an Appendix con- taining a reprint of a Review of Judge Curtis's paper on the Emancipation Proclamation, with a Letter from President Lincoln. By Charles P. Kirkland. New York : Anson D. F. Randolph, No. 770 Broadway. 1865. 8vo, pp 66. KIRKLAND. A Letter to the Hon. Benjamin R. Curtis, late Judge of the Supreme Court of the United States in review of his recently published pamphlet on the " Emancipation Proclamation " of the President. By Charles P. Kirkland, of New York. New York : Latimer Bros. & Seymour, Law Stationers, 21 Nassau St. 1862. 8vo, pp 21. 14 106 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. KNICKERBOCKER Magazine, New York, June, 1864. " The coming Presidential Election." 5 pages. LAUGEL, Auguste. Le President Lincoln. Revue de Deux Mondes. May 15, 1865. Paris. LAZARE. To whom it may concern. Music by C. Lazare. LELAND. The Proclamation (Sep. 22, 1862). By Chas. G. Leland. In the Continental Monthly. N. Y. : Nov., 1862. LIEBER. Loyal Publication Society, New York (Society's Seal) 863 Broadway. No. 59. Lincoln oder McClellan ? Hufuf an die Deutchen in Amerika. Von Franz Lieber. 1864. 8vo, pp 4. LIEBER. Loyal Publication Society, New York (Society's Seal) 863 Broadway. No. 67. Lincoln or McClellan. Appeal to the Germans in America. By Francis Lieber. Translated from the German by T. C. 1864. 8vo, pp 8. LIEBER. Lpyal Publication Society New York. (Society's Seal) 863 Broadway. No. 71. Lincoln or McClellan? Oproep aan die Hollanders in Amerika. Van Francis Lieber. 1864. 8vo, pp 4. LINCOLN and Johnson Club's Union Campaign Songster. 24th Ward, Phil. 16mo, pp 12. LINCOLN. Abraham Lincoln aad Ulysses S. Grant : their character and consideration scientifically explained. With Engrav- ings All who desire to gain a reliable knowledge of the personal characteristics of the President Abraham Lincoln and Lieut. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant will please to read this work. 8vo, pp 15. San Francisco. 1864. LINCOLN, (Mr. Lincoln's head with a crown on it) Abraham. Africanus I . His Secret Life, as revealed under the Mesmeric Influence. Mysteries of the White House. J. F. Feeks, Pub- lisher, No. 26 Ann Street, N. Y. 1864. 12mo, pp 57. LINCOLN. Abraham Lincoln, his life and death. The Mar- tyr President. H. H. Lloyd & Co., N. Y., publishers. Printed on a sheet 36 X 27 in colors, on either side of which is a mon- ument 36 X 2 containing mottos, &c. LINCOLN. Abraham Lincoln. In Memoriam. Good Friday. Passion Week. MDCCCLXV. (An illustrated border printed in sil- ver, in the centre on a black ground is a poem by A. J. H. Du- ganne, of N. Y.). LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 107 LINCOLN. Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, demonstrated to be the Gog of the Bible, as foretold by the Prophet Ezekiel in the xxxvm and xxxix Chapters of his Book of Prophecy. The Thirteen Confederate States shown to be the mountains of Israel and all the Productions contained in the Pro- phecy containing them literally fulfilled in the late war between the North and South. 1868. 12mo. Feb., '56. LINCOLN. Abraham Lincoln. Liberty's Great Martyr!! April 14, 1865. Printed on a card with scripture quotations. LINCOLN. '" Abraham Lincoln murdered April 14 " (4 lines with the preceding title printed on top of a " Hymn on the death of an infant, four years of age, &c.,&c.,as itshould b,e sung by 30,000,000," &c. The " Hymn" alluded to the death of Treason and the col- lapse of the Southern Confederacy). Broadside. LINCOLN. Abraham, our Abraham. Song by W. F. S. LINCOLN. Abraham Lincoln, President of the (portrait) United States, assassinated April 14, 1865. From the London " Punch " (for May 6th, 1865). 4to, 1 p. A poem. LINCOLN. A. Lincoln. Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Springfield, 111. To whom it may concern (announcing to his friends and customers that he has crossed the stream, and on the 4th of March will be ready to swap horses, dispense law, make jokes, &c., &c.}. Printed on a card. LINCOLN. A. Lincoln, quotation from Shakespeare applied'to our national bereavement. Broadside. LINCOLN. A memorial in regard to the Lincoln Monument to be erected at Springfield, 111. Trenton, N. J. Printed at the office of the State Gazette. 1867. 8vo, pp. 15. LINCOLN. A Memoir of Abraham Lincoln, President Elect of the United States of America, his opinion on secession, extracts from the United States Constitution, etc. To which is appended an Historical Sketch on Slavery, reprinted by permission from "The Times." London : Sampson Low, Son & Co., 47 Ludgate Hill. 1861. (Right of Translation reserved). 12mo, pp 126. Portrait. To a short preface the initials R. B. are attached. LINCOLN. Amnesty Proclamation and Third Annual Message of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, read in Con- gress, Wednesday, December 9, 1863. 8vo, pp 20. 108 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. LINCOLN. A Poem of 5 verses. Dated April 20. 1865. signed W. H. 8vo, pp. LINCOLN. A Presidential Poet. Household Journal. N. Y., October, 1860. (This journal published the poem Immortality, crediting Mr. Lincoln with its authorship, prefacing it with a note about the great rulers who had written poetry, and among them mentioning Mr. Lincoln as a Poet). LINCOLN. Arbitrary and Illegal Arrests made and done by order of Abraham Lincoln, during the four years of his administration, from March 4th, 1861 to March 1st, 1865. Compiled from the "Encyclopedia of the Rebellion" by Thos. S. Townsend, and from other sources. 10 pages in the Democratic Almanac. Van Evrie, Horton & Co. New York. 1867. LINCOLN. Arrangement for the Inauguration of the President of the United States on the Fourth of March, 1865. Washington : Government Printing office. 1865. 8vo, pp 6. LINCOLN. Assassination. 39th Congress, 1st Session. House of Representatives Report No. 104, Assassination of Lincoln July, 1866. Ordered to be printed. " Mr. Boutwell, from the committee on the Assassination of Lincoln, made the following Report." 8vo, PP 41 - LINCOLN. A Workingman's Reasons for the Re-Election of Abraham Lincoln. 1864. 8vo, pp 8. LINCOLN. By-Laws and Rules and Regulations of the Lincoln Association of Jersey City. Jersey City : Printed by the Journal Printing Association. 1867. Portrait and Motto. 16mo, pp 8. Tliis society has an annual banquet on Mr. Lincoln's birthday. I have their banquet and ball tickets, programmes, &c. The dinner bills of fare are printed in gold on broad silk ribbon. LINCOLN. By the President of the United States of America. A Proclamation, Dec. 8th, 1863. Abraham Lincoln. By the Pre- sident of the United States of America. A Proclamation. Abra- ham Lincoln. March 26th, 1864. Foolscap, 2 pages. LINCOLN. Character of Abraham Lincoln, 8vo, 16 pp. LINCOLN. Death and Burial of A. Lincoln. Broadside. LINCOLN. Dedicated to the Memory of Abraham Lincoln. A verse of 8 lines on a 4to p. Copyrighted by James Logan. Penn- sylvania. 1865. LINCOLN B1BLIOGBAPHY. 109 LINCOLN. Death of President Lincoln, 4 verses. 8vo page. Colburn & Hodgson, Printers. Pottsville, Penn. LINCOLN. Dioramic Association, a certificate issued by the Association. Columbus, 0. Portrait. LINCOLN. Document No. 12. Sold at 13 Park Row, and at all Democratic Newspaper offices. Lincoln's treatment of Gen. Grant, and Mr. Lincoln's treatment of Gen. McClellan. 8vo, pp 8. (1864). LINCOLN. Document No. 13. Sold at 13 Park Row, and at all Democratic Newspaper offices. Mr. Lincoln's Arbitrary Arrests, the Acts which the Baltimore Platform approves. 8vo, pp 24. LINCOLN. Document No. 14. Sold at 13 Park, Row, and at all Democratic Newspaper offices. Corruptions and Frauds of Lin- coln's Administration. 8vo, pp 8. LINCOLN. Document No. 18. Republican Opinions-about Lin- coln. 8vo, pp 16. LINCOLN. Emancipation Proclamation. Red and green bor- der. Green back ground and white stars. Rufus Blanchard, Chicago, 111., publisher. Size 10 X 14. LINCOLN. Executive Mansion. East. Admit the Bearer to the Executive Mansion, on Wednesday, the 19th of April, 1865. Printed on a heavy mourning card. LINCOLN. Evening Journal Doc's, No. 1. The War Policy, of the administration. Letter of the President to the Union Mass Convention at Springfield, Illinois. Aug. 16, 1863. 8vo, pp 8. Also contains Edward Everett's letter to the same Convention. LINCOLN. Evening Journal Tracts, No. 7. Republican Princi- ples. Speech of Hon. Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois, at the Republi- can State Convention, held at Springfield, Illinois, June 16, 1858. 8vo, pp 6. LINCOLN. Facsimile of the Emancipation Proclamation. Size 29 X 23. Ed. Mendel, lithographer and publisher, Chicago, 111. (Printed on this sheet is Mr. Lincoln's letter to the Ladies having in charge the North-western Sanitary Fair, 1863, accompanying the original manuscript draft of the Proclamation of Jan. 1st, which they had requested from him. Hon. Thos. B. Bryan purchased it at the Fair for $3,000. It has been lithographed and copies sold for the benefit of the Soldiers Home, Chicago, and the U. S. Sanitary Commission also derived a benefit from its sale. 110 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. LINCOLN. Facts for Men who do their own Thinking. The Two Platforms : Lincoln, Johnson, Baltimore platform ; McClellan, Pendleton, Chicago Platform. (American News Co., N. Y., 1864), broadside. Printed on the back is a map showing " What the rebels had when they began, what they now hold." LINCOLN. Four Years of Civil War in America ; or the death of Abraham Lincoln ; A play published and performed in Vienna. 1865. (Copied from a Newspaper). LINCOLN. (From the Chicago Daily Times, October 17, 1858). The Campaign in Illinois. Last joint Debate. Douglas and Lincoln at Alton, Illinois. Washington : Printed by Lemuel Towers. 1858. 8vo, pp 32. LINCOLN. Funeral March to the Memory of Abraham Lincoln. Arranged from Donizetti. Boston. 1865. LINCOLN. Funeral March to the Memory of Abraham Lincoln. Horace Waters, N. Y., publisher. LINCOLN. Funeral Obsequies of President Lincoln. Buffalo, April 27 ; 1865. Dinner Bill of Fare. (Printed on a sheet of note paper with heavy black border ; on the second page is a portrait of Mr. Lincoln. Used by the funeral escort who dined at the Mansion House). LINCOLN. Funeral Procession of President Lincoln, as it started from the Depot in Philadelphia, April 22, "1865. 4 verses, 8vo page. J. H. Johnson, publisher, Philadelphia, Pa. LINCOLN. God Bless Abraham Lincoln ! A Solemn Discourse by a Local Preacher. Dedicated to the Faithful. For general distribution at 5 cents a copy. 8vo, pp 16. LINCOLN. Golden Sayings of Abraham Lincoln (with a por- trait in the center), printed on a sheet 21 X 17. Engraved by J. W. Orr. New York. D. P. Mann, Oneida, N. Y. LINCOLN. Hanes By Wald. Abraham Lincoln Illinois, A. Hannibal, Hamlin, O Maine. Ye ymgeiswyr Geverinol am yr arly wyddiaeth a'r is lywyddiaeth : yn nghyd a'r Araeth a Dradd- oddn Mr. Lincoln yn Cooper's Institute, N., Y.,ary 270 chevefron 1860. Hefyd YrEsgynlawr Giverinol, yn nghyd a chan Etholiadol. Utica, N. Y. David C. Davis, argraffydd A chyhoeddydd. 1860. 8vo, pp 16. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. \\\ LINCOLN. Honest Abe of the West. 5 verses, 8vo page. J. H. Johnson, publisher, Philadelphia, Penn. LINCOLN. Honest Old Abe. Song by a Wide Awake. LINCOLN. How are you Greenbacks ? Music and Words pub- lished by Win. A. Pond & Co. New York. 1863. . The same. 7 verses, 8vo page. J. H. Johnson, Phila- delphia, Penn. LINCOLN. Illustrated Life, Services, Martyrdom, and Funeral of Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States, with a Portraitof President Lincoln, and other Illustrative Engravings of the Scene of the Assassination, etc. With a full history of his Life ; Assassination ; Death, and Funeral. His career as a Lawyer and Politician ; his Services in Congress : with his Speeches, Proclama- tions, Acts, and Services as President of the United States, and Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy, from the time of his first Inauguration as President of the United States, until the night of his Assassination. Only new and complete edition, with a full history of the Assassination, by distinguished eye witnesses of it; Mr Lincoln's Death Bed scenes, and a full account of the Funeral Ceremonies, from the time his remains were placed in the East Room at the White House, until they were finally consigned to their last resting place, in Oak Ridge Cemetery at Springfield, Illi- nois ; with Addresses and Sermons by the Hon. Schuyler Colfax ; Hon. George Bancroft, Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, Gen. Wald- bridge, Bishop Simpson, etc., with a full account of the escape, pursuit, apprehension, and death of the assassin Booth. Philadel- phia, T. B. Peterson & Brothers, 306 Chestnut street. 12tno, pp 299. 1865. LINCOLN. Illustrated Life, Services, Martyrdom and Funeral of Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth President of the United States, with a full account of the imposing Ceremonies at the National Capitol, on February 12tb, 1860, and the Hon. George Bancroft's Oration, delivered ou the occasion before both Houses of Congress, by their request, (in) presence of President Andrew Johnson, the Cabinet, Gen. Grant, Chief Justice Chase, and the Diplomatic corps, with a portrait of Abraham Lincoln, and other illustrations, Engravings of the scene of the assassination, etc. With a full history of his Life ; Assassination ; Death, and Funeral ; his Career as a Lawyer and Politician : his Services in Congress ; with his Speeches, Proclauia- 112 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. tions, Acts, and Services as President of the United States, and Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy, from the time of his first Inauguration as President of the United States, until the night of his Assassination. Only new and complete edition, with a full history of the Assassination of the President, by distinguished eye- witnesses of it. Mr. Lincoln's death bed scenes, and a full account of the funeral ceremonies, from the time his remains were placed in the East Room at the White House, until they were finally con- signed to their last resting place, in Oak Ridge Cemetery, at Spring- field, Illinois; with Addresses and Sermons by the Hon. George Bancroft, Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, General Waldbridge, Hon. Schuyler Colfax, Bishop Simpson, etc : with a full account of the escape, pursuit, apprehension, and death of the assassin Booth ; as well as the oration delivered by the Hon. George Bancroft, on Feb. 12, 1866, before both Houses of Congress, in presence of President Andrew Johnson, the Cabinet, Gen. Grant. Chief Justice Chase and the Foreign Ministers. Philadelphia : T. B. Peterson and Brothers ; 306 Chestnut street. 12mo, pp 328. 1865. LINCOLN. Inaugural Address of Abraham Lincoln, March 4, 1865, printed in colors. Jas. B. Rodgers, Phil. Size 4 X H- LINCOLN. In memoriam. A. Lincoln. Broadside. LINCOLN. In Memory of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America, born Feb. 12, 1809; Died April 15, 1865. His Farewell address to his old neighbors, Springfield, Feb. 12, 1861. 8vo, p. 1. LINCOLN. In Perpetuam. Broadside. LINCOLN. Life and Public Services of Abraham Lincoln, six- teenth President of the United States; and Commander-in-chief of the Army and Navy of the United States. With a full history of his Life ; his career a* a Lawyer and Politician; his services in Congress ; with a full account of his Speeches, Proclamations, Acts, and Services as President of the United States, and Commander-in- chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, up to the pre- sent time. Philadelphia: T. B. Peterson & Brothers, 306 Chestnut Street. 12mo, pp. 187. Portrait on the cover. 1864. LINCOLN. Lincoln's Anecdotes; (picture of Mr. Lincoln tell- ing jokes to his friends). A complete collection of the Anecdotes, Stories and Pithy Sayings of the late Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. H3 President of the United States. Office of Publication, 105 Fulton Street, New York. The American News Co., 121 Nassau St., N. Y., General Agents. 12ino, pp 63. LINCOLN Monument. 40th Congress, 1st Session, 8112. A bill to incorporate the Lincoln Monument Association. Imperial 8vo, pp 2. LINCOLN Monument. National Lincoln Monument Association, incorporated by Act of Congress, March 30th, 1867. Washington: Printed at the Great Republic Office. 1867. 12rno, pp 12. A portrait and title on the cover. LINCOLN Monument. Articles of Association and By-Laws, Rules and Regulations of the National Lincoln Monument Associa- tion, organized at Springfield, 111., May 11, 1865. Springfield : Steam Press of Baker & Phillips. 