American Eloquence, Volume IV
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Title: American Eloquence, Volume IV. (of 4) Studies In American
Political History (1897)
Author: Various
Release Date: March 17, 2005 [EBook #15394]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
AMERICAN ELOQUENCE, IV. ***
Produced by David Widger
AMERICAN ELOQUENCE
STUDIES IN AMERICAN POLITICAL HISTORY
Edited with Introduction by Alexander Johnston
Reedited by James Albert Woodburn
Volume IV. (of 4)
VII.--CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION
VIII.--FREE TRADE AND PROTECTION.
IX.--FINANCE AND CIVIL SERVICE REFORM.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
VII.--CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION
ABRAHAM LINCOLN First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861.
JEFFERSON DAVIS Inaugural Address. Montgomery, Ala., February
18, 1867.
ALEXANDER HAMILTON STEPHENS The "Corner-Stone" Address
--Atheneum, Savannah, Ga., March 2, 1861.
JOHN CALEB BRECKENRIDGE and EDWIN D. BAKER
Suppression Of Insurrection --United States Senate, August 1, 1861.
CLEMENT L. VALLANDIGHAM On The War And Its Conduct
--House Of Representatives, January 14, 1863.
HENRY WARD BEECHER Address At Liverpool, October 16, 1863.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN The Gettysburgh Address, November 19,
1863.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN Second Inaugural Address, March 4, 1865.
HENRY WINTER DAVIS On Reconstruction ; The First Republican
Theory --House Of Representatives, March 22, 1864.
GEORGE H. PENDLETON On Reconstruction ; The Democratic
Theory --House Of Representatives, May 4, 1864.
THADDEUS STEVENS On Reconstruction; Radical Republican
Theory --House Of Representatives-December 18, 1865.
HENRY J. RAYMOND . On Reconstruction; Administration
Republican Theory --House Of Representatives, December 21, 1865.
THADDEUS STEVENS On The First Reconstruction Bill --House Of
Representatives, January 3, 1867.
VIII.--FREE TRADE AND PROTECTION.
HENRY CLAY On The American System --In The United States
Senate, February 2-6,1832.
FRANK H. HURD. A Tariff For Revenue Only --House Of
Representatives, February 18, 1881.
IX.--FINANCE AND CIVIL SERVICE REFORM.
JUSTIN S. MORRILL On The Remonetization Of Silver --United
States Senate, January 28, 1878.
JAMES G. BLAINE On The Remonetization Of Silver --United States
Senate, February 7, 1878
JOHN SHERMAN On Silver Coinage And Treasury Notes --United
States Senate, June 5, 1890.
JOHN P. JONES On Silver Coinage And Treasury Notes --United
States Senate, May 12, 1810.
GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS On The Spoils System And The
Progress Of Civil Service Reform --Address Before The American
Social Science Association, Saratoga, N. Y., September 8, 1881.
CARL SCHURZ On The Necessity And Progress Of Civil Service
Reform --Address At The Annual Meeting Of The National Civil
Service Reform League, Chicago, Ills., December 12, 1894.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
GEORGE W. CURTIS--Frontispiece From a painting by SAMUEL
LAWRENCE.
JOHN C. BRECKENRIDGE From a photograph.
HENRY W. BEECHER . Wood-engraving from photograph.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN Wood-engraving from photograph.
JAMES G. BLAINE Wood-engraving from photograph.
INTRODUCTION TO THE FOURTH VOLUME.
The fourth and last volume of the American Eloquent e deals with four
great subjects of discussion in our history,--the Civil War and
Reconstruction, Free Trade and Protection, Finance, and Civil Service
Reform. In the division on the Civil War there has been substituted in
the new edition, for Mr. Schurz's speech on the Democratic War Policy
the spirited discussion between Breckenridge and Baker on the
suppression of insurrection. The scene in which these two speeches
were delivered in the United States Senate at the opening of the Civil
war is full of historic and dramatic interest, while the speeches
themselves are examples of superior oratory. Mr. Schurz appears to
advantage in another part of the volume in his address on Civil Service
Reform.
The speeches of Thaddeus Stevens and Henry J. Raymond, delivered at
the opening of the Reconstruction struggle under President Johnson, are
also new material in this edition. They are fairly representative of two
distinct views in that period of the controversy. These two speeches are
substituted for the Garfield-Blackburn discussion over a "rider" to an
appropriation bill designed to forbid federal control of elections within
the States. This discussion was only incidental to the problem of
reconstruction, and may be said to have occurred at a time (1879)
subsequent to the close of the Reconstruction period proper.
The material on Free Trade and Protection has been left unchanged for
the reason that it appears to the present editor quite useless to attempt
to secure better material on the tariff discussion. There might be added
valuable similar material from later speeches on the tariff, but the two
speeches of Clay and Hurd may be said to contain the essential merits
of the long-standing tariff debate.
The section of the volume devoted to Finance and Civil Service
Reform is entirely new. The two speeches of Curtis
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