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The writings of John Greenleaf Whittier, Volume 6. (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier), Personal Sketches and tributes (search)
ectives of her assailant, and wishing her well here and hereafter. She would not debate the specific merits or demerits of a man whose body was in charge of the courts, and whose reputation was sure to be in charge of posterity. Men, she continues, are of small consequence in comparison with principles, and the principle for which John Brown died is the question at issue between us. These letters were soon published in pamphlet form, and had the immense circulation of 300,000 copies. In 1867 she published A Romance of the Republic, a story of the days of slavery; powerful in its delineation of some of the saddest as well as the most dramatic conditions of master and slave in the Southern States. Her husband, who had been long an invalid, died in 1874. After his death her home, in winter especially, became a lonely one, and in 1877 she began to spend the cold months in Boston. Her last publication was in 1878, when her Aspirations of the World, a book of selections, on moral
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Appendix II: Bibliography (search)
le. Boston. 1850. The Seaside and the Fireside. Boston. 1851. The Golden Legend. Boston. 1855. The Song of Hiawatha. Boston. 1858. The Courtship of Miles Standish. Boston. 1863. Tales of a Wayside Inn. Boston. 1867. Flower-de-Luce. Boston. 1868. The New England Tragedies. Boston. 1867-70. Dante's Divine Comedy. A Translation. Boston. 1871. The Divine Tragedy. Boston. 1872. Christus: a Mystery. Boston. Three Books of Song. Bosto1867-70. Dante's Divine Comedy. A Translation. Boston. 1871. The Divine Tragedy. Boston. 1872. Christus: a Mystery. Boston. Three Books of Song. Boston. 1874. Aftermath. Boston. 1875. The Masque of Pandora, and other Poems. Boston. 1876-79. [Editor.] Poems of Places. 31 vols. Boston. 1878. Keramos, and other Poems. Boston. 1880. Ultima Thule. Boston. 1882. In the Harbor. Boston. 1883. Michael Angelo. Boston. 1886. A Complete Edition of Mr. Longfellow's Poetical and Prose Works, in 11 volumes, with introductions and notes, was published by Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston.
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Appendix III: translations of Mr. Longfellows works (search)
n. St. Louis: 1859. Die Brautwerbung des Miles Standish. Übersetzt von Karl Knortz. Leipzig: 18—. Miles Standish's Brautwerbung. Übersetzt von F. Manefeld. 1867. Die Sage von Konig Olaf. Übersetzt von Ernst Rauscher. The Same. Übersetzt von W. Hertzberg. Gedichte von H. W. L. Deutsch von Alexander Neidhardt. Darm. Tradotta da Pietro Rotondi. Firenze: 1856. The Same. Traduzione di Carlo Faccioli. Verona: 1873. La Leggenda d'oro. Tradotta da Ada Corbellini Martini. Parma: 1867. Il Canto d'hiawatha. Tr. da L. G. Bartolini. Frammenti. Firenze: 1867. Miles Standish. Traduzione dalla Inglese di Caterino Frattini. Padova: 1868. Li1867. Miles Standish. Traduzione dalla Inglese di Caterino Frattini. Padova: 1868. Liriche e Novelle. Tradotte da C. Faccioli. Firenze: 1890. Uccelletti di Passo. [Birds of Passage.] Dalla Inglese di H. W. Longfellow. Rovigo: 1875. Excelsior. Traduzione dalla Inglese. A. Tebaldi. Portuguese El Rei Roberto de Sicilia. Tr. by Dom Pedro II., Emperor of Brazil. Autograph Ms. Evangelina. Traduzida po<
of the Poor Widows' Fund in 1842 gave three widows four dollars each: total, twelve dollars, annual income. The Poor Widows' Fund, amounting to two hundred dollars, was the donation of the widow Mary Cutter. The School Committee Report for 1866-67 contains the following: Perhaps full justice has scarcely been done to the donor of this noble gift to the schools of the town. His will bears date March 17, 1823, and it gives his whole estate, $5,000—as it proved to be—after the death of his wifugh, N. H. ———— $75,372.99 1866 The town voted to accept the lot of land donated by the late Hon. James Russell for a public walk or common, on the conditions named by the donor in his will devising the same. It was named Russell Park in 1867. In 1866 the town appropriated $10,000 to rebuild the schoolhouse in the Northwest District-burned in the latter part of October, 1866. 1867 Town accepted the flag-staff standing at the corner of Main and Pleasant Streets, and the f
Principal town officers of West Cambridge, 1807-1867. Representatives. Samuel Butterfield, 18064. Joseph S. Potter, 1865-67. George Hill, 1867 (declined). Assessors. George Prentiss, 1, 1849, 1866, 1867. Stephen Symmes, Jr., 1860-67. George A. Locke, 1853. George C. Russell, 11856, 1860-62. William E. Parmenter, Esq., 1856-67. Dr. Richard L. Hodgdon, 1856, 1857. Warren S. Frost, 1866. Josiah Crosby, 1857, 1859-67. Edwin Locke, 1858. John Adams, 1858. John D. Ft Smith, 1863-66 (deceased). Henry Swan, 1864-67. Samuel G. Damon, 1866-67. Rev. Amos Harris,67-1879. representatives. Joseph S. Potter, 1867. Jesse Bacon, 1869. J. Winslow Peirce, 1872ey, 1879. Assessors. Stephen Symmes, Jr., 1867. Albert Winn, 1867, 1868. Abel R. Proctor 1873-79. Town Clerks. Abel R. Proctor, 1867, 1868 (resigned). John F. Allen, 1868-74 (re(removed from town). Rev. Charles C. Salter, 1867-69 (resigned). William E. Parmenter, 1867-79[21 more...]
