Page images
PDF
EPUB

RALPH WALDO EMERSON.-From a photograph by Black

JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.-Redrawn from an engraving after a daguerrotype .

NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE.-From Howells's Literary Friends and Acquaintance

HENRY W. LONGFELLOW.-From an old print

PRESIDENTIAL TICKET, 1840. From a photograph of the original ticket

PAGE

[ocr errors]

79

81

83

84

85

WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON. From Lossing's Field-Book of the War of 1812

86

[ocr errors]

JOSEPH STORY.-From an engraving after a portrait by Chester
Harding

89

CAMPAIGN SYMBOL OF 1840.-Redrawn from a copy of the campaign cartoon

93

JOHN TYLER.-Redrawn from an engraving from a daguerrotype . .

95

THE HANCOCK HOUSE, BOSTON.—Redrawn from a sketch
made in 1833. Showing rail-fence around the Boston
Common, which was used originally as a cow pasture . 97
TITLE-PAGE OF ANTI-ABOLITION PAMPHLET. From Sparks's

The Men Who Made the Nation

BROADWAY,

EAST SIDE, BETWEEN GRAND AND HOWARD
STREETS, NEW YORK, 1840. From an old lithograph

GENERAL SANTA ANNA.-Redrawn from an old print

99

[ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

TITLE-PAGE OF A CAMPAIGN PAMPHLET.-From the original in the New York Public Library

III

HENRY CLAY.-From a drawing by Davignon.

[blocks in formation]

TITLE-PAGE OF "THE CLAY SONGSTER."-From graph from the original.

a photo

113

JAMES K. POLK.-Redrawn from an old print

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

PAGE

WINFIELD SCOTT.-From an engraving after a daguerrotype 121 THE DEPARTURE OF THE PHILADELPHIA VOLUNTEERS FROM PHILADELPHIA. From a humorous drawing by F. O. C. Darley.

123

CHARGE OF THE "PALMETTOS" AT CHURUBUSCO. From a
drawing by Döpler, in Harper's Monthly Magazine.
MAIN STREET IN AUSTIN, TEXAS, ABOUT 1845.-Redrawn
from an old print

125

126

SALMON PORTLAND CHASE.-From Harper's Monthly Magazine 127 LEWIS CASS. From Harper's Monthly Magazine

129

THOMAS WILSON DORR.-Redrawn from an old print

130

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, IN 1848.-Redrawn from an old print

. . 131

ENGLISH POWER LOOM FOR WEAVING COTTON, 1847.-Redrawn from an old print

133

CASTLE GARDEN, NEW YORK, IN 1850.-From Harper's
Monthly Magazine.

135

EMIGRANT TRAIN CROSSING THE PLAINS.—

-Redrawn from an

old print.

136

A TYPICAL HOTEL IN THE MIDDLE MINES, CALIFORNIA, ABOUT
1850. From a sketch from nature by A. V. S. Anthony 137
SLUICE WASHING FOR GOLD IN THE MIDDLE MINES, CALIFOR-
NIA, ABOUT 1850. From a sketch from nature by A. V.
S. Anthony

OLD SPANISH FORT AT MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA, IN 1848.—
From Harper's Monthly Magazine

139

141

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

EDWARD LIVINGSTON.-From a painting which hangs in Whig
Hall, Princeton University. Livingston was Jackson's
Secretary of State from 1831 to 1833, and is credited with
having written (December, 1832) Jackson's "Proclama-
tion to the People of South Carolina." Livingston was

from New York; a member of Congress from that state
in 1795, serving until 1801, in which year he was chosen
Mayor of New York City. Through the misconduct
of a clerk Livingston became a public defaulter. At this
period he went to New Orleans, and, meeting with great
professional success, paid back every dollar he owed
the government. He was the author of the Criminal
Code for Louisiana; represented that state in Congress
from 1823 to 1829; was United States Senator from
1829 to 1831; a member of Jackson's Cabinet from
1831 to 1833; and then minister to France until the
close of 1835. He was the youngest brother of Chancellor
Livingston

PAGE

. . 197

A TYPICAL CHARLESTON (S. C.) MANSION, THE GEORGE
EVELEIGH HOUSE IN CHURCH STREET.-From Harper's
Magazine, vol. cxxxi., after a drawing by Alice R. Huger-
Smith

SAMUEL D. INGHAM.-From a lithograph. In 1829 President Jackson appointed him Secretary of the Treasury, but he resigned in 1831 on account of his objection to the "Kitchen Cabinet"

JACKSON, WEBSTER, AND CLAY.-From an engraving by
John Sartain.

THE UNITED STATES TREASURY BUILDING.-From Harper's
Magazine, vol. xliv. Erected in 1800; burned by the
British in August, 1814 .

AMOS KENDALL. From Harper's Magazine, vol. xix. Kendall was Postmaster-General (1835-40) in Jackson's Administration, and with Francis P. Blair, the editor of The Globe, formed the famous "Kitchen Cabinet." These two men were frequently consulted by the President as confidential advisers. To avoid observation they were accustomed to enter the White House by a back door. On this account the opposition party, who believed the advice of these two men caused Jackson to fill nearly all the offices with Democrats, after turning out the incumbents, called them in derision the "Kitchen Cabinet"

SCENE IN THE UNITED STATES SENATE IN THE THIRTIES.
HENRY CLAY SPEAKING. From an engraving in the Print
Collection, New York Public Library

201

205

207

211

213

219

PAGE

WILLIAM J. DUANE.-From a lithograph. Secretary of the Treasury in 1833 and opposed to Jackson's action in the matter of the United States Bank. In consequence of this President Jackson dismissed him within four months of his appointment, naming in his stead Roger B. Taney. 225 ANDREW JACKSON. From an engraving by G. Kruell after the lithograph by La Fosse; copyrighted by M. Knoedler & Co. Facing p. 226

.

LEVI WOODBURY.-From an engraving by G. F. Storm after a drawing by J. B. Longacre. Levi Woodbury, chosen United States Senator in 1825 from New Hampshire, was instrumental in winning over New Hampshire from the Federalist to the Jackson interest, and he was received into the intimate counsels of President Jackson. He was editor of the New Hampshire Patriot, also one of the officers of a bank at Concord and knew what the branches of the United States Bank could do to dominate credit and control exchanges

[ocr errors]

. 230

BENJAMIN LUNDY.-From an engraving in the Print Collec-
tion, New York Public Library. Lundy was born in
Hardwick, New Jersey, January 4, 1789, and became an
abolitionist about 1815, from which time until his death, in
1839, he continued to travel about the country preaching
and publishing journals and pamphlets against slavery.
His work resulted in converting William Lloyd Garrison,
who began the publication of the Liberator at Boston in
1831
WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON.-From an engraving by H. W.
Smith. Founder of the Liberator at Boston in 1831, a
weekly newspaper and uncompromising opponent of slav-
ery, which was discontinued in 1865, when the result for
which he had devoted the best energies of his life had
been effected by the Emancipation Proclamation of
President Lincoln. Mr. Garrison founded, in 1832, the
American Anti-Slavery Society, and was its president
from that time until 1865

[ocr errors]

234

. 236

CALEB CUSHING. From a photograph by Gardner, Washington, D. C. A colleague of J. Q. Adams in Congress, of which he was a member (1835-1843). He advocated the policy of war with Mexico. In 1853 he served as Attorney-General in President Pierce's Cabinet, and in 1860 he was president of the Democratic convention at Charles

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small]
« PreviousContinue »