Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 27. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones). You can also browse the collection for March, 1899 AD or search for March, 1899 AD in all documents.

Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 27. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), A noble life. (search)
ces of Lincoln (page 384), all in confirmation of Stanton's estimate and treatment of Lincoln. Hapgood's Abraham Lincoln refers (page 164) to Stanton's brutal absence of decent personal feeling towards Lincoln, and tells of Stanton's insulting behavior when they met five years earlier, of which meeting Stanton said that he had met him at the bar, and found him a low, cunning clown. (See Ben Perley Poore, in Reminiscences of Lincoln, page 223.) Miss Ida Tarbell, in McClure's Magazine for March, 1899, tells the story of this earliest manifestation of Stanton's contempt for Lincoln. McClure's Lincoln, etc. (page 123, et seq.), says: Lincoln's desire for a renomination was the one thing ever apparent in his mind during the third year of his administration, and he draws a pitiful picture (pages 113 to 115) of Lincoln as he saw him, in fits of abject depression during a considerable time after his second nomination, when he and all the leaders of the Republican party thought his defeat
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 27. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.52 (search)
ces of Lincoln (page 384), all in confirmation of Stanton's estimate and treatment of Lincoln. Hapgood's Abraham Lincoln refers (page 164) to Stanton's brutal absence of decent personal feeling towards Lincoln, and tells of Stanton's insulting behavior when they met five years earlier, of which meeting Stanton said that he had met him at the bar, and found him a low, cunning clown. (See Ben Perley Poore, in Reminiscences of Lincoln, page 223.) Miss Ida Tarbell, in McClure's Magazine for March, 1899, tells the story of this earliest manifestation of Stanton's contempt for Lincoln. McClure's Lincoln, etc. (page 123, et seq.), says: Lincoln's desire for a renomination was the one thing ever apparent in his mind during the third year of his administration, and he draws a pitiful picture (pages 113 to 115) of Lincoln as he saw him, in fits of abject depression during a considerable time after his second nomination, when he and all the leaders of the Republican party thought his defeat