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  • 1
    UID:
    (DE-627)1048971716
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (volumes 〈1-33, 36〉) , illustrations, portraits, maps, facsimiles
    Edition: Online-Ausg. [S.l.] HathiTrust Digital Library 2010 Electronic reproduction
    ISBN: 0691045828 , 0691047782 , 0691015856 , 0691047804 , 0691090432 , 0691094985 , 0691118957 , 0691046875 , 0691047286 , 0691047391 , 0691047766 , 0691047774 , 0691124892 , 069112910X , 0691135576 , 0691137730 , 0691137749 , 069104533X , 0691045348 , 0691045356 , 0691045364 , 0691045372 , 0691045380 , 0691045399 , 0691045402 , 0691045410 , 0691045429 , 0691045437 , 0691045445 , 0691045453 , 0691045461 , 069104547X , 0691045488 , 0691045496 , 0691045836 , 0691046867 , 069115001X , 069115323X , 0691046182 , 0691156719 , 0691160376 , 0691164207 , 1400833728 , 9780691045825 , 9780691047782 , 9780691015859 , 9780691047805 , 9780691090436 , 9780691094984 , 9780691118956 , 9780691046877 , 9780691047287 , 9780691047393 , 9780691047768 , 9780691047775 , 9780691124896 , 9780691129105 , 9780691135571 , 9780691137735 , 9780691137742 , 9780691045337 , 9780691045344 , 9780691045351 , 9780691045368 , 9780691045375 , 9780691045382 , 9780691045399 , 9780691045405 , 9780691045412 , 9780691045429 , 9780691045436 , 9780691045443 , 9780691045450 , 9780691045467 , 9780691045474 , 9780691045481 , 9780691045498 , 9780691045832 , 9780691046860 , 9780691150017 , 9780691153230 , 9780691046181 , 9780691156712 , 9780691160375 , 9780691164205 , 9781400833726
    Uniform Title: Works 1950 Selections
    Content: "The Papers of Thomas Jefferson is a projected 60-volume series containing not only the 18,000 letters written by Jefferson but also, in full or in summary, the more than 25,000 letters written to him. Including documents of historical significance as well as private notes not closely examined until their publication in the Papers, this series is an unmatched source of scholarship on the nation's third president"--Publisher's description
    Content: v. 1. 1760-1776 -- v. 2. 1777-18 June, 1779, including the Revisal of the laws, 1776-1786 -- v. 3. June 1779 to September 1780 -- v. 4. October 1780 to February 1781 -- v. 5. February 1781 to May 1781 -- v. 6. May 1781 to March 1784 -- v. 7. 2 March 1784 to 25 February 1785 -- v. 8. 25 February to 31 October 1785 -- v. 9. 1 November 1785 to 22 June 1786 -- v. 10. 22 June to 31 December 1786
    Content: v. 11. 1 January to 6 August 1787 -- v. 12. 7 August 1787 to 31 March 1788 -- v. 13. March to October 1788 -- v. 14. 8 October 1788 to 26 March 1789 -- v. 15. 27 March 1789 to 30 November 1789 -- v. 16. 30 November 1789 to 4 July 1790 -- v. 17. 6 July to 3 November 1790 -- v. 18. 4 November 1790 to 24 January 1791 -- v. 19. 24 January to 31 March 1791 -- v. 20. 1 April to 4 August 1791
    Content: v. 21. Index, volumes 1-20 -- v. 22. 6 August 1791 to 31 December 1791 -- v. 23. 1 January 1792 to 31 May 1792 -- v. 24. 1 June to 31 December 1792 -- v. 25. 1 January to 10 May 1793 -- v. 26. 11 May to 31 August 1793 -- v. 27. 1 September to 31 December 1793
    Content: v. 36. 1 December 1801 to 3 March 1802
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and indexes , Use copy Restrictions unspecified star MiAaHDL , Electronic reproduction , Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002.
    Additional Edition: Print version Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826 Papers Princeton : Princeton University Press, 1950-〈2009〉
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press
    UID:
    (DE-627)1066745021
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource , 8 duotones.