1865. 8vo, pp 11.- The following papers have been issued by the Association : Lincoln Monument Association. An Appeal to the Soldiers and Sailors of the United States. Springfield, 111., April 20, 1865. 4to, 1 page. Memorial. To the Honorable, the Senate and House of Repre- sentatives of the State of . Circular 4to, 1 page. National Lincoln Monument. Address to the Public. Circu- lar, Jan. 24, 1868. 4to, 3 pages. National Lincoln Monument. Description of Grounds. Orr- cular, 1 page. National Lincoln Monument. Office State Superintendent Public Instruction, Illinois. May 24, 1865. Circular, 4 pages. National Lincoln Monument. Office State Superintendent Public Instruction, Illinois, May 16, 1865. Circular, 4 pages. National Lincoln Monument Association, draft on. National Lincoln Monument Association. Secretary's Office, Letter Head. National Lincoln Monument Association. Secretary's Office March 12, 1868. Office of the National Lincoln Monument Association. Circu- lar 4to, 1 page. Contains Resolutions adopted at various times. Office of the National Lincoln Monument Association. June, 1865. Circular, 1 page. 15 114 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Office of the National Lincoln Monument Association, June 28, 1865. Circular, 1 page. The National Lincoln Monument Association of Springfield, 111., acknowledge the receipt of, etc. Subscription list of the Lincoln Soldiers and Sailors Monu- mental Association. 4to, 1 p. To Artists of the United States. Lincoln Monument. Jan. 28, 1868. Circular, 1 page. To the Soldiers and Sailors of the United States. Appeal in behalf of the National Lincoln Monument, July 14, 1865. Cir- cular, 3 pages. Treasurer's Office National Lincoln Monument Association. Receipt from. LINCOLN. Lincoln's letter to McClellan, broadside. LINCOLN. Mr. Lincoln's Rule. Broadside, being 21 lines from Mr. Lincoln's letter to Horace Greeley in regard to the Union and slavery. LINCOLN. Message of the President of the United States, and Accompanying Documents, to the Two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the Second Session of the Thirty-Eighth Congress. Washington : Government Printing Office. 1864. 8vo, pp 14. LINCOLN. New Yorker-Demokrat. Flugblatt No. 9. Das Leben von Abraham Lincoln. 12mo, pp 16. Illustrated. LINCOLN. New Yorker Demokrat. Flugblatt, No. 4. Die Nationale Politik. Kede von Abraham Lincoln, Gehalten un Cooper Institute New York am 27. Felmar 1860. 8vo, pp 10. LINCOLN. " Oh ! why should the spirit of mortal be proud ? " (The verses of this poem printed on both sides of a card, over the top of which is a photograph portrait of Lincoln and on either side of him a slave with broken fetters at his feet, a female reading, and Columbia with a flag, and shield). LINCOLN. Old Abe's Jokes, Fresh from Abraham's Bosom, containing all his issues, excepting the " Greenbacks," To call in some of which, this work is issued. New York : T. R. Dawley, Publisher, 13 and 15 Park Row. (1864). 12mo, pp 135, portrait. LINCOLN. Same as above, except that the last article " Mrs. Old Abe, from the New York Mercury " is omitted in this edition. The title on the cover, with colored illustration, is, Honest Abe's LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 1 1 5 Jokes; Being authentic Jokes and Squibs of Abraham Lincoln, pp 135. Published after Mr. Lincoln's death. LINCOLN. Only authentic Life of Abraham Lincoln, alias "Old Abe." '(Cut, Sun representing Mr. Lincoln) a son of the west, also of Gen. Geo. B. McClellan, alias " Little Mac." With an account of his numerous victories, from Phillipi to Antietam. The two lives in one volume. Published by J. C. Haney & Co., 109 Nassau Street, N. Y. 16mo, pp 16. LINCOLN. Original Hymn. Broadside. LINCOLN. Our Liberty. To the Rescue! Citizens awake! realize your position ; do not longer be deceived. We have a foe, a miserable, cowardly, insinuating, unrelenting foe to deal with, devoid of all generosity, all nobleness, all magnanimity (&c., &c.). Our Grand Master, the President of the United States, has been bereft of existence by the hand of an assassin (&c., &c.). All this has been done when he was manifesting the truest spirit of Christianism and liberality (&c., &c.). The Union, one and Indivisible! Strike now! Strike again ! Strike often! No more parley ! Entire submission and the Great Republic, one and Indivisible!!! The People. By one of the people. Medium, one page. April, 1865. LINCOLN. Political Debates between Hon. Abraham Lincoln and Hon. Stephen A. Douglas, In the celebrated campaign of 1858, in Illinois; Including the preceding speeches of each, at Chicago,, Springfield, etc. ; also, the two great speeches of Mr. Lincoln in Ohio, in 1859, as carefully prepared by the Reporters of each party, and published at the times of their delivery. Columbus : Follett, Foster and Company ; Boston : Brown & Taggard ; New York : W. A. Townsend & Co.; Chicago: S. C. Griggs&Co. ; Detroit: Putnam, Smith & Co. 1860. 8vo : pp 268. Two or three editions. LINCOLN. Powers of the President of the U. S. in Times of War. 8vo, pp 3t. Journal office, Muscatine, Iowa. 1865. LINCOLN. President Lincoln's Farewell Address to his old Neighbors, Springfield, February 12, 1861. J. L. Campbell, Illi- nois. 1865. (Printed on a sheet 16i by 12. At the top is an engraving representing . the bier of Lincoln beside which Columbia kneels in grief. At either end. of the bier is a soldier and marine with heads bowed down). 116 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. LINCOLN. President Lincoln's Farewell Address to his old Neighbors, Springfield, February 12, 1861. (American News Co. N. Y.). 1865. Size, 17 X 12*. LINCOLN. President Lincoln's Favorite (cut of Eagle and shield) Poem. A. W. Auner, publisher, Philadelphia, Penn. 8vo page. LINCOLN. President Lincoln's Favorite Poem. A. W. Auner, publisher, Philadelphia, Penn. 8vo page. LINCOLN. President Lincoln's Favorite Poem. Copied by F. B. Carpenter while our lamented chief was reciting it. Johnson & Co., publishers, Philadelphia, Penn. April 21, 1865. 8vo page. LINCOLN. President Lincoln's Funeral March. Frederick Blume, New York. 1865. LINCOLN. President Lincoln's Views. An important letter on the principles involved in the Vallandigham case. Correspond- ence in relation to the Democratic Meeting, at Albany N. Y. Phila- delphia : King and Baird, printers, No. 607 Sansom street. 1863. 8vo, pp 16. LINCOLN. Price, One copy, 8 cents ; Two copies, 15 cents. The letters of President Lincoln on questions of National Policy. I. To General McClellan. II. To Horace Greeley. III. To Fer- nando Wood. IV. To the Albany Committee. V. To Governor Sey- mour. VI. To the Springfield Meeting. New York : H. H. Lloyd & Co.. 81 John street. The tr,ade supplied by Sinclair Tousey, 121 Nassau street, New York. H. Dexter, 118 Nassau street, New York. B. B. Russell, 515 Washington street, Boston. R. R. Landon, 88 Lake street, Chicago. 1863. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1863, by H. H. Lloyd & Co , in the Clerk's office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern district of New York. 12mo, pp 22. LINCOLN. Proclamation of Emancipation With illustrated border. R. A. Dimmick, N. Y. Size 22 X 17. LINCOLN. Proclamation of Emancipation, with portrait. A. Kidder, Publisher, Chicago. Cha. Shober, lithographer. Size 20 XI5. LINCOLN. Proclamation of Emancipation. (With a portrait, all engraved on steel within the space of 4| X H, surrounded by a border. A. Kidder, Chicago). LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. H7 LINCOLN. Proclamation of Emancipation. (One of the twenty copies of the Emancipation Proclamations which were printed for the Philadelphia Sanitary Fair, and signed by President Lincoln and Sec. Seward. 1864. It is certified to as being a true copy with the autograph signatures above, by John G. Nicolay who was pri- vate secretary to Mr. Lincoln). LINCOLN. Proclamation of Emancipation. J Mayer & Co., lithographers. B. B. Russell & Co. Boston. 1865. Size 21J X 16. Portrait and three illustrations. LINCOLN. Proclamation of Freedom. By the President of the United States. (Jan. 1st, 1863)- 14 X 10f . Chas. Moss, publisher, Times print, Jersey City. LINCOLN. Proclamation of Freedom. By the President of the United States. Card, size 5f X 3f . (On the back of this is a pho- tograph of the Proclamation, and a full length portrait of Mr. Lincoln, all executed with a pen by Gr. R. Russell). , * LINCOLN. Programme of the Lincoln minstrels. (This of course was a burlesque ; gotten up after the fashion of the minstrel's pro- grammes. Mr. Lincoln, his cabinet, and some other high officials be- ing the performers. It was I believe, printed in Hartford, Ct., and has long since been unattainable). LINCOLN. Republican Campaign song by " Our Ned," Dedi- cated to the Lincoln and Johnson clubs. 7 verses, 8vo page, with, portrait of Lincoln. Mason & Co., publishers, Phil. Penn. LINCOLN. Republican Opinion of Mr. Lincoln. From Brown- son's Review for April, 1864. 8vo, pp 8. LINCOLN. Route of the (portrait of Lincoln) procession. (Issued during the Lincoln obsequies in Philadelphia by Loag, as an advertising card). LINCOLN. Second Inaugural Address of the late President Lincoln. James Miller, N. Y., publisher. Size 17 X 12. ' LINCOLN. The Address of the Hon. Abraham Lincoln, in vindication of the policy of the Framers of the Constitution and the principles of the Republican party, delivered at Cooper Institute, February 27th, I860, issued by the Young Men's Republican Union (659 Broadway, New York), with Notes by Charles C. Nott & Cephas Brainerd, Members of the Board of Control. New York : George F. Nesbitt & Co., Printers and Stationers. 1860. 8vo, pp 32. 118 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. LINCOLN. The Campaign of 1860, comprising the Speeches of Abraham Lincoln, William H. Seward, Henry Wilson, Benjamin F. Wade, Carl Schurz, Charles Sumner, William M. Evarts, &c. Albany : Weed, Parsons & Company. 1860. 8vo. Contains Mr. Lincoln's speeches of Feb. 27, 1860, June 16, 1858, and the Republican Platform of 1860 with letters of acceptance from Mr. Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin. LINCOLN. The Inaugural Address of President Abraham Lincoln. Delivered at the National Capitol, March 4th, 1865. Glazed paper, and printed in blue. Size 11 X 19. LINCOLN. The Lincoln and Hamlin Songster, or, the Conti- nental Melodist, comprising a choice collection of Original and Se- lected songs, in honor of the People's Candidates, Lincoln and Hamlin, and illustrative of the enthusiasm everywhere entertained for " Honest Old Abe," of Illinois, and the noble Hamlin of Maine. (Portrait of Lincoln). Fisher & Brother, No. 10 South Sixth St. Philadelphia; 64 Baltimore St., Baltimore; Wm. J. Bunce, 68 Bowery, New York. 16mo, pp 72. LINCOLN. The Lincoln (cut, Blackman's head) Catechism, wherein The Eccentricities and Beauties of Despotism are fully set forth. A Guide to the Presidential Election of 1864. J. F. Feeks. Publisher, No. 26 Ann Street, N. Y. 12mo, pp 46. . The same in German. LINCOLN. The Nation in tears. In Memoriam. Abraham Lincoln. Words by R. C., music by Konrad Treuer, from Demor- est's Monthly, New York, for June, 1865. This also contains a view of the funeral procession on Broadway, New York. . The same, published in sheet music form : on the last page is added a tablet " In memoriam of Abraham Lincoln," &c. LINCOLN. The Opinions of Abraham Lincoln, upon Slavery and its issues : indicated by his speeches, letters, messages, and pro- clamations. L. Towers, printer for the Union congressional com- mittee. 8vo, pp 16. LINCOLN. The Position of the Republican and Democratic Parties. A dialogue between a white Republican and a colored citizen. Published by the Union Republican Congressional Com- mittee, Washington, D. C. (with portrait). 8vo, pp 4. LINCOLN The President's Assassination. Broadside. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 119 LINCOLN. Loyal Publication Society, No. 5, Voices from the Army. The President cordially sustained. 8vo, pp 7. 1863. LINCOLN. The President's Dedication Address at Gettysburg. Published by Miller & Matthews, New York. Printed on a card. LINCOLN. The President's Emancipation Proclamation. 8vo, pp 3. A grand demonstration in Albany, N. Y., Jan. 5, 1863, in honor of the event. Business generally suspended, a hundred guns fired, &c. LINCOLN. The President's Hymn : Give thanks, all ye people, in response to the Proclamation of the President of the United States, recommending a general thanksgiving, on Nov. 26th, 1863. Pub. by A. D. F. Randolph. New York. Music and 9 verses. Large 8vo, 3 pages. LINCOLN. The President Lincoln Campaign Songster. New York : T. R. Dawley, Publisher for the Million. 13 and 15 Park Row. 16mo, pp 72. Illustrated cover. LINCOLN. The President's Proclamation. 8vo, pp 2. Signed H. LINCOLN. The Republican party vindicated. The demands of the South explained. Speech of Hon. Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois, at the Cooper Institute, New York city. February 27, 1860. 8vo, pp 8. (Issued by the Republican Executive, Cong. Com). LINCOLN. The Republican Songster, for the Campaign of 1864. (Seal, E Pluribus Unum). Cincinnati : J. R. Hawley & Co., 164 Vine street. 1864. 16mo, pp 64. LINCOLN. The Terrible Tragedy at Washington. Assassina- tion of President Lincoln. Last hours and Death-bed Scenes of the President. A full and graphic account, from reliable authority, of this Great National Calamity. Attempt of the Conspirators to murder Secretary Seward, Vice President Johnson, and the whole cabinet. A Biographical Sketch with a correct likeness of all the parties in any way connected with the lamentable event. To which is added an authentic History of Assassins, and the distinguished personages of the world who have fallen by their hands. Philadel- phia : Published by Barclay & Co., 602 Arch Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 116. Illustrated. . The same in German, pp 100. 120 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. LINCOLN. The War Policy of the Administration. Letter of President Lincoln to Mass Convention at Springfield, 111. Aug. 16, 1863. Evening Journal Doc., No. 1. 8vo. LINCOLN. The Washington Despotism dissected in Articles from the Metropolitan Record. New York : Office of the Metro- politan Record, No. 419 Broadway. 1863. 12mo, pp 130. Contains the Administrative Telegraph, or, How it is done, a play in 3 acts. The Abolition Policy of the Administration, etc., etc. LINCOLN. The "Wigwam Edition." The Life, Speeches, and Public Services of Abraham Lincoln, together with a Sketch of the Life of Hannibal Hamlin, Republican Candidates for the offices of President and Vice President of the United States. (Monogram) New York : Rudd & Carleton, 130 Grand Street, Brook's Building, Cor. of Broadway. MDCCCLX. 12mo, pp 117, with portrait. LINCOLN. 39th Congress, 2d Session. S. R., 183. Joint Resolution thanking the Chambers of Senators and Deputies of Brazil for their Resolutions of Sorrow and Sympathy on the death of President Lincoln. Imperial 8vo, pp 1. LINCOLN. To Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Consideration on the Slavery question. Dec. 24, 1862. 8vo, pp 15. LINCOLN. To the Memory of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America, who died a Martyr to his country. Falling under the hand of a Traitor Assassin, on the night of the 14th day of April, 1865. The Fourth Anniversary of the beginning of the great War of Rebellion. Through which he had led the Nation (&c.,&c.). Printed in silver on a black glazed sheet 17* X H, by A. M. Clapp & Co., Buffalo, N. Y.; with a slight variation the same occupied a whole page of the Buffalo Morning Express April 17, 1865. LINCOLN. Trial of Abraham Lincoln by the Great Statesmen of the Republic. - A Council of the Past on the Tyranny of the present. The Spirit of the Constitution on the Bench. Abraham Lincoln, Prisoner at the Bar, his own Counsel. (Reported expressly for the New York Metropolitan Record). New York : Office of the Metropolitan Record, No. 419 Broadway. 1863. 8vo, pp 29. LINCOLN. Tribune Tracts. No. 4. National Politics. Speech of Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois, Delivered at the Cooper Institute, Monday, Feb. 27, 1860. 8vo, pp 15. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 121 LINCOLN. Tribune War Tracts, No. 5. President Lincoln on Valla ndigharn and " Arbitrary Arrests." 8vo, pp 4. LINCOLN. Tribune Tracts. No. 6. Life of Abraham Lincoln. 