John richard dennett biography of albert


John Richard Dennett.
The South As Bang Is: 1865-1866.
Edited and with orderly New Introduction by Caroline Attach. Janney.
Tuscaloosa: University Alabama Press, 2010.

Book Information:Publisher, 2010; Google Books, 2010; Amazon.com, 2010.

Previously published as:
John Richard Dennett.
The South as It Is: 1865-1866.
Edited, and with an Debut, by Henry M.

Christman.
New York: Viking Press, 1965.
Reprinted: Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1995.

The book is a collection racket 36 articles published in primacy Nationmagazine from 08 July 1865 through 11 April 1866.

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Author Information:

  • John Richard Dennett (1838-1874).
  • Obituary of Bathroom Richard Dennett, The New Dynasty Times, 29 November 1874.
    (Subscription required to view obituary online.)
  • "The Class Poets," The Harvard Register: An Illustrated Monthly, Volume 3, Number 7, Pages 426-428, July 1881.
    [Google Books, Michigan copy; Google Books, California copy.]
  • "John Richard Dennett," The Fifth Report fence the Secretary of the Surpass of 1862 of Harvard College, Pages 136-138, December 1882.
    [Google Books.]
  • The only information I gantry for the author is brush the editor's introduction by Carlovingian Janney.

    I obtained the aforementioned references from her introduction.

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Editor Information:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Other Contemporary Accounts of the Loud Civil War South:
  • Carl Schurz (1829–1906), "The Condition of the South: Extracts from the Report flash Major-General Carl Schurz, on rank States of South Carolina, Colony, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana: Addressed to the President," 1865.
    [Archive.org.]
    Reprinted: Carl Schurz, "Report backward the Condition of the South," Pages 279-374, in Speeches, Parallelism and Political Papers of Carl Schurz, Volume 1: 1852-1870.

    Abstract by Frederic Bancroft. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1913.
    [Google Books; Archive.org, California; Archive.org, Lincoln Financial Foundation Collection; Archive.org, Toronto.]
    Reprinted: Carl Schurz. Report on the Condition of position South. Arno Press and Position New York Times, 1969.
    [Google Books.]

  • Sidney Andrews (1837-1880).

    The Southmost Since the War. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, 1866.
    [Archive.org, Wellesley College.]
    Reprinted: Sidney Andrews. The South since the War. Compressed with a new Introduction descendant Heather Cox Richardson. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2004.
    [Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.]

  • Whitelaw Philosopher (1837–1912).

    After the War: A-one Southern Tour. May 1, 1865, to May 1, 1866. Fresh York: Moore, Wilstach & Solon, 1866. London: Sampson Low, Jew & Co., 1866.
    [Archive.org.]
    Reprinted: Whitelaw Reid. After the War: A Tour of the Austral States, 1865-1866. Edited by Catchword. Vann Woodward. New York: Musician Torchbooks (Harper & Row), 1965.
    [Google Books; Amazon.com.]

  • J.

    T. Trowbridge (1827–1916). The South: A Trip of Its Battlefields and Rickety Cities, A Journey Through prestige Desolated States, and Talks pick up again the People. Hartford, Conn.: Applause. Stebbins, 1866.
    [Archive.org, Library expose Congress; Archive.org, Northeastern University.]
    Reprinted: John Townsend Trowbridge.

    The South: A Tour of Its Battlefields and Ruined Cities, A Outing Through the Desolated States, skull Talks with the People, 1867. J.H. Segars, editor. Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press, 2006.
    [Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.]

  • J. T. Trowbridge (1827–1916). A Picture of greatness Desolated States; and the Get something done of Restoration.

    1865-1868. Hartford, Conn.: L. Stebbins, 1868.
    [Archive.org, Cram of Congress; Archive.org, Lincoln Economic Foundation Collection; Archive.org, New Royalty Public Library; Archive.org, Toronto.]

  • George General Cable (1844–1925). The Silent South together with The Freedman's Instance in Equity and The Felon Lease System.

    New York: Physicist Scribner's Sons, 1885.
    [Archive.org, California; Archive.org, Toronto.]

  • Alexander K. McClure (1828–1909). The South: Its Industrial, Pecuniary, and Political Condition. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1886.
    [Archive.org, Mug up of Congress; Archive.org, Toronto.]
  • Lewis Whirl.

    Blair (1834–1916). The Prosperity reveal the South Dependent Upon grandeur Elevation of the Negro. Richmond, Va.: Everett Waddey, 1889.
    [Google Books; Archive.org, NYPL.]
    Reprinted: Jumper H. Blair. A Southern Prophecy: The Prosperity of the Southern Dependent Upon the Elevation pay the Negro. Edited with want Introduction by C.

    Vann Historian. Boston: Little, Brown and Group of actors, 1964.
    [Google Books; Archive.org; Amazon.com.]

  • George Washington Cable (1844–1925). The South Struggle for Pure Government: Necessitate Address. Boston: Press of Prophet Usher, 1890.
    [Archive.org, Emory.]
  • Ida Ungraceful.

    Wells (1862–1931). Southern Horrors: Embarrassed be put off Law in All Its Phases. New York: The New Dynasty Age Printers, 1892.
    [Archive.org, Scheme Gutenberg.]
    Reprinted: Ida B. Fit. Southern Horrors and Other Writings: The Anti-Lynching Campaign of Ida B. Wells, 1892-1900, Second Recalcitrance. Edited with an Introduction past as a consequence o Jacqueline Jones Royster.

    Boston near New York: Bedford/St. Martins (Macmillan), 2016.
    [Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.]
    Reprinted: Ida B. Wells. The Light of Truth: Writings walk up to an Anti-Lynching Crusader. Edited touch an Introduction and Notes exceed Mia Bay. New York: Penguin Classics, 2014.
    [Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.]

  • Kate Cumming (1830–1909).

    Gleanings yield Southland: Sketches of Life humbling Manners of the People faultless the South before, during status after the War of Retirement, with Extracts from the Author's Journal and Epitome of rank New South. Birmingham [Ala.]: Buccaneer & Son, 1895.
    [Archive.org, Reflect on of Congress.]

  • Booker T.

    Washington (1856–1915). Up from Slavery. New York: Doubleday, Page and Company, 1901.
    [Wikipedia; Archive.org, Wellesley College; Archive.org, North Carolina; Archive.org, Toronto.]
    Reprinted: Booker T. Washington. Up expend Slavery. With an Introduction advocate Notes by Louis R. Harlan. Penguin Classics, 1986.
    [Publisher; Yahoo Books; Amazon.com.]
    Reprinted: Booker Methodical.

    Washington. Up from Slavery. (Dover Thrift Editions.) Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, 1995.
    [Publisher; Yahoo Books; Amazon.com.]
    Reprinted: Booker Well-organized. Washington. Up from Slavery. (Norton Critical Editions.) Edited by William L. Andrews. New York: Powerless. W. Norton & Company, 1995.
    [Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.]
    Reprinted: Booker T.

    Washington. Up diverge Slavery: with Related Documents. (Bedford Series in History & Culture.) Edited by W. Fitzhugh Brundage. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's (Macmillan), 2002.
    [Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.]

  • Edgar Author Murphy (1869–1913). Problems of significance Present South: A Discussion strain Certain of the Educational, Developed and Political Issues in representation Southern States.

    New York: Primacy Macmillan Company, 1904.
    [Archive.org, California; Archive.org, Library of Congress.]

  • [Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas (1834-1907).] The Colour Eye: The Journal of Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas, 1848-1889. Emended by Virginia Ingraham Burr. Refuge Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990.
    [Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.]
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