    ISBN: 9781400833726 , 9781400833726
    Series Statement: Papers of Thomas Jefferson
    Content: The period covered by this volume brings to a conclusion Thomas Jefferson's first year as president. On 8 December he communicates his first annual message to Congress: peace between France and England is restored; a rise in population will increase revenue and help abolish internal taxes; the standing army can be done away with; "peace & friendship" prevail with Indian neighbors. He recommends two particular matters to the attention of Congress: a revision of the laws on naturalization and a review of the Judiciary Act. Two delegations of Indian nations hold conferences with Jefferson and Secretary of War Henry Dearborn in Washington. Jefferson observes that it is good for them to "renew the chain of affection." The president receives a "Mammoth Cheese" as a token of esteem from the citizens of Cheshire, Massachusetts, and the letter from the Danbury Baptists arrives. In his famous reply to the Baptists, Jefferson states that "religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god." Shortly after legislators arrive in town for the opening of Congress, he begins to entertain at the President's House. He uses such occasions to bridge the divide between the executive and legislative branches and foster political understanding between Republicans and Federalists. As he moves into his second year as president, he is optimistic about his legislative program and the Republican majority in Congress.
    Note: Frontmatter -- -- FOREWORD -- -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- -- EDITORIAL METHOD AND APPARATUS -- -- CONTENTS -- -- ILLUSTRATIONS -- -- JEFFERSON CHRONOLOGY -- -- VOLUME 36 -- -- DECEMBER 1801 -- -- JANUARY 1802 -- -- FEBRUARY 1802 -- -- MARCH 1802 -- -- Appendix I: Letters Not Printed in Full -- -- Appendix II: Letters Not Found -- -- Appendix III: Financial Documents -- -- Appendix IV: Statements of Accounts with John Barnes -- -- INDEX , Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
    Language: English
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 3
    UID:
    (DE-604)BV045879304
    Format: 1 online resource , 8 duotones
    ISBN: 9781400833726
    Series Statement: Papers of Thomas Jefferson
    Content: The period covered by this volume brings to a conclusion Thomas Jefferson's first year as president. On 8 December he communicates his first annual message to Congress: peace between France and England is restored; a rise in population will increase revenue and help abolish internal taxes; the standing army can be done away with; "peace & friendship" prevail with Indian neighbors. He recommends two particular matters to the attention of Congress: a revision of the laws on naturalization and a review of the Judiciary Act. Two delegations of Indian nations hold conferences with Jefferson and Secretary of War Henry Dearborn in Washington. Jefferson observes that it is good for them to "renew the chain of affection." The president receives a "Mammoth Cheese" as a token of esteem from the citizens of Cheshire, Massachusetts, and the letter from the Danbury Baptists arrives. In his famous reply to the Baptists, Jefferson states that "religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god." Shortly after legislators arrive in town for the opening of Congress, he begins to entertain at the President's House. He uses such occasions to bridge the divide between the executive and legislative branches and foster political understanding between Republicans and Federalists. As he moves into his second year as president, he is optimistic about his legislative program and the Republican majority in Congress
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Nov 2018) , In English
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Princeton : Princeton University Press
    UID:
    (DE-627)1049554213
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (815 pages)
    ISBN: 9781400833726
    Series Statement: Papers of Thomas Jefferson Ser v.45