8vo, pp 32. LINCOLN. Tribute to the Declaration of Independence. Broad- side. LINCOLN. Tributes of the Nations to the memory of Abraham Lincoln (" cover title"). This is a reprint of the Appendix to the Diplomatic correspondence of 1865 (seepage 26), with the addition of an " Appendix " not in the other vol. This edition of 3,000 copies, was ordered specially by Congress to be printed by the Department of State, to be distributed only among members of Congress ; and for Governments, Corporations and Societies whose expressions of condo- lence are published in the vol. 4to, 930 pp. 1867. The cost of the edition was $18,179.54. A printed letter was gotten- up by the State Department to send to applicants for this book. The writer procured one, after much effort; it is difficult to obtain them, LINCOLN. U. S. A. The opinions of Abraham Lincoln, upon Slavery and its issues : indicated by his Speeches, Letters, Messages, and Proclamations. 8vo, pp 16. LINCOLN. What shall be done with the confiscated Negroes? The question discussed and a policy proposed in a letter to Hon. Abraham Lincoln (and eleven others). "God Almighty ! There i some soul of goodness in things evil would men observingly distil it out." Shakespeare. 8vo, pp 15. Signed, Manhattan. LINCOLN. When Abe comes marching home again, by " Our Ned." Portrait of Fremont. Mason & Co., Philadelphia, Pa. 8vo page. LINCOLN. Who will care for old Abe now ? A parody by J. M., published by H. De Marsan, N. Y. 6 verses. 8vo page. LINCOLN. Why the South hopes for Lincoln's Re-Election. (From theRichmond Enquirer of September 5, 1864). 8vo,one page. LINCOLN. Wide Awake Edition. The Life and Public Ser- vices of Hon. Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois, and Hon. Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine. Boston: Thayer & Eldridge, 114 and 116 Washington Street. 1860. 12mo, pp 320, portrait. 16 122 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. LINCOLN (Mrs.). Behind the Seams ; By a Nigger Woman who took in work from Mrs. Lincoln and Mrs. Davis. Price Ten Cents. New York : The National News Company, 21 and 23 Ann Street. 1868. 8vo, pp 23. LINCOLN (Mrs.). General Appeal. 4 to page. (To raise funds for Mrs. Lincoln. N. Y., Nov., 1867. Signed by several prominent gentlemen). LINCOLN (Mrs.). National Lincoln Memorial. 4to 1 page. (For the purpose of procuring a testimonial to Mrs. Lincoln. April 24, 1865. The secretary, Mrs. E. H. Derby, has kindly sent me the Manuscript "Records of the Committee," and 11 Newspaper cuttings relative to the object). LINCOLN (Mrs.). 41st Congress. 2d Session. S. R., 104. Joint Resolution granting a pension to Mrs. Mary Lincoln, widow of the late President of the United States. Imp. 8vo, 1 p. LINDEN. Our Martyr President. Music by 0. Linden. LONG ISLAND Historical Society's Report, for 1865. Devotes 4 pages to the Minute and Resolutions on the death of President Lincoln, Brooklyn, L. I. LOWELL. No. 16. The President's Policy. By James Russell Lowell. From the North American Review, January, 1864. 8vo, PP 22. LOWREY. The Commander in Chief; A defence upon legal grounds of the Proclamation of Emancipation ; and an answer to ex- judge Curtis's Pamphlet, entitled u Executive Power." Second Edition, with additional notes. By Grosvenor P Lowrey, a mem- ber of the New York Bar. New York : G. P. Putnam. 1863. 12mo, pp 34. LUDLOW. President Lincoln judged by his own words. By J. M. Ludlow, in Good Words (London, Eng.) for June, August and Dec. 1865. MACK. Respectfully dedicated to the People of the United States. President Lincoln's Funeral march, composed by E. Mack. Lee & Walker, Phil. Pa. 1865. MACKENNA. A short Biography of Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States, written in Chili, with the purpose of exhibiting the feelings of the Chilean nation towards the United LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 123 States in the hour of her most critical trials, by B. Vicuna Mac- kenna. 8vo, pp 25. (From a work on Chili by Daniel J. Hunter. New York : Printed by S. Hallet, No 60 Fulton street. 1866). McCLELLAN. General McClellan's Letter to President Lin- coln. July 7, 1862. 8vo, pp 2. McCLELLAN vs. Lincoln. Damning Disclosure of the Treat- ment of McClellan by Stanton and Lincoln. Testimony of Gen. H. M. Naglee. Secret History of the Famous First Council of War. Lincoln's Weakness and Stanton's Rudeness, etc., etc., etc. Sept. 27, 1864. 8vo, pp 4. i MACLEOD (Dr Norman). British Sympathy in our Affliction. Reprinted from Good Words in Hours at Home. July, 1865. MCMILLAN'S Magazine, for Feb., 1865. Article by Goldwin Smith. MAGIE. A discourse delivered in the Second Presbyterian church, Elizabeth, N. J., Aug. 8th, 1863, on occasion of the Public Thanksgiving appointed by Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, to commemorate the signal victories vouchsafed to the Federal Arms. By Rev. David Magie, D.D. New York: Printed by Francis Hart & Co., 63 Cortland Street. 1863. 8vo, pp28. MANSHIP. National Jewels : Washington, Lincoln, and the fathers of the Revolution. By Rev. Andrew Manship, of the Phil- adelphia Conference. Philadelphia : Compiled and Published by Rev. A. Manship, and for sale at the Depository of the Tract So- ciety, 119 North Sixth st., atPerkinpine & Higgins, 56 N. Fourth st., at Carlton & Porter's, 200 Mulberry st., New York ; James Magee, Boston, Mass. ; Poe & Hitchcock, Cincinnati, Ohio ; and at other Bookstores. 1865. 8vo, pp 123. Portrait of Washington. (56 pages are devoted to Mr. Lincoln). MARBLE. Letter to Abraham Lincoln. By Manton Marble, Editor of " The World," " Nulla potentia supra leges esse debit." Cicero. New York. Privately Printed. 1867. 8vo, pp 25. 99 copies. (Printed in large type, on heavy tinted paper and bound in muslin with gilt title on front cover. This letter is dated May 23, 1864, and was called forth by the suppression of the World for pub- lishing the bogus proclamation). LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. MARSHALL'S Engraving of Abraham Lincoln. 16mo, pp 13. Ticknor & Fields, Boston, Mass. MASSACHUSETTS. Resolves on the Death of Lincoln. MASSACHUSETTS. Sustain the Government. Stand by the President. 8vo, pp 7. Issued by Republican State Committee, Boston, Oct. 14. 1862. MERRILL. " Come all ye Gallant Citizens." By H. H. Merrill. Wright & Potter, Printers. Boston. 16 verses on an imperial 8vo page. MERRILL. In Memoriam. Quartette by Merrill. MERS. Lincoln's Funeral March, by Mers. MESSLER. Dr. [A.] Messler's Sermon in Commemoration of President Lincoln. Raritan, N. J. 1865. Printed on a sheet 10 X 20, with a border. MISSOURI. Address of the Committee from the State of Mis- souri to President Lincoln. (Washington, Sept. 30, 1863). 8vo, pp!2. MISSOURI. Letter from the Executive Committee of the Mis- souri Delegation to President Lincoln. Washington, Oct. 3, 1863. 8vo, pp 7. MONCRIEFF. Our Freedom-lit Banner, affectionately dedi- cated to Master " Tad," the beloved son of our late Noble and Lamented President, Abraham Lincoln, by K. Moncrieff.* 8vo page. Phil., Pa., June 7, 1865. MONTHLY Record of the Five Points House of Industry, New York. May, 1865. (A notice of Mr. Lincoln's death, and recalls his visit to the Institution in Feb., 1860). MONTHLY Religious Magazine. Boston. May, 1865. Life from the Dead. A sermon preached on the day following the assassina- tion of Abraham Lincoln, by Rufus Ellis. Address on the occasion of the Burial of President Lincoln, by Rufus Ellis. The Lesson of the Hour by E. J. Y. (Young) ; Our Great Sorrow, by E. H. S. (Sears). . The same. June, 1865. English Sympathy, by S. . The same. August, 1865. The Executions at Washing- ton ; by E. The same by S. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 125 . MOORE. Moral Grandeur of the Proclamation of Emancipa- tion A Sermon delivered on the day of National Thanksgiving, Dec. 7, 1865, in the Plymouth Congregational Church, Pittsburgh, Penn. : By Rev. Henry D. Moore, Pastor. Pittsburgh : Printed by W. S. Haven. 1866. 8vo, pp 20. MUDGE. The Forest Boy. A Sketch of the Life of Abraham Lincoln, for Young People. By Z. A. Mudge, Author of " Lady Huntingdon Portrayed," " The Christian Statesman," etc., etc. Four illustrations. New York : Published by Carlton & Porter, Sunday School Union, 209 Mulberry Street. 1867. 12mo, pp 321, illustrated. NATIONAL Freedman. New York. For May 1, 1865, contains a Notice of Stoddard's Ode on Death of Mr. Lincoln, and gives extracts ; also an Article on the Obsequies and Mr. Bancroft's ora- tion at Union Square. NATIONAL Preacher and The Prayer Meeting, May and June, 1865. In Memoriam of President Lincoln by Rev. Dr. Gurley. The National Bereavement, by Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Personal Forgiveness and Public Justice, by Rev. Robert R. Booth, D.D. Our National Sorrow, by Rev. Samuel T. Spear, D.D. God Vailing Himself, by Win. R. Williams, D.D. Victory and Reunion, by Stephen H. Tyng, D.D. Published by W. H. Bidwell. New York. 8vo, pp 165. NATIONAL Union Convention Presidential Election, 1864. Proceedings of the National Union Convention held in Baltimore, Md., June 7th and 8th, 1864. Reported by D. F. Murphy, of the Official Corps of Reporters for the United States Senate. New York : Baker & Godwin, Printers, Printing House Square, oppo- site City Hall. 1864. 8vo, pp 94. NAVY Department. General order, No. 51, Washington, April 15th, 1865. The Secretary announces the Death of the President, and orders the Officers of the Navy and Marine Corps to wear Mourning for six months. One page, note size. NAVY Department. Washington, April 20, 1865. An order from the Secretary directing three officers to accompany the President's remains to Springfield. 1 page, note size. NEW ENGLAND Loyal Publication Society. (Boston). No. 265. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Mortally 126 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. wounded by an assassin on the 14th of April. Died on the 15th of April, 1865. Follows Psalm Ixii. One page, note. NEW ENGLAND Loyal Publication Society. (Boston) No. 266. April 27, 1865. The character of Abraham Lincoln, &c., Broadside. . The same. No. 267. May 4, 1865. The President and Loyal Publication Society. Boston. Broadside. . The same. No. 268. May 11, 1865. Abraham Lincoln and Emancipation &c. Broadside. . The same. No. 269. May 17, 1865. President Lincoln, &c. Broadside. NEW JERSEY. Addresses delivered at the Presentation of the Portrait of Abraham Lincoln. By the Committee of the House of Assembly, February 12, 1867. Trenton, N. J. Printed at the office of the State Gazette. 1867. 8vo, pp 33. NEW YORK. Annual Report of the Inspector General of the State of New York, For the year ending December 31, 1865. Albany : C. Wendell, Legislative Printer. 1866. 8vo, pp 174. (Contains " Funeral obsequies of President Lincoln." 4 pp.) NEW YORK. N. Y. Christian Commission No. 2. Good words from the President. A Proclamation. 8vo, pp 4. Contains Mr. Lincoln's Sabbath order, etc., etc. NEW YORK Social Science Review. New York. July, 1865. Abraham Lincoln. NICHOLAS. A Review of the Argument of President Lincoln and Attorney General Bates, in favor of Presidential power to sus- pend the privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus. By S. S. Nicholas, of Louisville, Ky. Louisville, Ky. : Printed by Bradley & Gilbert, corner of First and Market streets. 1861. 8vo, pp 38. NICOL. A Voice from the Army, by R. B. Nicol. Washington, D. C. 1864. 6 verses, 8vo page. (Acrostic, We vote for Lincoln and Johnson^). NICOL. Hurra for Lincoln, by R. B. Nicol. Washington, D.C., 1864. 3 verses, 8vo page. Cuts of Lincoln ; Columbia, and soldier with flag. NICOLAY (Jno. G.). Springfield, 111. This gentleman is pre- paring a biography of Mr. Lincoln, whose private secretary he was during the whole of his presidential term. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 127 NORTH American Review. Boston, Jan., 1864. The Presi- dent's Policy. A Review of the President's Message, Dec. 9,1863. 27 pages. . The same, October, 1864. The Next General Election. 16pp. . The same, Jan., 1865, devotes 21 pages to a review of Henry J. Raymond's history of the administration of President Lincoln published in 1864. OBITUARY. . (Cut of coffin). One page, note, black border. A burlesque account of the death of the " Sham Democracy," Nov. 6th (1864). The funeral to take place at Washington on the 4th of March, " Services to be conducted by A. Lincoln." OLD ABE, the Miller ; or, the Campaigns of Richmond. A Story. 8vo, pp 8. In rhyme, evidently issued in 1864. OLD GUARD (The). A monthly magazine. New York. March, 1867. Abraham Lincoln's Place in History. 11 pages. . The same. September, 1867. The Satires of Juvenal, with some Parallels between the Public career of Domitian and Lin- coln. 10 pages. . The sams. Nov., 1867. Lincoln and Davis, by Dr. J. H. Van Evrie. 4 pages. OLSSEN. Sermon preached on Easter Morning, 1865. By. Rev. Win. W. Olssen, M. A., at the church of St. James the Less. Scarsdale, N. Y. New York : C. S. Westcott & Co., printers, No. 79 John Street. 1865. 8vo, pp 13. OWEN (Hon. Robert Dale). This gentleman has gathered many facts for a biography of Mr. Lincoln, and has completed several chapters of the work ; it is possible, however, that they may appear in some magazine instead of in book form. OWEN. The policy of Emancipation ; in three letters to the Sec. of War, the President of the United States and the Sec. of the Trea- sury. By Robert Dale Owen. 12mo, pp 48. J. B. Lippincott & Co. Phil., Pa. 1863. PADDOCK. The Nation's Strength, Fidelity and Duty. A Thanksgiving Discourse, delivered in St. Andrews church, Phila- delphia, November 26, 1868. By the Rev. Wilbur F. Paddock, rector. Published by request of Members of the Congregation. 128 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Philadelphia: F. Scofield, 36 South Fifth Street. 1868 8vo, pp 29. (Contains remarks upon Mr. Lincoln's death). PALMER. Washington and the Union. Oration delivered by Hon. Robert M. Palmer, Speaker of the Senate of Pennsylvania, at the Reception of President Lincoln at Harrisburg, and the Rais- ing of the National Flag on the Dome of the Capitol, on the 22d day of February, 1861. 8vo, pp 17. PARKHURST. The Nation Mourns. Funeral march to the memory of Abraham Lincoln the Martyr President, by Mrs. E. A. Parkhurst. Horace Waters, New York. 1865. With, portrait. PERHAM. Gen. Perham's Platform. The most feasible plan yet offered for suppressing the Rebellion. " God Bless Abraham Lincoln." Boston : Press of Alfred Mudge & Son, 34 School Street, 1862. 8vo, pp!2. PERKINS. The Picture and The Men : Being Biographical Sketches of President Lincoln and his Cabinet; together with an account of the Life of the celebrated Artist, F. B. Carpenter, Author of the Great National Painting. The first reading of the emancipa- tion Proclamation before the Cabinet by President Lincoln ; includ- ing also an account of the Picture ; An Account of the crisis which produced it ; And an Appendix containing the great Proclamation and the Supplementary Proclamation of January 1, 1863; together with a Portrait of the Artist, and a Key to the Picture. Compiled by Fred. B. Perkins, Editor of " The Galaxy, ' formerly one of the editors of the " New York Tribune," and of the " New York Inde- pendent." Published by A. J. Johnson, New York. F. G. & A. C. Rowe, Cleveland, Ohio; C. Allen, M.D., Chicago, 111. 1867. 12mo, pp 190. PETTEE. Address by Rev. Joseph Pettee, on the occasion of the funeral of President Lincoln, delivered in Abington, Mass., April 18, 1865. 5 p. New Jerusalem Magazine, May, 1865. Boston, Mass. PHILADELPHIA. Preamble and Resolutions adopted by the Fire Department of Philadelphia (photograph of Mr. Lincoln), April 20, 1865. Expressive of regret of the death of our late President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. (Printed in bronze on black glazed paper, 17$ X 12). LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 129 PHILADELPHIA. Resolutions, relative to the death of the President of the United States, on the 15th and 20th of April, 1865, by the Select and Common Councils of Philadelphia. 8vo, pp 15. PHILADELPHIA. (Seal). Select Council Chamber. Phil., April 21, 1865. (A printed circular of invitation to attend the obsequies, issued by the committee). PHILADELPHIA. Third Annual Report of the Board of Directors of The Union League, of Philadelphia. December 11, 1865. Philadelphia : Henry B. Ashmead, Book and Job Printer, Nos. 1102 and 1104 Sansom Street. 1865. 8vo, pp22. PHRENOLOGICAL Journal. S. R. Wells, New York, May, 1865. Contains " Death of the President," With a portrait, one page quarto. PINKERTON. History and Evidence of the Passage of Abraham Lincoln from Harrisburgh, Pa., to Washington, D. C., on the 22d and 23rd of February, 1861. Republican Print, 93 Washington Street, Chicago. 