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A record of the absence of President Grant and cabinet from the seat of government to the neglect of the people's business. [n. p., 1872].

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Summary

"Mr. Greeley's letters of acceptance": p. 6-8.; I. Greeley, Horace, 1811-1872.

Page Order: Uncut Quarto

Available also through the Library of Congress web site in two forms: as facsimile page images and as full text in SGML.

Printed Ephemera Collection; Portfolio 237, Folder 13d.

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pamphlets record absence president grant president grant cabinet seat government neglect people business rare book and special collections division people business ultra high resolution high resolution broadsides printed ephemera united states history
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Date

01/01/1872
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Source

Library of Congress
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http://www.loc.gov/
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Public Domain

label_outline Explore Neglect, President Grant

A record of the absence of President Grant and cabinet from the seat of government to the neglect of the people's business. [n. p., 1872].

Gen. Grant's reasons for supporting Gen. Garfield. A sharply-drawn contrast. Speech at Warren, O., Sept. 28, 1880 .... President Grant's letter in 1876 to Gov. Chamberlain, of South Carolina, on the Hamburg massacre [Washington D. C. 1880].

The third term. The long silence of Caesar broken at last. President Grant writes a letter on the third term, Washington, D.C. May 29, 1875.

Washington D.C. - The Inauguration - President Grant taking the oath of office [March 4, 1873]

The financial record of President Grant's administration. [1873?].

Dance President Grant's quickstep - Public domain musical sheets

The financial record of President Grant's administration. [1873?].

He knew all at once that he himself had wrought this ruin

Don't be a dope - care for your sidearms By fireball pilots like Joe, sidearms are ignored as y'know. After years of neglect that caused rust to collect the dang thing is needed - oh woe! / / Warrant Off. Will Eisner, Ordnance.

A menace to Society. The Padgett family. The entire family including the mother totally illiterate. No one could read or write. The mother does mill work some. Alice, 17 years has steady job. Makes from $5 to $6 a week. Alfred, 13 years now, worked here when he was 12, and in other mills before that. Makes $4 a week. Recently crippled by getting his hand caught in the cogs of a spinning machine. Richard just reached 11. Been working here 1 year; began when he was 10. Makes $2.40 a week. "The work runs him down too." William, 6 years old, nearly blind. Lizzie, 5 years old. Home in utter neglect; filthy and bare. When investigator called the mother had been gone about an hour, leaving a roomer's 3 months old baby in the cradle before an open fire on the hearth, and only two children 5 and 6 years old - one nearly blind, playing around. She came back and fed them a lot of cheap candy. What will Society reap from its neglect of this family? Shaw Cotton Mills. Location: South Weldon, North Carolina.

A menace to Society. The Padgett family. The entire family including the mother totally illiterate. No one could read or write. The mother does mill work some. Alice, 17 years has steady job. Makes from $5 to $6 a week. Alfred, 13 years now, worked here when he was 12, and in other mills before that. Makes $4 a week. Recently crippled by getting his hand caught in the cogs of a spinning machine. Richard just reached 11. Been working here 1 year; began when he was 10. Makes $2.40 a week. "The work runs him down too." William, 6 years old, nearly blind. Lizzie, 5 years old. Home in utter neglect; filthy and bare. When investigator called the mother had been gone about an hour, leaving a roomer's 3 months old baby in the cradle before an open fire on the hearth, and only two children 5 and 6 years old - one nearly blind, playing around. She came back and fed them a lot of cheap candy. What will Society reap from its neglect of this family? Shaw Cotton Mills. Location: South Weldon, North Carolina

The Republican party. Address of the Republican Congressional committee to the party. Review of the history of the party - what it has accomplished - Work yet to be done - Success of President Grant's administration. [Washington, D. C. 1872?].

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pamphlets record absence president grant president grant cabinet seat government neglect people business rare book and special collections division people business ultra high resolution high resolution broadsides printed ephemera united states history