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 1. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Bibliographical note (search)
the remarkable work of M. Vigo Roussillion on The Military Power of the United States, and the writings of three officers with whom the author had the good fortune to serve in the campaign against Richmond in 1862: History of the War of Secession, by the Swiss Federal colonel F. Lecomte, two volumes; History of the War of Secession, by Lieutenant-colonel Fletcher of the British Guards, three volumes; and Four Years in the Army of the Potomac, by General Regis de Trobriand, two volumes, Paris, 1867. This last work, French in language, in spirit, and in the place of its publication, possesses at the same time, in an historical point of view, all the value of a narrative written by one of the eye-witnesses and actors in the great American drama. We shall conclude this note with a final reference, which will convey to the reader an idea of the multitude of documents of varied importance and value that have been published on the subject of which we are treating; this is a large quarto
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 2. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Bibliographical note. (search)
by Heros Von Borcke, London, 1866, 2 vols.; Medical Recollections of the Army of the Potomac, by Chief Surgeon Letterman, New York, 1866, 1 vol.; Four Years of Fighting, by Coffin, Boston, 1866, 1 vol.; Partisan Life with Mosby, by Scott, London, 1867, 1 vol.; General Burnside and the Ninth Army Corps, by Woodbury, Providence, 1867, 1 vol.; Three Years in the Sixth Corps, by Stevens, 2d edition, New York, 1870, 1 vol.; General Lee, by Edward Lee-Childe, Paris, 1874, 1 vol.; Narrative of Militar1867, 1 vol.; Three Years in the Sixth Corps, by Stevens, 2d edition, New York, 1870, 1 vol.; General Lee, by Edward Lee-Childe, Paris, 1874, 1 vol.; Narrative of Military Operations, by General J. E. Johnston, New York, 1874, 1 vol. This last-named work, which has just appeared, possesses an especial interest, being written by the principal survivor of the Confederate generals, nine years after the close of the war, with all the care and moderation to be expected from a writer who relates events in which he has himself played the most conspicuous part.
He was installed December 29, 1869, and remained three years till December, 1872. The present pastor, Rev. Edward C. Guild, was installed June 8, 1873. He was graduated from Harvard College in 1853, and from the Cambridge Divinity School in 1857. An Act of the Legislature approved May 3, 1866, enacts that, The Independent Congregational Society in Waltham shall be called and known by the name of the First Parish in Waltham. The church edifice was thoroughly repaired and remodeled in 1867. A Committee was appointed by the Parish April 16, 1867, to inquire into the history of the Ann Mills Fund and the Ripley Fund. From their report it appears that Ann Mills by her Will, November 7, 1725, gave to the Church of the West part of Watertown one quarter of her estate, the interest of which was to be annually distributed to the Poor of the Parish by the Ministers and Deacons. The First Church appointed trustees of the fund, which in 1732 was £ 282 6s. 4d., and in 1747 was increa
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 2., The second Congregational and Mystic churches. (search)
degree of D. D. was conferred upon him by Dartmouth College, in 1866. His resignation was given in order to assume the editorial and business management of the Boston Recorder, and when that paper was consolidated with the Congregationalist, in 1867, he joined the editorial staff of the united papers, and was also at the same time the managing editor of the Congregational Review. Later he purchased and managed till his death a small paper called the Daily News, in order to advance the cause higher success or the health and happiness of one so dear to us and him. During the Civil war Mr. Hooker was drafted for the army, but his people could not spare him, and with promptness cheerfully procured a substitute. In the winter of 1866-67 there was a deep religious awakening in the evangelical churches of the town, Mr. McCollom of the First, Mr. Preston of the Baptist, Mr. Waite of the Methodist, and Mr. Hooker of the Mystic, with many laymen of those churches, working earnestly and
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 2., A business man of long ago. (search)
ared in February, 809,—four dollars on a share of one hundred dollars. In 1803 Benjamin Hall, John Brooks, Fitch Hall, Ebenezer Hall, 2d, and Samuel Buell First postmaster of Medford. were the petitioners to the Legislature to form the Medford Turnpike Association. This road was built east of Winter and Ploughed hills and presented a shorter route to Boston than the old road over Winter hill. The road was built and proved a great convenience to teamsters. It remained a turnpike until 1867, when it was laid out as a county road. Few old residents of Medford, to this day, call it by its modern name, Mystic avenue. It is the Turnpike to them and their children. When Col. Isaac Royall fled from Medford his estates were left in charge of Dr. Simon Tufts, the worthy physician of the town, who carefully rendered to the government all income arising from them. But in 1778 the whole property was confiscated. Probably through influence of his friends in Medford, who testified that