8vo, pp!8. (By Allen Pinkerton, of Chicago, 111.). POLITICAL Extracts. 8vo, pp 41. POORE (Ben. Perley). The Conspiracy Trial, 3 vols. instead of 2 as given on pp 68. 12mo, pp 480, 552, 552. PORTER. The Martyred Patriot, Grand Funeral March per- formed on the reception of the remains of our beloved President Abraham Lincoln, at Philadelphia, April 22, 1865, by J. W. Porter. J. Marsh, Philadelphia, Pa. PORTLAND. Funeral services, in the City Hall, Portland, (Me.), April 19, 1865, commemorative of the Death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Note sheet, 3 pages. PORTRAITS and Biographies of the leading Military and Naval Officers of the United States, including those of Presidents Lincoln and Johnson. Cincinnati, Ohio : Wrightson & Company, Printers, No. 167 Walnut street. 1867. PORTRAITS and Sketches of the Lives of all the Candidates for the Presidency and Vice Presidency, for 1860, comprising Eight Portraits engraved on Steel, Facts in the life of each, the Four Platforms, the Cincinnati Platform, and the Constitution of the United States. New York : J. C. Buttre, 48 Franklin street. 1860. 8vo, pp 32. 17 130 LIS'.'OLS BIBLIOGRAPHY. PORTSMOUTH. City of Portsmouth, N. H. Joint Resolutions of the city council. April, 1865. 4to, 1 page. POTTS. Freemen's Guide to the Polls, and a solemn appeal to American Patriots, by Rev. Wm. D. Potts, M. D. Newark, N. J. New Fork : Published by the Author, 49 Walker St. 1 864. 12mo, pp 125. (Bitterly denouncing Mr. Lincoln ; in favor of Gen'l Mc- Clellan's election, and sustaining the " Confederate States)." RAIL ROAD. Chicago and Alton Rail Road Company. Time Table for the special train, conveying the funeral cortege with the remains of the late President from Chicago to Springfield, Tuesday, May 2, 1865. Imp. 8vo, 2 pages. RAIL ROAD. Cleveland, Columbus & Cincinnati R. R. Special Time Schedule for the train conveying the Remains of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the U. S., and escort from Washington, D. C- to Springfield, 111. Cleveland to Columbus, Saturday, April 29. 1865. (Printed on an imp. 8vo page, black border; on the top of the page is an illustration of Lincoln's bier by the side of which Columbia kneels weeping, at either end is a soldier, sailor), &c. RAIL ROAD. New York Central Rail Road. Time Table of Special Train and Pilot with the Remains of Abraham Lincoln, late President of theUnited States, Wednesday, April 26th, 1865. 8vo, pp 1. RAIL ROAD. Time Table. New York Central Rail Road. General Superintendent's office, Albany. April 25, 1865. The fol- lowing order from the War Department will be obeyed by employees of this road, H. W. Chittenden, Gen'l Supt. Then follows Gen. McCallum's regulations. One page, note, black border. RAIL ROAD. Time Table New York Central Rail Road. Special Time Table for funeral train, conveying the remains of our late President Abraham Lincoln, from Albany to Buffalo. Wednes- day, April 26, 1865 3 pages, note paper, black border. RAIL ROAD. Time Table. New York Central Rail Road. Time Table of Special Train and Pilot with the remains of Abraham Lincoln, late President of the United States, Wednesday, April 26th, 1865. One imp. 8vo page, black border. RAIL ROAD The Nation mourns. (Cut of Eagle and flags). Buffalo and Erie Rail Road special time table for funeral train con- LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 131 veying the Kemains of the late President Abraham Lincoln, from Buffalo to Erie. Thursday, April 27, 1865. Note sheet, 2 pages. RAIL ROAD Ticket. Obverse, For Springfield and Return. Funeral Escort. Mr. Sec'y. Not transferable. Reverse, For Michigan city and Return, &c., as on the obverse. RAPHAEL'S Prophetic Almanac, or the Prophetic Messenger, Weather Guide and Ephemeris for 1863. T. T. Lemare, London, Eug. 2 pages devoted to " Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America." RAYMOND. History of the Administration of President Lincoln : Including his Speeches, Letters, Addresses, Proclamations, and Messages, with a Preliminary sketch of his life. By Henry J. Ray- mond. New York : J. C. Derby & N. C. Miller, No. 5 Spruce street. 1864. 12mo, pp 496, portrait. RAYMOND. The Life of Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois. By Henry J. Raymond ; and the Life of Andrew Johnson, of Tennessee. By John Savage. New York : Derby and Miller, No. 5 Spruce street. 1864. 12mo, pp 136. RAYMOND. The Life (portrait) of Abraham Lincoln, by Henry J. Raymond, and of Andrew Johnson, by John Savage. New York : National Union Executive Committee, Astor House. 12mo, pp 136. (On thin paper for campaign distribution. Title on the cover only). REDCLIFFE (J.). Historical Romance of Abraham Lincoln Republished in the " Phil. Family Journal " from a European work j but discontinued through the failure of the foreign firm. REED. The House that Jeff built. (Illustration of the " Banner of the South Carolina convention.") By John J. Reed. New York : American News Company. 1868. 8vo, pp 16. (Written after the style of the old nursery rhyme, This Is The House That Jack Built. Every page is illustrated, one of which is the death bed scene of Mr. Lincoln, and 24 lines follow). REPUBLICAN National Convention Proceedings of the Repub- lican National Convention, held at Chicago, May 16, 17 and 18. 1860. 8vo, pp 153. REPUBLICAN Wide Awakes of Albany. Three circulars issued by this organization (June 16th, 1860) in behalf of Lincoln and Hamlin ; one contains four full length views of Wide Awake sin form. 132 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. RITCHIE. Ritchie's Historical Picture, Death of President Lincoln. Engraved from the Painting by A. H. Ritchie. Size of Engraving 32 X 2H inches. Artist's Proofs, $30.00. Proof after Letters, $20.00. New York : Published by A. H. Ritchie & Co., 39 Park Row. 1868. 12mo, pp 11. (With an engraved key to the characters in the painting). ROGERS. Nation's Loss. Solo and chorus, by C. E Rogers. ROGERS (Rev. Dr.). Preached in the South Dutch Church, New York, April 16, being the Sabbath succeeding the assassination of President Lincoln. The National Preacher, N. Y., July, 1865. ROOT. Farewell, Father, Friend and Guardian. By Geo. F. Root, Chicago. ROOT. Father Abraham's Reply to the Six Hundred Thou- sand. Song by Geo. F. Root. Chicago. RUGGLES. To his Excellency Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Samuel B. Ruggles, June 9, 1862. 4to, pp 15. Relating to National Defence and Commerce. SAILOR'S Magazine and Seaman's Friend, New York, May, 1865. Covers in mourning, and printed on the front one is " The Nation mourns the death of Abraham Lincoln." Inside is an anecdote " The Commander-in-chief of the Army and Navy a Christian." SANITARY Commission Bulletin, May 1, 1865, Philadelphia. " President Lincoln " SCRIPPS. Life of Abraham Lincoln, by Hon. J. L. Scripps, Chicago, 111. 1860. Tribune Co., Chicago. SEAMAN. What Miscegenation is ! and (Picture of a colored man kissing a white woman) what we are to expect now that Mr. Lincoln is re-elected. By L. Seaman, LL. D. Waller & Willets, Publishers, New York. 8vo, pp 8. SEARS. The People's Keeper : or Funeral Address on the death of Abraham Lincoln, late lamented president of the United States, with the Principal incidents of his life. Delivered by Hiram Sears, A.M., in the city of Mount Carmel, 111., Sunday, April 23, 1865, and dedicated to the Loyal men, women, and children of all parties in the country. 8vo, pp 18. Cincinnati. 1865. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 1 33 SEVENTH Regiment Veterans of the National Guard. (Coat of Arms) Head-Quarters Seventh Regiment Armory, New York, April 29, 1865. (Resolutions on the death of Lincoln. 3 pages letter sheet). SMITH. Abraham Lincoln, by Matthew Hale Smith. 8 pages with portrait in Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, May, 1865. New York. SMITH. A Proclamation (State Seal), by His Excellency James Y. Smith, Gov. of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. (Printed on cap paper 17 X 14, " Designating Thurs- day June 1, 1865, a day of Humiliation and Mourning, for our National bereavement"). SMITH. A Proclamation by James Y. Smith, Governor of the State of Rhode Island. Let the Nation Mourn. Small 4to, 1 page. Issued on the 15th of April, announcing the death of the Pre- sident, and requesting the clergy of the state to assemble their con- gregations on Sunday the 16th instant to offer up prayers to Almighty God, &c., &c. SMITH. Considerations on the Slavery Question. Addressed to President Lincoln, by Truman Smith. 8vo, pp 15. SMITH. The Civil War in America : an address read at the last meeting of the Manchester Union and Emancipation Society, by Goldwin Smith. London : Simpkin, Marshall, & Co., Stationers Hall Court. Manchester : A. Ireland & Co. 1866. 12mo, pp 96. Contains " Proceedings in reference to the assassination of President Lincoln" in an appendix to the Report of the above Society. SMITH. The Great American Crisis, &c., &c., embracing Phren- ological character, and pen and ink portraits of the President, his leading generals and Cabinet officers, &c.,&c., by L. M. Smith. Cin- cinnati. 8vo, pp 36. 1862. SPEED. Oration of James Speed, upon the Inauguration of the bust of Abraham Lincoln, at Louisville, Ky., February 12, 1867. Louisville : Bradley & Gilbert, corner Third and Green streets. 1867. 8vo pp 8. SPRINGFIELD. Guards are instructed, &c. This is a small hand bill containing instructions to the guards on the day of the funeral at Springfield, 111. 134 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. SPRINGFIELD. Guards will pass one person to and from the State House, by the west gate. Sharon Tyndale, Sec. of State ; Orlin H. Miner, Auditor; James H. Beveridge, Treasurer. White card, used on the occasion of the funeral ceremonies at Springfield, 111. SPRINGFIELD. Guards will respect this State officer's Pass. Sharon Tyndale, Sec. of State ; Orlin H. Miner, Auditor; James H. Beveridge, Treasurer. Blue card used on occasion of the funeral ceremonies at Springfield, 111. SPRINGFIELD. Invitation issued by the Committee at Spring- field, 111., April 21, to attend the funeral of Mr. Lincoln in that city. 1 page, note sheet, heavy black border. SPRINGFIELD. Obsequies of President Lincoln. Order of Funeral Procession. 4to, 1 page. (Springfield, 111., May 4, 1865). SPRINGFIELD. Programme of Division No. 7. 4 pages, note paper, used on the occasion of the funeral ceremonies at Springfield, 111. SPRINGFIELD. Programme of Section 1, Masonic Fraternity, Division 7. 2 pages, note paper. Used on occasion of the funeral ceremonies at Springfield, 111. STARKWEATHER. Hurrah for Abe and Andy. Song by Starkweather. 1864. STATE Department. Papers relating to Foreign affairs. Part 1 and 2 of the Diplomatic Correspondence 1866. (Pub. 1867). Contains papers relative to President Lincoln and to the capture of Surratt, one of the alleged conspirators. STATE Department. Washington, April 17, 1865. Assistant Secretary announces the death of Mr. Lincoln, and orders mourning to be worn for 6 months by those subject to the state Dep't. This circular was sent to all our ministers and consuls abroad. 4to, 1 page, mourning border. STEELE. Song on the Death of President Abraham Lincoln. By Silas S. Steele. J. Magee, pub. Philadelphia, Pa. 8vo page, red and blue border. . The same printed in black. STOCKTON Hymn for the National Funeral, (Cut of monu- ment, weeping-willow, and a female) By Rev. T. H. Stockton. A. W. Auner, pub. Philadelphia, Penn. 4 verses, 8vo page. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 135 STOEVER (Prof. L.). Abraham Lincoln. In Evangelical Quarterly Review. July, 1865. STOWE. Abraham Lincoln, by Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe. Being 100 pages on Mr. Lincoln, with a portrait, from Mrs. Stowe's book entitled Men of our Times. 1869. SURRATT. Life and Extraordinary Ad ventures of John H. Sur- . ratt, the Conspirator. A correct account and highly interesting Narrative of his doings and adventures from childhood to the pre- sent time. Philadelphia : Published by Barclay and Co., 602 Arch street. 8vo, pp 136, illustrated and portrait on cover. SURRATT. The Career and Adventures of John H. Surratt, since his flight from America, after the execution of his Mother, M-rs. Mary Surratt, Payne, Harold, and Atzerott for the assassination of President Lincoln. His enlistment in the Pope's Zouaves in Italy. His betrayal by his Mistress to U. S. Minister King. His arrest and desperate escape. His flight to Egypt, aided by Brigands whose band he had joined. His final arrest in Egypt by United States Consul Hale. Philadelphia : Published bj C. W. Alexander, 224 South Third street. Entered according to act of Congress in the year 1866, by C. W. Alexander, in the clerk's office of the dis- trict court in and for the Eastern district of Pennsylvania. 8vo, pp 99. illustrated. TAYLOR. The Ballad of Abraham Lincoln. By Bayard Taylor.' With illustrations by Sol. Eytinge, Jr. Engraved and printed in colors by Robert Hooper & Co. (Monogram F. 0. & Co.) Boston : Fields, Osgood, & Co. 1870. Large paper, pp 8. Illuminated cover, and three oil pictures. THAYER. Character and Career of Abraham Lincoln. By Rev. W. M. Thayer. In the Home Monthly, Dec., 1865, and Jan. and Feb. numbers, 1866. C. H. Pearson & Co., Boston, Mass. THAYER. Life and Character of Abraham Lincoln. By Wil- liam M. Thayer, Author of the " Pioneer boy," The " Youth's History of the Rebellion," etc. Boston : Walker. Wise and Com- pany, 245 Washington street. 1864. 12mo, pp 76, portrait and view of Mr. Lincoln's early home. THAYER. The Pioneer Boy, and how he became President. By William M. Thayer, Author of "The Bobbin Boy," "The Printer Boy," " The Poor Boy and Merchant Prince," " Working 136 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. and Winning," "Tales from Genesis. In two volumes," etc. Bos- ton : Walker, Wise, and Company, 245 Washington street. 1863. 12mo, pp 310. Illustrated. THAYER (Wm. M.). apoikos pais, etoi existoresis ton peripe- teion tou biou tou nun proedrou ton enomenon politeion tes Amerikes Abraam Ligkolnos, Me eikonographias, Ek tou Agglikou upo, G. Koustantinou. En Athenais, tupois Lakonias. 1865. pp viii, 299, 12mo. (A Greek translation of the Pioneer Boy). THE PLATFORMS. Baltimore, Chicago. . Points of Differ- 1864. Broadside. THE PRESIDENT is dead. War Department, Washington, April 15, 1865. To Maj. Gen. Dix. Abraham Lincoln died this morning, at twenty-two minutes after seven o'clock. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War. This was printed on a large sheet, in Buffalo, N. T., by Matthews & War- ren, and distributed through the city. THE REAL Chicago Platform, as expounded by the Democratic Orators at Chicago. Broadside. THE WIDE AWAKES. Six Verses. 8vo page. Song. THE YOUNG INVINCIBLE. By a Member of the Minute Men's Glee Club. 4 Verses. 8vo, page. J. H Johnson, publisher. Philadelphia, Penn. THOMPSON. A Nation Mourns her Chief. Music by H. S. Thompson. THOMPSON. Memorial Service for Three Hundred Thousand Union Soldiers, with the Commemorative Discourse. By Joseph P. Thompson, D.D. New York : Published by the Loyal Publication Society. 1866. 8vo, p 28. TOWNSEND. The Life, Crime and Capture of John Wilkes Booth, with a full Sketch of the Conspiracy of which he was the leader; and the Pursuit, Trial and Execution of his Accomplices. By George Alfred Townsend, a Special Correspondent. New York : Dick & Fitzgerald, Publishers. 1865. 8vo, pp 65, illustrated. . The Same. And with this difference : on page 62 of both, is " Letter VIII," in this vol. it is dated May 26, in the former, May 17 ; and each omitting the other. In this is " Letter IX," and " Extra Mural Scenes," neither of which are in the former, pp 80. Same illustrations. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 137 TOWNSEND. Virginia F. Abraham Lincoln. Arthur's Home Magazine, Philadelphia, June, 1865. TREASURY Department. Washington, April 17, 1865. The Secretary orders all in his Department to wear Mourning for Six Months. 4to, 1 page, heavy black border. TREMAINE. 1864, 1865. The Tremaine Brothers' Lincoln and Johnson Campaign Song Book, containing 40 pages of Soul- Stirring Pieces, written expressly for the Campaign. a The Copper- heads have had their day, We reckon, We reckon ; They've done their work and will get their pay ; Glory Hallelujah ! " New York : The American News Co., Wholesale Agents, 121 Nassau street. 1864. 