    Content: Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- FOREWORD -- EDITORIAL METHOD AND APPARATUS -- ILLUSTRATIONS -- JEFFERSON CHRONOLOGY -- 1801 -- To Andrew Sterett, 1 December -- From Joseph Yznardi, Sr., enclosing Statement of Principles, 1 December -- To James Currie, 2 December -- To Thomas Leiper, 2 December -- To George Jefferson, 3 December -- To James Madison, [ca. 3 December] -- To Craven Peyton, 3 December -- From Andrew Sterett, 3 December -- From Abishai Thomas, 3 December -- Memorial from the District of Columbia Commissioners, 4 December -- From the Georgia Legislature, 4 December -- From George Jefferson, 4 December -- To George Latimer, 4 December -- To John Monroe, 4 December -- To Thomas Mann Randolph, 4 December -- From Christopher Smith, 4 December -- To Caspar Wistar, 4 December -- To Joseph Bloomfield, 5 December -- From Sylvanus Bourne, 5 December -- From Henry Dearborn, 5 December -- From John Glendy, 5 December -- To Gideon Granger, 5 December -- From James Hall, 5 December -- To James Lyon, 5 December -- To Isaac Story, 5 December -- From "Philanthrophos," [on or before 6 December] -- Bill to Establish a Government for the Territory of Columbia -- I. Draft Bill, [before 7 December] -- II. From John Thomson Mason, [7 December] -- From Tench Coxe, [before 7 December] -- Henry Dearborn's Plan for Reorganizing the Army, [7 December] -- From Albert Gallatin, 7 December -- From Horatio Gates, 7 December -- From George Jefferson, 7 December -- From the Senate, 7 December -- Annual Message to Congress -- I. To the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President of the Senate, 8 December -- II. First Annual Message to Congress, 8 December -- III. Note for the National Intelligencer,[ca. 8 December] -- Henry Dearborn's Statement on Indian Trading Houses, 8 December -- To Albert Gallatin, 8 December
    Content: From George Jefferson, 8 December -- From Matthew Lawler, 8 December -- From James Lyon, 8 December -- From James Madison, 8 December -- To Bishop James Madison, 8 December -- From James Monroe, 8 December -- General Statement of Account with John Barnes, 9 December -- Memorandum from John Barnes, 9 December -- From William P. Gardner, 9 December -- From John Vaughan, 9 December -- DeWitt Clinton's Statement on a Political Faction in New York, [before 10 December] -- From James Cheetham, enclosing James Cheetham's Statement on a Political Faction in New York City, [10 December] -- From the District of Columbia Commissioners, 10 December -- From James Madison, [10 December] -- From the War Department, with Jefferson's Reply, 10 December -- From "An American," 11 December -- From Benjamin Hawkins, 11 December -- To the Senate, 11 December -- To the Senate, 11 December -- From Jean Chas, 12 December -- From James Currie, 12 December -- From John Dickinson, 12 December -- From James Dinsmore, 12 December -- To Christopher Ellery, 12 December -- From Lewis Littlepage, 12 December -- From Elijah Paine, 12 December -- From Albert Gallatin, [13 December] -- To James Monroe, 13 December -- From James Ray, 13 December -- To Mary JeCerson Eppes, 14 December -- To Albert Gallatin, 14 December -- From William Judd, 14 December -- From George Meade, 14 December -- From J. P. G. Muhlenberg, 14 December -- From François Soulés, 14 December -- From Antoine Félix Wuibert, 14 December -- From Jacob Crowninshield, 15 December -- From Albert Gallatin, [15 December] -- From Abishai Thomas, 15 December -- From Thomas Bruff, 16 December -- From Henry Dearborn, 16 December -- From Tadeusz Kosciuszko, 16 December -- From Bishop James Madison, 16 December -- From Pierre Samuel Du Pont de Nemours, 17 December -- From Hugh Holmes, 17 December -- From David Walker, 17 December
    Content: From John Devereux DeLacy, 18 December -- To Peter Lyons, 18 December -- From Nathaniel Macon, 18 December -- From William Short, 18 December -- To James Taylor, Jr., 18 December -- From David Austin, 19 December -- From William Cranch, 19 December -- To John Dickinson, 19 December -- From the District of Columbia Commissioners, 19 December -- From Benjamin Henfrey, 19 December -- From Robert Patterson, 19 December -- From Richard Williams, 19 December -- To Horatio Gates, 20 December -- To Levi Lincoln, 20 December -- From James Monroe, 20 December -- To Benjamin Rush, 20 December -- From George Baron, 21 December -- Statement of Account with Thomas Carpenter, 21 December -- From Albert Gallatin, with Jefferson's Reply, 21 December -- To Levi Lincoln, 21 December -- Resolution of the Mississippi Territory General Assembly, 21 December -- From James Monroe, 21 December -- Proclamation on Ratification of the Convention with France, 21 December -- From John Vaughan, 21 December -- From Charles Douglas