16mo, p 38. TREUER. Nation in Tears. Dirge by Treuer, TURNER. Abraham's Draught. Song by J. W. Turner. TURNER. A Nation Weeps. Song by J. W. Turner. TURNER. Little Tad. Words and Music by J. W. Turner. TURNER Live but one Moment. Words and music by J. W. Turner. TURNER. The Nation's honored dead. By J. W. Turner. UNION. League club, N. Y. April 22, 1865. A circular issued to the Members to take part in funeral ceremonies at N. Y. on the 24th. Note sheet. UNION League of America. In Memoriam. His Excellency, Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America. Died at Washington, District of Columbia, Saturday, the 15th of April, Anno Domini, 1865. Tribute of Respect of Subordinate Council, Number Three, 19th Ward. City of New York, of the Union League of America. Preamble and Resolutions. April 24, 1865. 8vo, p 4. UNION League of Philadelphia. No. 17. Abraham Lincoln. 8vo, p 12. 1864. UNION League of Philadelphia. Third Annual Report of the Board of Directors of the Union League, of Philadelphia. Decem- ber 11, 1865. Philadelphia: Henry B. Ashmead, Book and Job Printer, Nos. 1102 and 1104, Sansom street. 1865. 8vo, p 22. 18 138 LINCOLN U. S. SANITARY Commission. Letter to President Lincoln. August5, 1865. p8. U. S. Sanitary Commission. Letter to the President of the United States. July 21, 1862. p 8. U. S. Sanitary Commission. Letter to the President of the United States, p 4. U. S. Sanitary Commission, Washington. October 1, 1861. Letter to the Loyal Women of America, with a note from Mr. Lin- coln. Circular. UPH AM. Abraham Lincoln. " The mourners go about the streets." Eccl., xii, 5. By Louise S. Upham. Published by C. Magnus. New York. A Poem printed on note paper, with black border. At the top a portrait of Lincoln, surrounded with weeping soldier, and two females. UPHAM. Lincoln lies Sleeping. By Nathan Upham. H. De Marsan, Publisher. New York. 4 verses. 8vo page. UPHAM. The Nation is Weeping. By Louise S. Upham. H. De Marsan, Publisher. New York. 1865. 4 verses. 8vo page. Cuts of Tomb, Flag and Cannon. VANDENHOFF. Treason's Masterpiece. By George Vanden- hoff. New York. 17th April, 1865. 12mo page. VICTOR. The Private and Public Life of Abraham Lincoln, Comprising a full account of his Early Years, and a succinct Record of his career as Statesman and President. By 0. J. Victor : Author of Lives of " Garibaldi," " Winfield Scott," and " John Paul Jones," etc. New York : Beadle & Company, Publishers, 1 1 8 William Street. 1864. 16mo, p 98. Illustration. : . The same as above, with the addition of four pages " In Memoriam," and omitting the last article from Harpers' Weekly. The Title on the cover of this edition, is, " The Private and Public Life of (portrait) Abraham Lincoln. Born Feb. 12, 1809. Died April 15, 1865. New York : Beadle & Company, 118 William street ; T. S. Hawks, Buffalo, N. Y. pp 69. Published after Mr. Lin- coln's death. WALKER. Letter of Hon. R. J. Walker, in favor of the Re- election of Abraham Lincoln. London: September 30, 1864. 8vo, P 20. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 139 WALKER. Letter of Hon. R. J. Walker, in favor of the Re- election of Abraham Lincoln. London : September 30, 1864. (Continental Monthly, New York, for December, 1864). WALLACE. National Anthem for the Obsequies of the late President Lincoln, in Union Square. New York. By William Ross Wallace. 4 verses. 8vo. WAR Department, Adjutant-General's Office, Washington, April 16, 1865. General Orders No. 66, announces to the Armies the Death of Mr. Lincoln, with orders referring to the Event. 2 pages, note size. WAR Department, Adjutant-General's Office, Washington, April 17, 1865. General Orders, No. 69. Announces that labor will be suspended in the Dep't, on the day of the Funeral ; ordering Minute Guns to be fired, etc. 1 page, note size. WAR Department, Adjutant-General's Office, Washington, April 17, 1865. Official arrangement at Washington, for the Funeral of Mr. Lincoln. 3 pages, note size. WAR Department, Adjutant-General's Office, Washington, April 20, 1865. General Orders, No. 72, appointing General Officers, and a guard of Honor, to accompany the remains of Mr. Lincoln to Springfield. 1 page, note size. WAR Department. Adjutant-General's Office. Washington. April 22, 1865. General Orders. Appointing General Ekin in place of General C. Thomas, to accompany the remains of Mr. Lin- coln to Springfield. 1 page, note size. WAR Department. [Free Transportation.] Adjutant-General's office. Washington. April 20, 1865. A card of Invitation to accompany the remains of President Lincoln to Springfield. WAR Department. Washington. April 18, 1865. Special Or- der regulating the Transportation of the Remains of Mr. Lincoln to Springfield. 3 pages, note size. WAR Department. Order of the Procession (in Washington, April 19). 8vo page. WAR DEPARTMENT. Surratt (photograph). Booth (pho- tograph). Harold (photograph). War department, Washington, April 20, 1865, $100,000 REWARD ! THE MURDERER of our late 140 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. beloved President, Abraham Lincoln, is still at large. 850,000 Re- ward will be paid by this Department for his apprehension, in addi- tion to any reward offered by Municipal authorities or State Executives. $25,000 REWARD, will be paid for the apprehension of John H. Surratt, one of Booth's Accomplices. $25,000 Reward will be paid for the apprehension of David C. Harold, another of Booth's accomplices. (Here follows a warning to the public not to harbor them, or their accomplices, under the penalty of death, &c., &c., signed by Edwin M. Stanton, Sec., of War. Then follows a full description of the above). Printed on a sheet 12 X 24. . The same, except that the names and photographs at the top are omitted, and a notice at the bottom : there is some differ- ence in the description and spelling of names. Printed on a sheet 221 x Hi b 7 Geo - F - Nesbitt & Co., New York. WEIS Rev. John. April 19, 1865. The Friend of Pro- gress. New York: June, 1865. WELLS S. R.. Abraham Lincoln. The Martyr President. (With Portrait) Illustrated Annual of Phrenology and Physiognomy for 1866. New York. WE MOURN the Nation's Loss. Abraham Lincoln. April 15, 1865. Broadside : size, 21 by 13J. WHITING. War Powers of the President. By Wm. Whiting. Boston. 1862. 8vo. WILKS. English Criticism on President Lincoln's Anti-slavery Proclamation. WILLSON. The Proclamation of Freedom. A Sermon preached in the North Church, Salem. January 4, 1863. By Edmund B. Willson, Minister of the Church. Published by request. Salem : T. J. -Hutchinson, Printer. 1863. 8vo, p. 16. WILSON. Colonel James Grant. Mr. Lincoln's Favorite Poem, and its Author. Hours at Home. New York: September, 1865. WINNER. He's gone to the arms of Abraham. By Sep. Win- ner. Philadelphia, Pa. . The same on an 8vo page. J. H. Johnson, Publisher, Phila. WOLCOTT. Lincoln's song. By Wolcott. . LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 141 YEAMAN. Speech on the President's Proclamation. Decem- ber 18, 1862. By Hon. Geo. H. Yeaman, of Kentucky. YE BOOK of Copperheads. Contains 24 Caricatures, with verses. 1863. 30 pages. ZIEBER. Our Flag. By John L. Zieber. 8vo page. J. H Johnson, Philadelphia. (Lines suggested on witnessing Abraham Lincoln raise the Flag on Independence Hall. Philadelphia. February 22, 1861). PORTRAITS, ENGRAVINGS, ETC. No newspaper portraits or engravings are mentioned in this list. The title is given first. The actual size of the engraving, and not the plate, is given. " Signed " is used where the original was a fac simile of Mr. Lincoln's writing. A. Lincoln J. C. Buttre, New York, Publisher. Size, 3 by 2. This was also printed on silk badges, during the campaign of 1860. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Engraved by J. C. Buttre. 1860. Size, 5Jby 4J. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Engraved and Published by J. "C. Buttre. New York. Size, 5 by 4J. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Size, 3 by 3. (A first proof on India paper. Engraved by J. C. Buttre). A.Lincoln. (Signed). Engraved by A. H. Ritchie. Published by Derby & Miller. New York. Size, 6i by 4J. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Engraved by A. H. Ritchie. Derby & Miller, Publishers. New York. Size, 4$ by 3J. A. Lincoln. A. H. Ritchie, Engraver. Derby & Miller, Pub- lishers. 1865. Size, 6 by 4i. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Portrait and Illustrated border. Size, 6 by 3*. A. Lincoln. H. W. Smith, Sc., S. Walker, Boston. Size, 8 by 6*. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Engraved by W. Gr. Jackman. Size, 4 by 3J. (Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, 1865). A. Lincoln. W. Gr. Jackman, Engraver. Size, 4 by 4J. 142 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. A. Lincoln. J. Serz, Sc. Size, 3| by 3. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Engraved and Printed at the Treasury Department. Size, 5i by 3|. A. Lincoln. J. C. McRae, Engraver. Virtue & Co., Pub- lishers. New York. Size, 8 by 6. Underneath the portrait is a small view of the " Cabinet Council." A. Lincoln. G. E. Perine & Co., New York, Engravers. Rice & Allen, Publishers. Chicago, 111. 1866. Size, 15 by 12. Alle- gorical border. A.Lincoln. (Signed). Middleton, Strobridge & Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. 1860. Size, 4f by 3. A.Lincoln. (Signed). J. Rogers, Sculptor. Size, 6i by 4J. A. Lincoln. (Signed). W. H. & 0. H. Morrison. Washing- ton, D. C. Size, 6f by 4. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Size, 4$ by 3J. (Sampson, Low, Son & Co. London, England. 1861). A. Lincoln. (Signed). Size 5 by 4. A. Lincoln. Size, 3J by 2}. On a card. A. Lincoln. Size, 3 by 2. On a card. A. Lincoln. Size, 2} by 2. On a card. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Size, 6J- by 5. (B. B. Russell & Co., Boston). A. Lincoln. (Signed). " With Malice towards none, with Charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in." A. Lincoln, R. White- church, Sc. J. E. Potter, Philadelphia, Pa. Size, 3 by 3. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Alexander Strahan, London and New York, 1866. Size 4} by 3'. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Bacon & Co., London, England. Size, 3 by 2|. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Pub. by Ohio State Journal, Columbus. Size, 4 by 3J. A. Lincoln, portrait with view of the Capitol underneath. B. B. Russell & Co., Boston. Size, 8| by 5J. A.Lincoln. (Signed). Moore, Wilstach& Baldwin, Cincinnati, 1864. Size, 6 by 4J. A. Lincoln. G. B. McClellan. Oval portraits. Dr. W. R. Merwin, N. Y. Size, 2J. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Late President of the United States. Miller & Mathews, photos. H. W. Smith, New York. D. Apple- ton & Co., N. Y. Size, 4| by 4. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 143 A. Lincoln. (Signed). By 0. Stark; J. Mayer & Co., publishers, Boston ; and John Russell, Portland. Size, 151 by 13. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Nach einer, photographic, Stahlstich v Weger in Leipzig, Verlag v. Otto Spamer in Leipzig. Size, 5J by 4. A. Lincoln. Western Engraving Co., Chicago. Size, 4f by 3. A Lincoln. Portrait. Size, 3J by 3. A. Lincoln. (Signed). Engraved by Samuel Sartain after the miniature from life by J. Henry Brown in the possession of Judge Read. James Irwin, publisher, Phil. Size, 5| by 4. A. Lincoln. (Signed). 16th President of the United States. Engraved by Perine & Giles, N. Y., 1865. Size, 7 by 7. A Lincoln. Our martyred president. The friend of Man, Ser- vant of God. The Nation his Mourner. And the country his mon- ument. Wm. G. Robertson, publisher, New York, oval. Size, 9 by 61. Abraham Lincoln. Size, 3| by 3. (Fowler and Wells, New York). Abraham Lincoln. National Bank Note Co. New York. Size, 2J by 2i. Used on $500 and 810,000 United States Government Bonds. First proof on India paper. Abraham Lincoln. American Bank Note Co., N. Y. Size, \l by If. First proof on India paper. Abm. Lincoln. National Bank Note Co., N. Y. Size, If by 1J. First proof on India paper. Abraham Lincoln. Magee, Philadelphia. Size, 1\ by 4. (Full length view). Abraham Lincoln. L. Prang & Co., Boston, Publishers, 1865. Size, 1H by 8J. Abraham Lincoln. L. Prang & Co., Boston, Mass. Size, 11 by 8. Tinted lithograph. Abraham Lincoln. L. Prang & Co., Boston. Size, 2 by If. Abraham Lincoln. A H. Ritchie, Engraver. Size, 4 by 4. Abraham Lincoln. Engraved by A. H. Ritchie. Size, 6J by 4, Abraham Lincoln. A. H. Ritchie, Engraver. Size, 6 by 4J. Abraham Lincoln. Size, 7 by 7. Wm. Jennings Demorest, New York. Abraham Lincoln. Size, 10 J by 8J. Abraham Lincoln. Size, 11 by 7f. Abraham Lincoln. Size, 15 by 12. Abraham Lincoln. Size, 2-V by 2]. Fay-Cox. 144 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Abraham Lincoln. Bufford's Print Publishing House. Boston, Mass. 1865. Size, 12 by 10. Abraham Lincoln. Bufford, Boston, Publisher. Size, 111 by 9. Abraham Lincoln. Born Feb. 12, 1809; died April 15, 1865. Am. News Co., N. Y., Publisher. Size, 211 by 16*. The same with Black Border. Abraham Lincoln. Lithograph portrait, oval. Size, 15 by 12. The title is cut off this print, so cannot give it in full. The initials T. M. J., 1860, are in one corner of the picture. Abraham Lincoln. Born Feb. 12, 1809. Assassinated April 14, 1865. He was a man, take him for all in all, we ne'er shall look upon his like again. Size, 3f by 2|. Abraham Lincoln. Born February 12th, 1809. Assassinated April 14th, 1865. He was a man, take him for all in all, we ne'er shall look upon his like again. King & Baird, Phil., Pa. Size, 15 by 13. Abraham Lincoln. Portrait and Fancy Border. Underneath is a Spread Eagle. On top of card, statue of Liberty, etc. Size, 3J by 2J. Abraham Lincoln. Portrait. Size, 21 by If. Wanamaker & Brown. Philadelphia. Abraham Lincoln. J. Kelly, N. Y., Publisher; R. S. Jones, Eng. 1860. Proof. Size, 4* by 3*. Abraham Lincoln. John Sartain, Engraver ; Bradley & Co. pub- lishers. Phil. Size, 101 by 9. Abraham Lincoln. J. Gibson. N. Y. 1865. Size, 13 by 10. (Bordered with flags scene in lower left corner of a slave auction right corner, home of free colored family). Abraham Lincoln. H. C. Shotwell.Rockford, 111., Engraver and Publisher. Size, 9 by 7. Abraham Lincoln. H. W. Smith, Sc. S. Walker, Boston, Pub- lisher. Size, 8} by 6}. Abraham Lincoln of Illinois; Andrew Johnson of Tennessee. H. H. Lloyd & Co., New York. Size, each portrait 9 by 7. Abraham Lincoln. Oval. 'Size, 9 by-6J. Abraham Lincoln. Old Abe's Jokes. Size, 36 by 22. Abraham Lincoln. Samuel Sartain, Engraver ; Rice & Allen, Chicago, 111. Publishers. Size, 13 by 10. Abraham Lincoln. Size, 25 by 191. F. D' Asignon. M. Knoedler Publisher, New York. Groupil & Co., Paris and London. Abraham Lincoln. Size. 4 by 3J. (To accompany " The Mar- tyrs and Heroes of Illinois." By Barnett of Chicago). LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 145 Abraham Lincoln. Portrait. Size, 16 by 12 J. Lithographed and printed in oil colors, by J. Hagelberg'in Berlin (Prussia). Abraham Lincoln. Rice Rutter & Co., Publishers. W. G. Jackman t Eng. Size, 4z by 3. Abraham Lincoln. Elias Dexter & Son, N. Y., Publishers j J. A. O'Neil, Eng. Size, 12 by 9*. Abraham Lincoln. Cadwell & Co., N. Y., Publishers. Oval. Size, 21 by 17|. Abraham Lincoln. T. Doney, Elgin, 111.. Engraver and pub- lisher. W. Pate. Ne-w York. Size, 8 by 6. Abraham Lincoln. Assassinated April 14, 1865. The Martyr dies, but freedom lives. H. H. Lloyd & Co., Publishers. New York. Size, 16 by 16. Abraham Lincoln. Assassinated April 14, 1865. 0. Pelton, Engraver. Size, 5 by 5J. Abraham Lincoln. Printed and Engraved by Wni. E. Marshall. New York. A stipple line engraving. Size, 21 by 16. Abraham Lincoln. (Signed). Engraved by F. Halpin, after a painting from life by F. B. Carpenter. Size, 17 by 13. (The actual size of the portrait is 12 by 10. This and Marshall's are the two finest and most expensive portraits of Mr. Lincoln, a proof of Carpenter's costing $15, that of Marshall's $20). Abraham Lincoln. Copied from the original picture by Matthew Wilson in the possession of Hon. Gideon Welles. Published by L. Prang & Co. Boston : 1865. Size, 12 by 10. . The same portrait on a tinted back ground,' 18 by 15. Abraham Lincoln. The Martyr President, assassinated April 14, 1865. Currier & Ives. New York : 1865. Size, 22* by 17. Abraham Lincoln. The Nation's Martyr, assassinated April 14, 1865. Currier & Ives, Publishers, New York. Size, 15 by 12. Abraham Lincoln. The Nation's Martyr, assassinated April 14, 1865. Currier & Ives, Publishers, New York. Size, 10 by 9. Abraham Lincoln. The Martyr President, assassinated April 14, 1865. H. H. Lloyd & Co., Publishers, New York. Size, 9 by 9. Abraham Lincoln. The Martyr, Victorious. 1866. W. H. Hermans, Penn Yan, N. Y. John Sartain, Eng. Size, 18 by 14. (Washington meeting Lincoln in the clouds, an angel crowning Lin- coln with a wreath, while others are playing harps). Abraham Lincoln. The Martyr President. Horace Waters, Pub- lisher. New York: Lithograph of Major & Knapp. Size, 6 by 5. 19 14G LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Abraham Lincoln. Late President of the U. S., Assassinated April 14, 1865. Gibson & Co., Cincinnati, O. Size, 14 by 13|. Abraham Lincoln. Late President of the United States, Assassin- ated April 14th, 1865. Size, 22 by 13J. Full length portrait, wood cut with border. Abraham Lincoln. Late President of the United States, Assassin- ated April 14th, 1865. Size, 18 by 11* Full length view. Abraham Lincoln. Portrait Late President of the United States, Assassinated April 14, 1865. Size, 14 by llj. Abraham Lincoln. President of the United States. Geo. E. Perine, Publisher, New York. Size, 11 by 8. Abraham Lincoln. President of the United States. Geo. E. Perine, N. Y., Engraver and Publisher. 1866. Size, 4| by 3i Abraham Lincoln. President of the United States. Geo. E. Perine, Publisher. N. Y. Size, 4 by 4. Abraham Lincoln. President of the United ' States. Geo. E. Perine, Publisher. N. Y. 1864. Size, 11 by 8i. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, signing the Emancipation Proclamation. J. Serz, Engraver. 1864. (Proof). Size, 18 by 14. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, Assassinated April 14, 1865. Engraved and Published by John C. McRae. New York. Illustrated border " Leaving Springfield." " Reviewing the Army." "Reading the Emancipation Act." "Lying in State, Washington," &c. Size, 13 by IQi. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Engraved by John Sartain. R. R. Landon. Publisher.- Chicago, 111. Size, 214 by 15J. Abraham Lincoln. President of the U. S. A. G. P. Putnam. Size, 5 by 4|. Abraham Lincoln. President of the United States, assassinated April 14, 1865. J. C. Buttre, engraver and publisher. New York, 1864. Size, 13 J by 9|. (Has an illustrated border). Abraham Lincoln. President of the United States, assassinadet 14 April, 1865, deceased 15 April 1865. Size, 4 by 2f. A portrait, with the above, printed in gold on blue mica, and there- fore of course transparent. The det in assassinated is of course a typographical error. Abraham Lincoln. President of the United States. J. C. Buttre, publisher. Size, 26 by 19]. (A full length portrait on steel). . The same an oval, same head as above. Size, 6 by 4}. ^LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 147 Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America. Engraved by H. B. Hall, Jr. Published by Juo. B. Bachelder, New York. Size, 2f by 2J. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Ed. Valois, lithographer. John Kelly & Son, New York, 18(55. Size, 28 by 2U. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. Size, 10 by 8, underneath are flags and an eagle. Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States. Derby & Miller, New York, and Geo. & C. W. Sherwood, Chicago, Pub- lishers; A. H. Ritchie, engraver. Size, 11 by 9. Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States. En- graved by John Sartain from the original, painted by E. D. Mar- chant, at the White House, in 1863, and now in the Union League rooms. Phil. : Bradley & Co., publishers. 1864. Size, 13 by 13. Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States. Born February 1?, 1809; died April 15, 1865. Size, 9 by 7J. Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States. John Sartain, engraver. Bradley & Co., publishers. Philadelphia. Size, 5 by 5. Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States. Born Feb. 12th, 1809; died April 15th, 1865. Chr. Kimmel & Forster, New York. Size,. 81 by 6J. Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States, Born February 12th, 1809; died April 15th, 1865. Chr. Kim- mel & Forster, New York. . Size, 8} by 6. Abraham Lincoln, Sixteenth President of the United States. Assassinated April 14, 1865. Size, 13 by 12. Abraham Lincoln and his Cabinet. Nine oval Portraits. Size, 6 by4J. Abraham Lincoln and his Family. Published by Kelly & Sons, Philadelphia and New York. Size, 18| by 27. Abraham Lincoln's Residence. Size, 8i by 12. Abraham Lincoln's Residence. Size, 8* by 12. Abraham Lincoln at Home. (Reading to Tad !) Size, 7 by 5 J. Abraham Lincoln and his Son Tad. L. Prang & Co., Boston, Publishers. Size, 6? by 6. Abraham Lincoln entering Richmond, April 3, 1865. B. B. Russell & Co., Boston, Publishers. J. C. Buttre, Engraver, 1866. Size, 6| by 4f . 148 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Abraham Lincoln, (Large portrait). Born Feb. 12, 1809. Ours the Cross, his the Crown. Died April 15, 1865. H. H. Lloyd & Co., New York, Publishers. Size, 36 by 27. Illustrated border in colors, representing scenes in the Life of Mr. Lincoln. Lincoln. Size, 3j by 2. (A portrait cut from a map). Lincoln. Size, 3 by 2. Portrait. . Lincoln. Full length. 10 inches. (A pattern for pen wiper :) E. 13. & E. C. Kellogg. Hartford, Ct. Lincoln. Gaylord Watson. New York : 1865. Size, 33 by 25. Large portrait with sketch of his life and death, and the Proclama- tion of Emancipation; with smaller portraits of Grant, Meade, Sher- man and Sheridan (in the corners). Lincoln. Portrait. " President Lincoln is the best man I ever knew." Wm. H. Seward. Lincoln, Washington and seven Army and Navy officers' por- traits engraved on steel by J. C. Buttre, for the cover of a small book issued by an insurance Co. Lincoln and Washington's portraits facing each other. Oval border with stars. Size, 4 by 6. Lincoln, Grant, Sheridan and Sherman. Oval portraits, battle scenes in the back ground. H. H. Lloyd & Co, Publishers. New York. Size, 7t by 5. Lincoln and Hamlin. C. H. Brainard, Boston, Publisher. 1860. Size, 12 by 11. (On top of the portraits, eagle, flags, &c. Underneath, view of the White House. U. S. Laws and Bible). Lincoln. Tribute to Abraham Lincoln. A 4to page illustra- tion inserted in " The Tribute Book." Published by Derby & Miller, New York. Lincoln. Published by Thurston, Herline & Co., Philadelphia, Pa. Size, 2* by If Lincoln. Born Feb. 12, 1809. Abraham Lincoln, died April 15, 1865. I have fought a good fight. I have finished my course : I have kept the faith Size, 30 by 16. Lincoln. Born Feb. 12, 1809, ours the cross, his the crown, assassinated April 14, 1865. H. H. Lloyd & Co. New York. Size, 17 J by 12. (A monument with Columbia weeping and laying ever- greens upon it). Lincoln and Son. Published by Thurston, Herline & Co., Phila- delphia, Pa. 2} by If Lincoln at Home. E. B. & E. C. Kellogg, Hartford, Ct. ; and F. P. Whiting, N. Y., publisher. Size, 8 by 12*. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 149 Lincoln at Home. " With malice towards none, with charity for all." H. B. Hall, Jr., Engraver. Ledyard Bill, N. Y., Publisher. Size, 13 by 11. (Mr. Lincoln reading to Tad). Lincoln and his Generals. Jones & Clark, N. Y., Publishers, 1865. Size, 15 by 20. Lincoln and his Family. Bradley & Co., Publishers; Win. Sar- tain, Ehg. 1866. Size, 18 by 25. Lincoln at Home. Currier & Ives, Publishers, New York. 1867. Size, 16| by 24. Lincoln and Family. Size, 19 by 24. Wm. C. Robertson, New York. . Lincoln Family. Moore &'Annin, Publishers, N. Y., oval. Size, Lincoln Family. Drawn by E. Valois. Printed by Win. C. Robertson. Pub. by Thos. Kelly. Size, 17 by 25|. Lincoln Family. Thomas Kelly, N. Y. 1866, Publisher. Size, 24* by 18. Lincoln's Death Bed. 453 Tenth St., Washington, D. C. H. H. Lloyd & Co., N. Y. Publishers. Size, 9 by 13. Lincoln's Home, Springfield, Ills. W. H. Woodworth, Utica, N. Y. Eng. by Serz. (1865). Size, 12 by 15. . A Solid Phalanx leading to Victory. Oval portraits of Lincoln, Johnson, Grant, Farragut, Sheridan and Sherman. Size, Qk by 5J. Assassination of President A. Lincoln, April 14th, 1865, at Ford's Theatre, Washington, D. C. Size, 8 by 12. Assassination of President Lincoln, at Ford's Theatre, April 14th, 1865. " Treason and murder work together." H. H. Lloyd & Co., N. Y., Publishers. Size, 12 by 7|. Assassination of President Lincoln. Ford's Theatre, Washington, April 14, 1865. F. B. & E. C. Kellogg, Hartford, Ct. ; and F. P. Whiting, N. Y , Publishers. Size, 8 by 13. Boyhood of Lincoln. Painted by Eastman Johnson, chromo, by L. Prang & Co. Boston. Size, 16| by 21. Britannia sympathizes with Columbia. Size, 6$ by 8. Photo- lithographed from the London Punch, to accompany the poem re- published from that paper for May 6, 1865. Andrew Boyd. Albany, 1868. Columbia's Noblest Sons. Kimrnel & Forster, N. Y., Litho- graphers. Size, 13J by 20. Columbia standing in the centre, one foot upon the neck of a crouched Lion, and arms outstretched placing a wreath upon the heads of Washington and Lincoln ; alle- 1,00 LINCOLN B1BL10GUA I'll ) . gorical borders illustrating scenes in the Revolution and in the late llebellion. Council of War in 1861. Geo. E. Ferine. New York. Death of Abraham Lincoln, April 15, 1865. E. B. E. C. Kel- logg, Hartford, Ct. ; and F. P. Whiting, N. Y., Publishers. Size, 8 by 13J. Death Bed of Lincoln. Jones & Clark, N. Y., Publishers. 1865. Size,, 18 by 25. Death of President Lincoln. At Washington, D. C., April 15, 1865. The Nation's Martyr. Currier & Ives, Publishers, New York. Size, 13 by 8. Death of President Lincoln. Painted and Engraved by A. H. Ritchie, New York. Size, 32 by 21. Diogenes, His Lantern needs no more : An Honest Man is found ; The Search is o'er. H. B. Hall, N. Y., Engraver. Size, 15 by 12. Diogenes gazing at a portrait of Mr. Lincoln ; view of the Capitol in the distance. Emancipation. F. 0. C. Darley, fecit. Manhattan Engraving Co., N. Y., pub. by E. Parsloe, New York. An allegorical picture finely executed. Size, 2} by 4f . Proof on India paper. Emancipation. Size, 2| by 4J. This is a proof on India paper of an exquisite little engraving, without title or engraver's name. It is numbered 44, and evidently executed by some Bank Note Company. I call it emancipation, because a colored man sits upon the ground with clasped hands resting upon a portrait of Mr. Lin- coln, at his feet lie broken shackles ; opposite sits his wife and child and beside them two white doves. In the rear a female figure stands pointing to a Temple of Liberty, a sure promise of Freedom ; while in the sky a rainbow is seen, suggestive of hope and a bright future. Emancipation Proclamation. Allegorical Portrait of Abraham Lincoln, Pub. by the Art Publishing Asso. of Phil. 1865. The lines are so engraved as to show portrait of Mr. Lincoln. Size, 21 by 16. Emancipation of the Slaves. Proclaimed on the 22d September, 1862. By Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of North America. J. Waeshle, Phil. Size, 13 by lOf. Emancipation. Drawn by Thos. Nast, representing the colored people in slavery and as free men. S. Bott, publisher, Phil., Pa. Freedom to the Slaves. Proclaimed Jan., 1863. By Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. " Proclaim liberty through- LINCOLN Binu Engraver and Publisher, New York. 1860. Size, 6} by 4. The Father of his country. (Portrait of Washington). 1789. The Saviour of \ is country. (Portrait of Lincoln). 1865. Sur- mounted by an Eagle. Size, 7 by 10. 1868. The Funeral of President Lincoln. New York, April 25th, 1865. Passing Union Square. The magnificent funeral car was drawn by 16 gray horses richly caparisoned with ostrich plumes LINCOLN B1BL100RAPUT. 157 and cloth of black trimmed with silver bullion. Size, 8 by 13. Currier & Ives, publishers. The funeral car. Size, 6 by 6. Engraved for a chart by D. H. Tuttle, N. Y. A proof impression. The Inauguration. Size, 6 by 4. Engraved for a chart by D. H. Tuttle, N. Y. A proof impression. The last hours of Lincoln. Engraved by H. B. Hall, Jr., from the painting by Alonzo Chappel. Pub. by John B. Bachelder, New York. Size, 18 by 21. The Lincoln Family. Currier & Ives, publishers, New York. 1867. Size, 8 by 12$. The Outbreak of the Rebellion in the United States, 1861. Size, 16| by 24$. Kimmel & Forster, New York, 1865. . Companion to the above, entitled : " The end of the Re- bellion in the United States, 1865." Same size, same publishers. 1866. The " Republican court," in the days of Lincoln, by P. F. Rother- mel. This handsome painting the scene of which is laid at the second Inauguration, is being engraved, and may already be com- pleted ; though I have not seen it. The President at home. Size, 6$ by 4. (Reading to his son Tad). The President at home. Size, 4 by 4. (Reading to Tad). The Union Must and Shall be Preserved. Destiny of America, S. W. Fasel, publisher, &c. Size, 15 by 19. (Female characters*in a circle representing each state. In the centre Columbia sits upon a pedestal. On either side are Washington, Lincoln, and Presidents of the past. The Presidents of the United States. Ensign & Bridgeman, New York. Size, 33 by 25. (Contains portraits of all the presidents anterior to Mr. Lincoln's Assassination, with sketches of their lives and views of their residences). Three Wood Cut portraits. Theory Bickley head of the Knights of the Golden circle. Practice Booth the Assassin. Effect A. L., the Martyr President. Size, 12 by 6. Tomb of Abraham Lincoln at Springfield. Size, 6$ by 4J. Not pub. or Eng. Union and Liberty and Union and Slavery. Size, 10$ by 21. M. W. Siebert, New York. Washington and Lincoln. J. H. Bufford & Sons, Boston, Litho- graphers. Size, 6| by 9. 158 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Washington and Lincoln. The Father and Saviour of our coun- try. Currier & Ives, publishers, New York, 1865. Size, 15 by 11. (Standing by the altar of Liberty, shaking hands). Washington and Lincoln portraits. Size, 1 by If. On a 1st National Bank Check, Brooklyn. The portrait of Lincoln appeared on the following securities. &c., engraved and printed at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Dept. Treasurer, to wit : 810,000, 10.40 Registered Bond. 50 " Coupon " ) Under Acts, June 30th, 1864, and Feb. " 500 5.20 " " j 25th, 1862, 4th Series. " 50 " " " Fourth Series. "100 R 81 " " (. Under Acts, July 16th and Aug. 5th, j 1861, and March 3d, 1863. " 100 " " " Act of March 3d, 1863. " 20 One and three year interest notes. Also, on interior Warrant draft. " Subscription receipt for the Lincoln monument fund. " Badge worn by the treasury employers on the day of the obsequies. " 50cts. fractional currency, 1869, eng. by Bank Note Co. " $10 Greenbacks " " " " " " " 15ct. postage stamp, " " " " " u QQ (( u a a u u " 25ct. Package postage, " " " " Also in the pamphlet as a frontispiece for Bancroft's oration be- fore congress. And in all probability will appear on the new 8100 legal tender series of 1869, and the new gold note 8500, series of 1870. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 159 CARICATURE PRINTS. Abe Linking with his significant named cabinet. Abraham's Dream. Currier & Ives, New York, 1864. A Cure for Republican Lockjaw. Benj. Day, New York, 1861. " After the chivalrous defeat of 60 men at Fort Sumterby 12,000 confederate troops, Jefferson Davis sent the following witty ' pome/ by telegraph to Abraham Lincoln, ' with mortar, paxhan, and petard, we tender old Abe our Beauregard,' to which reply (il- lustration of a General and civilian hanging on one rope) : ' For Traitors we have no regard, we'll hang both thee and Beauregard.' " Woolfe, del. A little game of bagatelle between Old Abe the Rail Splitter & little Mac, the gunboat General. J. L. Magee, Phil., 1864. An heir to the Throne, or the next Republican Candidate. Cur- rier & Ives, New York, 1860. Behind the Scenes. Columbia demands her Children. Honest Abe taking them on the half shell. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. Honest Old Abe on the Stump. Springfield, 1858. Honest Old Abe on the Stump at the ratification Meeting of Pre- sidential Nomination. Springfield, 1860. " I knew him, Horatio ; a Fellow of infinite jest.* * * Where be your Gibes now." Hamlet, Act iv, Scene 1. Letting the Cat out of the bag. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. Little Mack & his Party " Going up " Salt River on a Gun Boat. Terrific Explosion of the " Quaker Gun," and destruction of the entire Party. (Mr. Lincoln standing upon the shore holding the Emanci- pation Proclamation in his hand, tells them they are all going to be hanged.) Size, 3 by 6. Miscegenation, or the Millennium of Abolitionism. Bromley & Co, New York, 1864. Mr. Lincoln crowned, and sitting ; Gen'l Scott and members of the Cabinet standing on either side of him. Size, 3 by 6. Platforms Illustrated. Political "Blondins," crossing Salt River. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. 160 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Progressive Democracy. Prospect of a Smash up. Cuvrier & Ives, New York, 1860. Running the " Machine." Currier & Ives, N. Y., 1864. South Carolina Topsey in a Fix. T. W. Strong, New York, 1861. Storming the Castle. " Old Abe " on Guard. Currier & Ives, 1860. "Taking the Stump," or Stephen in search of his mother. Cur- rier & Ives, New York, 1860. The Abolition Catastrophe or the November Smash-up. Brom- ley & Co., N. Y., 1864: The Commander-in-Chief conciliating the Soldiers' votes on the Battle field. The grave of the Union or Major Jack Downing's dream, drawn by Zeke. Bromley & Co. New York, 1864. The Great Exhibition of 1860. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. The Irrepressible Conflict. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. The Miscegenation Ball. Kimmel & Forster, New York, 1864. The National Game, Three " Outs," and one " Run," Abraham winning the Ball. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. " The Nigger " in the Woodpile. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. The Old Bull Dog on the right Track. Currier & Ives, New York, 1864. The Political Gymnasium. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. The Rail Candidate. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. The Rail Splitter. Card. The Rail Splitter at work repairing the Union. The Republican Party going to the Right House. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. The Schoolmaster abroad at last. T. W. Strong & Co., New York. The Sportsman upset by the recoil of his own Gun. (Jo Miller). The true issue, or " That's what's the matter." Currier & Ives, New York, 1864. This ticket good for a Free Pass up Salt River, &c., &c., Mr. Lincoln at the White-House door, shutting Gen'l McClellan out. Size, 2J by 3J. " Uncle Sam " making new arrangements. Currier & Ives, New York, 1860. " Your Plan and Mine." Currier & Ives, New York, 1864. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 161 MEDALS, MEDALETS, ETC. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left. " DeMie" par la Democratic Franchise a Lincoln President deux fois elu des Etats- unis." Reverse Is a pyramidical-shaped monument bearing the inscription " Lincoln I'honne'te homme, abolit 1'Esclavage. rdtablit 1'Union Sauva la Republique, Sans voiler la Statue de la Liberte". II fut Assassine" le 14 Avril, 1865." Supported on the left by a figure of Liberty placing a wreath upon the tomb : on the right a figure of a negro holding a musket and addressing a negro boy with a book under his arm, and who is offering a branch of palm. In the back ground are the emblems of commerce : the steamship, locomotive, etc., and above all the Eagle surrounded by the stars of the states. Underneath the whole " Franky-magniades. Liberte" ^galit^ Fraternit4." This is a bronze copy of the gold medal presented to Mrs. Lincoln by the French people. The original was effected by a sous subscription, to which more than 40,000 contributed. Napoleon III prohibited its production on French soil, and the " Democratic" was obliged to go to Geneva to strike the medal. It is gold ; weighs nearly 17oz. Troy : is 3 inches in diameter and J of an inch thick. Obverse Bust facing to the right, "Abraham Lincoln, Presi- dent of the United States, 1862." Ellis. Size, 50. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Salvator PatriaD." Reverse A circle composed of a wreath encloses the inscription " In memory of the life, acts and death of Abraham Lincoln. Born February 12, 1809. Died April 15, 1865." Emil Sigel, fecit. Pub. by the American Numismatic and Archaeological Society, New York 1866. Size, 49. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln, President of the United States : Born Feb. 12th, 1809. Died assassinated April 15th, 1865." Reverse Star, "With malice towards none, with charity for all," star, "4th March, 1865: Emancipation of Slavery Proclamation September 22, 1862." Hu- guer Bovy. Size, 37. This medal is inclosed in a handsomely wrought brass band, or frame, studded with stars ; fastened together at the top, over which is a spread eagle. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln, President of the United States, 1862." Reverse Indians aud Indian Implements form a circle, in which is a farm scene. Ellis, Del. Sc., J. Wilson, Del. & Sc. Size, 37. (* 1 21 162 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right, " Memoria in JEterna Abraham Lincoln." Reverse Figure of woman with U. S. Flag in her left hand, with right hand pointing to camping ground ; on her left a Monitor, etc. ; on her right at her feet, an Eagle with outstretched wings, standing on shield ; before her on the ground, barrels and boxes of merchandise. " North Western Sani- tary Fair, Chicago. 111. 1865." Paquet, F. Size, 34. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lincoln 1865." Reverse Broken column, in front of four U. S. flags, with inscription " A. L." on it. " He is in glory and the nation in tears. Born Feb. 12, 1809, assassinated Apr. 14, 1865." W. H. Key, Sc. Size, 30. Obverse Head of Lincoln. Reverse An Eagle surrounded by a circle of stars. Key. Size, 26. Obverse Head of Lincoln. Reverse Two circles of stars sur- rounding " The Union." Key. Size, 26. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, "The President of the U. S., 1861." Reverse A country scene with a man en- gaged in splitting rails. "The rail splitter of 1830." Child, Chi- cago. Copyright secured. Size, 24J. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right enclosed in oval " Lincoln;" bust of Andrew Johnson facing to the left enclosed in oval "Johnson." Eagle above, holding streamer with inscription, "Freedom to all men " four flags partially behind ovals. Under- neath, a shield, with " War for the Union " on it. Reverse " Re- publican Candidates, 1864. For President Abraham Lincoln ; for Vice President Andrew Johnson of Tennessee." W. H. Key. Size, 23 . Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln." Reverse The arms of the United States between two branches of laurel forming a wceath. " Republican Candidate for sixteenth President of the United States." Henuing & Eymann, N.Y. .Size, 23*. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln." Reverse ''Thou art the man, President, 1861." Henning & Eymann, N. Y. ; A. L. Henning, N. Y. Size, 23*. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right. " Abraham Lin- coln, 1860 " Reverse A country scene with two men engaged in splitting rails. " Progress, 1830." Size, 22 }. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln." Reverse -Two rails crossed. " The people's choice, I860, Lincoln & Hamlin, Freedom and Protection." Key, F. Size, 22*. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 163 Obverse 'Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. " For President, Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois." Reverse Under a semicircle of thirteen stars, an eagle supporting the U. S. Shield, and holding a ribbon inscribed E Pluribus Unum." True. Size, 22J. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing left, without inscription. Reverse Old Middle Dutch church, Nassau street, New York. Size, 22. Obverse Lincoln and Hamlin facing left, " The Fall of Sumter will be Avenged." Size, 22. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right " Salvator Patriae." Reverse A circle composed of a wreath encloses the inscription : " In memory of the life, acts and death of Abraham Lincoln, born February 12, 1809. Died April 15, 1865." Pub. by the American Numismatic and Archaeologial Society, New York, 1866. Size, 21. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right and enclosed within a circle of thirty-two stars. " Abraham Lincoln, Republican candi- date for President, 1860." Reverse A circle composed of a rail fence encloses the inscription: "The Great Rail Splitter of>the West must & shall be our next President." Size, 20J. Obverse Busts of Lincoln and Hamlin facing to the left, " Lin- coln & Hamlin ; " enclosed by wreath. Reversed Enclosed in wreath. " Free soil, Free speech, Free labor and Eternal Progres- sion.'^. B. Smith, F. Size, 20J. Obverse Busts of Lincoln and Hamlin facing to the left, " Lin- coln & Hamlin ; " enclosed by wreath. Reverse Enclosed, in wreath, " Be vigilant and watchful that internal dissentions destroy not your prosperity." F. B. Smith, F. Size, 20. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, "Abraham Lin- coln;" enclosed in wreath. Reverse Enclosed in wreath, " If I am reelected president, slavery must be abolished with the reunion of states." F. B. Smith, F., N. Y. Size, 20. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right ; a wreath of flowers surrounds the bust. " Abraham Lincoln, sixteenth President of the U. S." Reverse Representation of a country residence. "Resi- dence of Abraham Lincoln." Size, 20|. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right encircled by thirteen stars and "Honest old Abe." Reverse Encircled by wreath. " Union Candidates, 1864. For president, Abraham Lincoln of Illinois. For vice president, Andrew Johnson of Tenn." Size, 20. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse Out- side of wreath, " Abraham Lincoln, President of. the U. S., 1861," 164 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. enclosed by wreath, star. " The right man in the right place," star. Size, 20. Obverse Bust of -Lincoln facing to the left, " Lincoln & Johnson, Union Candidates, 1864." Keverse Head of Washington sur- rounded by rays and thirteen stars, " Freedom to all men. Union." W. H. Key, F. Size, 19. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left, " Abm. Lincoln, the martyr President." Reverse " Born Feb. 12, 1809. 1st Inaug. March 4, 1861. 2d Inaug. March 4, 1865. Died Apr. 15, 1865." Size, 18. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left, " Abraham Lincoln, 1864," and eight stars. Reverse " The people's choice for presi- dent," on shield, surrounded by six U. S. Flags and surmounted by the cap of liberty. Size, 18}. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " A foe to traitors " encircled by " Abr'm Lincoln" and wreath. Reverse Outside of circle composed of thirty -five stars. "No compromise with armed rebels," and two eagles' heads ; inside the circle, " May the union flourish." Size 18. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the feft, " Abraham Lincoln, 1864," and eight stars. Reverse Urn with " A. L. " on it, " Re- surgam Died April 15, 1865." Size, 18J. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " A foe to traitors," encircled by " Abr'm Lincoln" and wreath. Reverse "Died April 15, 1865," encircled by " Sine fuco et fallacia homo." Size, 18}. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. " Hon Abram Lincoln, 1860." Reverse " Lincoln & Hauiliu, Freedom & Pro- tection. The man that can split rails or guide the Ship of State." L. Size, 18}. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abrain Lin- coln, Republican Candidate for President, 1860." Reverse " Our next President." Size, 18. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abram Lincoln, Republican Candidate for President, 1860." Reverse Roman fasces, surrounded by rays. "United we stand, Divided we fall." Size, 18}. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abram Lin- coln, Republican Candidate for President, 1860." Reverse An eye, from which proceeds rays. " The Union must and shall be pre- served." Size, 18}. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 165 Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln, Republican Candidate for President, 1860." Reverse A wreath enclosing the inscription, " Let Liberty be national & Sla- very, sectional." " Free Territory for a Free People." J. D. L. Size, 18*. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln, born Feb. 12, 1809." Reverse A Laurel Wreath enclosing the inscription, " No more Slave Territory. Republican Candidate, 1860." Merriam. Size, 18}. Obverse Two branches crossed, " In memory of Abm. Lincoln, Died, April 15, 1865. Size. 18}. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, enclosed in circle; " Abraham Lincoln for president, 1864," and two stars. Reverse United States coat of arms, and " U. S." Size, 18. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abram Lin- coln, Rep. Candidate for President, 1860." Reverse An oak wreath enclosed within a circle of thirty- two stars ; within the wreath is the inscription : " Free Homes for Free Men." "Protection to American Industry." R. L. Phila. Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Kos- suth, the Washington of Hungary. Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, Reverse " War for the Union, 1862." Size, 17. Obverse " Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Eagle, " War of 1861." Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse " The old man with specs." Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse " West's trained dogs." Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Pub- lic Square, Nashville, Tenn. Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Clipper ship. Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Jen- nings & Wheeler's card. Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Eagle " U. S. A." Size, 17. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " President Lin- coln." Reverse Eagle and U. S. Shield, " Compositions," three stars, " Spiel-Marke," three stars. Size, 16}. 166 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Republican Can- didate, 1860, Abraham Lincoln." Reverse American Eagle and shield, " Liberty, Union and Equality," Size, 16*. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse " Lin- coln," twelve stars. Reverse Head of Washington facing to the right " George Washington, First in war, First in peace, and First in the hearts of his countrymen." Size, 16*. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left, " Abraham Lincoln," Pres. of the U. S., 1864." Reverse Head of Washington, Flags, Muskets, &c. " The Union must and shall be preserved." W. H. Key. Size, 16*. / Obverse Tomb and Weeping Willow. " A sigh, the absent claims ; the dead a tear." Reverse " Abm. Lincoln, President of the U. S. Died, April 15, 1865, by the hands of a rebel assassin." Size, 16*. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln, born Feb. 12, 1809." Reverse A wreath encircling the in- scription : " No more Slave Territory." li Republican- Candidate, 1860," Size, 16. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abm. Lincoln, Rep. Candidate for president, 1860." Reverse " Free homes for Free men," enclosed in wreath, outside of which is a circle of stars and " Protection to American Industry." R. L., Phil. Size, 16. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. " Abraham Lin- coln, 1860." Reverse "Freedom National, Slavery Sectional." Size, 15*. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right. " Hon. Abraham Lincoln, 1860." Reverse A country seen with two men engaged splitting rails. " The Rail-splitter of the West." Ellis. Size, 15*. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right, "Abraham Lin- coln, 1860." Reverse " Our policy is expressly the Policy of the men who made the Union, no more, no less." Jensch & Meyer, Chicago. Size, 14*. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, "Abraham Lin- coln, assassinated April 14, 1865. 25. In God we trust," and two stars. Reverse Eagle in centre ; " United States of America, For ever and inseparable, 1864," and thirteen stars. Size, 14*. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lincoln, In God we trust, 25," and two stars. Reverse Eagle in centre, " United States of America, Forever and inseparable, 1864," and thirteen stars. Size, 14*. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 167 Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left, " Abraham Lincoln, 1860." Reverse Bust of Hannibal Hamlin facing to the right, "Hannibal Hamlin, 1860." Size, 14*. Obverse Bust of Lincoln at full face, " Abraham Lincoln, free Land, Free Speech, & Free Men." Reverse American eagle and ~ shield, " Union of the states." Size, 14. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse Elliott, Vinson & Co." Size, 14. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse " Steamer Lancaster." Size, 14. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse Good for 20 cents in Tobacco." Size, 14. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse card of " Excelsior Tobacco Works." Size, 14. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse " The wealth of the South." Size, 14. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse " No submission to the North." Size, 14, Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse Bust of Douglass. Size, 14. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, " For President, Abraham Lincoln of 111." Reverse " The Wealth of the South." Size, H. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse Bust of Bell facing left. Size, 14. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, " For President, Abraham Lincoln of 111." Reverse A representation of the White House at Washington, " President's House." Size, 13. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, "Abraham Lin- coln, 1864." Reverse Flags, Cannons, &c. "Our Country and our Flag, Now & Forever." Size, 13. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left, " Abraham Lincoln for president." Reverse Eagle perched upon drum, flags, &c. Size, 13. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left, " Abraham Lincoln for president." Reverse Star enclosed in wreath. Size, 13. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the left. Reverse " Mar- tyr to Liberty," enclosed in circle, star, " Abraham Lincoln " star, " 15th April, 1865," outside of circle. Oval. Size, 12J by 14. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lincoln 16 president of the United States, assassinated by the plotters 168 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. of treason, April 14, 1865." Reverse Monument with the in- scription " A Lincoln, April 15, 1865," stars, &c. Martyr for Liberty." Lewis Joy, New York. Size, 12*. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, " 18 Abm. Lincoln 64, President." Reverse Eagle standing on cannon, " Liberty for all, 1864." Size, 12. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, surrounded by thirteen stars. " 1864." Reverse Eagle standing on cannon, " Liberty for all, 1864." Size, 12. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln, Natus Feb. 12, 1809." Reverse Upon a scroll the word " Wide- Awakes." "Abra-Ham Lin -Coin, Honest Abe of the West." Size, 11 J. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, "Abraham Lincoln, Natus Feb. 12, 1809." Reverse " Abra -Ham Lin - Coin, Hon- est Abe of the West," Ins. " The Hannibal of America, 1860." Size, 111. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right. " A, Lincoln, R. Cand't for President, 1860." Reverse An eagle, " D. Venten's Needle Threaders, 178 Duane St., N. Y." Size, 11*. Obverse Head of Lincoln family to the right. " A Lincoln R. Cand't for President, 1860." Reverse An eagle, " F. Lehr's Needle Threaders, 56 Chatham St., N. Y." Size, 111. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, " 18 Abrm. Lincoln 64 President." Reverse " America " and thirteen stars enclosed by wreath. Size, 11|. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left: " 18 Abm. Lincoln 64 President." Reverse " Freedom " enclosed by wreath : U. S. Shield and Flags. Size, 11*. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left. " The right man in the right place, 1864." Reverse " Freedom " enclosed by wreath ; U. S. Shield and Flags. Size, 11*. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, enclosed by thir- teen' stars, " 1864." Reverse Peck & Orvis, Druggists & Gro- cers, Baraboo, Wis. Size, 11. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, enclosed by thirteen stars. " 1864." Reverse " Freedom " Enclosed by wreath ; U. S. Shield and Flags. Size, 111. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, enclosed by thirteen stars, " 1864." Reverse " 0. K." enclosed by chain. Size, 11*. LINCOLN D1BL10ORAPH T. 169 Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left. " 18 Abraham Lincoln 64 President." Reverse "O.K." enclosed by chain. Size, 11J. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, enclosed by thir- teen stars, "1864." Reverse " C. L. R." enclosed in wreath, Anchors, Swords, &c. Size, 11J. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, " 18 Abraham Lin- coln 64 President." Reverse U. S. Shield, two stars, " Our Union." Size, ll. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right. Star, " For President," star, " Abraham Lincoln." Reverse Head of An Jrew Johnson facing to the right, star, " For Vice President," star, " An- drew Johnson." Size, 11^. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Head of Washington facing to the right. Size, 11. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Head of Grant facing to the right. Size, 11. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Broken column, and scroll, with two U. S. Flags. Size, 11. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the right. Reverse Wreath enclosing, " Born Feb. 12, 1809. Assassinated April 14, 1865." Size, 11. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Abraham Lin- coln, 1864." Reverse Cannons, Flags, &c. " 1864." Size, 10J. Obverse Bust of Lincoln facing to the right, " Salvator PatriaD." Reverse A circle composed of a wreath, encloses the inscription, " In memory of the life, acts and death of Abraham Lincoln, born- February 12, 1809. Died April 15, 1865." Published by the American Numismatic and Archaeological Society, New York, 1866. Size, 9. Obverse Head of Lincoln facing to the left, encircled by thir- teen stars, " 1864." Reverse " Abraham Lincoln, Freedom, Jus- tice, Truth, 1865." Size, 8. Obverse Bust of Lincoln and of Hamlin, side by side. Re- verse " We will not interfere with the constitutional rights of any state," &c. Tin Badge Pin, form of star. Head of Lincoln, " Abraham Lin- coln, Wide awake." Size, 40. Tin Badge Pin, form of Shield. Head of Lincoln, " Abraham Lincoln." Size, 20-}. Brass Badge Pin. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted. Size, 20. 170 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Brass Medalet. Ferrotypes of Lincoln and Johnson inserted. Obverse " For President, 1864. A. Lincoln." Reverse " For Vice President 1864. A. Johnson." Size, 15. Brass Medalet. Ferrotypes of Lincoln and Johnson inserted. Obverse " For President, Abraham Lincoln For Vice President Andrew Johnson." Size, 15. Brass Medalet. Ferrotypes of Lincoln and Hamlin inserted Obverse ." Abraham Lincoln, I860." Reverse " Hannibal Ham- lin, 1860." Size, 15. Tin Medalet. Ferrotypes of Lincoln and Hamlin inserted. Obverse " Abraham Lincoln." Reverse " Hannibal Hamlin." Size, 15. Brass Badge Pin. Ferrotype inserted " For President 1864. A. Lincoln." Size, 14. Velvet medalet. Ferrotypes of Lincoln and Johnson inserted, Obverse " A Lincoln, 1864." Reverse "A Johnson." Size, Ufr Tin Badge Pin form of shield. Photograph of Lincoln inserted. " Republican invincible." Size, 14. Brass Badge Pin. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted. Size, 13 J. Brass Badge Pin. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted. Size, 13 by 16. Brass Medalet. Ferrotype inserted " A Lincoln. " Size, 12J. Brass Medalet. Ferrotypes of Lincoln and Johnson inserted. Obverse "A Lincoln." Reverse " Johnson." Size, 12J. Brass and Black Badge Pin. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted, " A. Lincoln." Size, 12. Brass and Blue Badge pin. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted. Size, 12. Brass Medalet. Ferrotypes of Lincoln and Hamlin. Obverse " Lincoln and Hamlin." Reverse, " 1860." Size, 10. Brass Badge Pin. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted, " Lincoln." Size, 10. Tin Medalet. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted. Size, 8. Brass Button. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted, " Abraham Lin- coln. Size, 7. Brass Button. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted, " Lincoln." Size, 71. Black and White Medal. Ferrotype of Lincoln inserted. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. MOURNING CARDS AND BADGES. Seventeen mourning cards, handsomely embossed and bearing various devices. The largest is 5 by 3, and the smallest 4 by 2|. Ten mourning cards, plain. The largest is 6 by 4, and the smallest 3i by 2J. Forty silk badges, three of which are richly wove, and made in Europe. The largest is 10 by 2, and the smallest, 2 by 1. Ten Paper Badges. The largest is 6 by 2, and the smallest, 3f by 2. Eleven Paper Mourning Flags. The largest 6J by 3|, and the smallest, 1} by f. ADDENDA. Abraham Lincoln The World's Great Martyr, a discourse de- livered in the M. E. Church, Jamaica. L. I., on Sabbath morning, April 23, 1865. By Rev. Chas. Baehinan, Jamaica. Chas. Welling, " Long Island Farmer " Print. 1865. 8vo, pp. 16. Funeral Services at Christ Church, Cambridge, 12 M., April 19, 1865. Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America, died, April 15, 1865. (Cambridge, 1865). 8vo, 2 1. Grand Council U. S. A. State of California, San Francisco, April 20, 1865. Resolutions adopted at a meeting of the Grand Council U. S. A., and transmitted to the members of the Grand and Subor- dinate Councils of the Union League, on the Death of Abraham Lincoln, S. H. Parker, Grand President, Alfred Barstow, Grand Secretary, [s. 1. s. a.] p. I, 2 1. In memory of Abraham Lincoln, City of Concord, N. H. 1 p. quarto. Our Nation's Sorrow. A Sermon preached in Berlin, Illinois, April 19, 1865, on the assassination of A. Lincoln before the Baptist, Methodist, Christian and Presbyterian Congregations. By A. W. McGibbon, Licentiate of the U. P. Church. 8vo, pp. 12. Our Young Folks, Boston, June, 1865 Abraham Lincoln. 172 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Resolutions on the death of Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States. General assembly of Conn. 8vo, pp. 2. The Nation weeping for its Dead. Observances at Springfield, Massachusetts, on President Lincoln's Funeral Day, Wednesday, April 19, 1865, including Dr. Holland's Eulogy. From the Spring- field Republican's report. Springfield, Mass. : Samuel Bowles & Co. L. J. Powers. 1865. 8vo, pp. 32. The Life of Abraham Lincoln. By Abott A. Abott, Author of " The Statesmen of America." &c. New York : T. R. Dawley, Pub- lisher for the Million, 13 and 15 Park Row. 1864. 12mo, pp. 100. Uncle Abe's Republican Songster. (Sailor nailing U. S. Flag to a Mast). For "Uncle Abe's Choir. >; San Francisco: Towne & Bacon, Book, Card and Fancy Job Printers, Southwest corner Clay and Sansome Streets. 1860. 16mo, pp. 20. SKETCH OF MONUMENTS, ETC. The FREEDMAN'S MONUMENT to Abraham Lincoln now being executed by Miss Hosmer, and about to be erected in the grounds of the Capitol at Washington, is described as follows : The total height is sixty feet ; the sides of the base are filled with bas-reliefs, illustrating the life of the president : the first sym- bolizes his birth and his various occupations as a builder of log cabins, flat boatman and farmer; the second illustrates his career as a lawyer, and his installation as president of the United States ; the third contains four memorable events of the late war; while the fourth shows the closing scenes of his life, the assassination in the theatre, the funeral procession, and his burial at Springfield. The four tablets above these contain respectively the following inscrip- tions : Abraham Lincoln, Martyr, President of the United States, Preserver of the American Union, Emancipator of Four Millions of men. The circular bas-reliefs higher up show thirty-six female figures, symbolizing the union of the same number of states; each t of these figures represents the peculiarity of that state whose shield occupies the medallion beneath. The four colossal statues placed at the outer angles, display the progressive stages of liberation during Lincoln's administration. LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 173 The negro appears, first, exposed for sale ; second, laboring in a plantation; third, guiding and assisting the loyal troops ; and, fourth serving as a soldier of the union. In the pillared " temple " surmounting the whole, is a colossal statue of Lincoln, holding in one hand the Proclamation of Eman- cipation, and in the other the broken chain of Slavery. The four female figures also of colossal size, represent Liberty bearing their crowns to the freedman. On the architecture of the temple are in- scribed the concluding words of the Proclamation of Emancipation : And upon this, sincerely believed to be an act of justice, I invoke the considerate judgment of mankind, and the gracious favor of Almighty God." The architectural portions will be constructed of granite.; the figures and bas-reliefs will be cast in bronze. The cost is estimated at 50,000. LINCOLN STATUE, Union Square, New York. This statue is intended to be placed in Union Square, New York. Mr. Lincoln is represented with his right arm thrown across his breast and the left hand holding the Emancipation Proclamation. The statue is of bronze, is nearly eleven feet high, weighs about 2,600 pounds, and entire cost about $22,000. The design is by H. K. Brown, and the casting by Robert Wood & Co., Philadelphia. LINCOLN MONUMENT, Philadelphia. This statue now being cast at Munich is intended to be erected at Philadelphia. The figure presents Mr. Lincoln seated in a chair over which is thrown a cloak. In one hand it holds an open scroll representing the emancipation, and in the other a pen. The upper side panels of the pedestal will be decorated with the arms of the United States on one side, and those of the city of Philadelphia on the other, in bronze the corners being supported with Roman fasces, also in bronze. On the lower corners of the pedestal are four American eagles, supporting festoons of laurel, all in bronze. Appropriate inscriptions will be placed in the several unoccupied panels of the pedestal. The monument will be of bronze and granite, its total height being twenty-three feet. The granite work will be done in this country, and the bronze work at the Royal Foundry, Munich. The design is by Randolph 174 LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. Mr. Hiram Powers, the American Sculptor at Florence, Italy, has executed a statue called the " Muse of History." The figure is that of a maiden standing on a half globe ; a wreath upon her brow, one bright star above her forehead, and open book and pen at her feet. Upon the page of the histrionic volume will be written simply the one word LINCOLN. THE NATIONAL LINCOLN MONUMENT. This monument intended to be placed over the remains of Mr. Lincoln at Oak Ridge Cemetery, in Springfield, Illinois. It was de- signed by the American sculptor, Larkin G. Meade, and is described as follows : The total height will be one hundred feet. The foundation and the sub-base are of granite, the architectural work of Raverceoni marble, and the statue of bronze. The obelisk is surmounted by the eagle and globe. At the base a pedestal is projected in front, on which is a colossal statue of Lincoln. On a plane below, at the four cardinal points, are four pedestals, on which are groups repre- senting the infantry, cavalry, artillery and marine arms of the service. Encircling these pedestals are tablets on which are written the names of all the states. These tablets are linked together. On the four sides of the base are tablets for inscriptions. That in front and under the statue bears the name in full, Abraham Lincoln. The sub-base is reached by stairs from the corners of the base, and under the base is the crypt for the remains. The door of the crypt is also the en- trance to the passage and stairway, which ascends the monument's inside. It will cost $200,000. LINCOLN MONUMENT at Washington. The monument consists of a Tuscan pillar thirty-five feet high, surmounted by a colossal statue of Lincoln all of white marble. It was the work of Lieutenant Flannery, and was erected April 15, 1868, in front of the City Hall, Washington. LINCOLN STATUE, at Prospect Park, Brooklyn. On Thursday, October 21, 1869, this statue was unveiled by its sculptor, Mr. H. K. Brown. It is of bronze, about nine feet high, and represents the figure of the late president standing, with the folds of a cloak draped about him ; his left hand is extended and holds a manuscript. The head is uncovered. The figure stands upon a base of Scotch granite and faces to the west. On the sides of the base are various LINCOLN BIBLIOGRAPHY. 175 emblems and inscriptions. On the east and west, wreaths enclose the letters " U. S. A." and " U. S. N. j" on the south aneagle holds a shield, in the centre of which is a female holding an axe, and sup- ported by a bundle of reeds, with the motto, " Een draght maakt maght ;" on the north is an eagle with a broken shackle in his talons. There have been several busts and paintings of Mr. Lincoln, ordered by state legislatures, and societies ; as well as many fine allegorical pictures. Ferdinand Pauwels' picture, " The New Re- public." Healy's " Peace makers." Mrs. Ames's bust of Mr. Lin- coln. Miss Vinne Ream's statue. Col. A. P. Henry's bust for the state capital of Kentucky ; and many others.