and Susan Douglas, 22 December -- To the Senate, 22 December -- To the Senate and the House of Representatives, 22 December -- From Lewis Littlepage, 23 December -- To Lewis Littlepage, 23 December -- To the Senate and the House of Representatives, 23 December -- From Albert Gallatin, 24 December -- From George Hadfield, 24 December -- From Josiah Hook, 24 December -- From Kennebec County, Maine, Constitutional Republicans, 24 December -- From John Stuart Kerr, 24 December -- From James Madison, 24 December -- From Overton Carr, 25 December -- To James Currie, 25 December -- To Benjamin Waterhouse, 25 December -- Memorandum to Albert Gallatin, with Gallatin's Reply, [on or before 26 December] -- From Albert Gallatin, 26 December -- From Albert Gallatin, 26 December -- From Robert R. Livingston, 26 December
    Content: From the National Institute of France, 26 December -- From Albert Gallatin, enclosing Outline of Government Offices, 27 December -- From Albert Gallatin, 27 December -- To Adam Lindsay, 27 December -- From Caesar A. Rodney, 27 December -- To Oliver Wolcott, Jr., 27 December -- From William Adamson, 28 December -- From James Jackson, 28 December -- From John F. Mercer, 28 December -- From David Stone, 28 December -- From James Cheetham, 29 December -- From Andrew Ellicott, 29 December -- To Albert Gallatin, 29 December -- To James Madison, 29 December -- To James Madison, 29 December -- From Julian Ursin Niemcewicz, 29 December -- From Edmund O'Finn, 29 December -- From Robert Smith, 29 December -- From John Vaughan, enclosing List of Learned Societies, 29 December -- From Dr. John Vaughan, 29 December -- From Henry Voigt, 29 December -- From Timothy Bourn [before 30] December -- To William Eustis, 30 December -- From William Henry Harrison, 30 December -- From Thomas Oben, 30 December -- Presentation of the "Mammoth Cheese" -- I. From the Committee of Cheshire, Massachusetts, [30 December] -- II. From the Committee of Cheshire, Massachusetts, [1 January 1802] -- III. To the Committee of Cheshire, Massachusetts, [1 January 1802] -- Reply to the Danbury Baptist Association -- I. Draft Reply to the Danbury Baptist Association, [on or before 31 December] -- II. From Gideon Granger, [31 December] -- III. To Levi Lincoln, 1 January 1802 -- IV. From Levi Lincoln, 1 January 1802 -- V. To the Danbury Baptist Association, 1 January 1802 -- A Bill for the Relief of Sufferers under Certain Illegal Prosecutions, [1801] -- 1802 -- From James Dinsmore, 1 January -- To John Wayles Eppes, 1 January -- To Thomas Mann Randolph, 1 January -- From Philip Turner, 1 January -- From Caspar Wistar, 1 January -- From "A. B.," 2 January -- From Gideon Granger, 2 January
    Content: From George Jefferson, 2 January -- To James Oldham, 2 January -- To Samuel Smith, 2 January -- From James Taylor, Jr., 2 January -- From Albert Gallatin, 3 January -- From David Austin, 4 January -- From Sarah Blackden, 4 January -- Conference with Little Turtle -- I. Address of Little Turtle, [4 January] -- II. JeCerson's Reply, 7 January -- III. Henry Dearborn's Reply, 7 January -- IV. Response of Little Turtle, [7 January] -- From Joseph Crockett, 4 January -- From Louis Desmarets, 4 January -- To Theodore Foster, 4 January -- From Gideon Granger, 4 January -- From Benjamin Henfrey, 4 January -- From John F. Mercer, 4 January -- From Louis de Tousard, 4 January -- From William Goforth, 5 January -- To Benjamin Henfrey, 5 January -- To the Senate, 5 January -- From Samuel R. Demaree, 6 January -- From the District of Columbia Commissioners, 6 January -- From Blair McClenachan, 6 January -- From Thomas Newton, 6 January -- To the Senate: Interim Appointments, 6 January -- I. Tables of Justices of the Peace for the District of Columbia, [before 16 March 1801] -- II. Memorandum on Justices of the Peace for the District of Columbia, [on or before 16 March 1801] -- III. List of Interim Appointments from the State Department, [on or before 26 December 1801] -- IV. Draft of Interim Appointments, [on or after 26 December 1801] -- V. Key to the Arrangement of Interim Nominations, [before 6 January] -- VI. To the Senate, 6 January -- To the District of Columbia Commissioners, 7 January -- From William Duane, 7 January -- To George Jefferson, 7 January -- To Christopher Smith, 7 January -- To James Taylor, Jr., 7 January -- To Antoine Félix Wuibert, 7 January -- From David Austin, 8 January -- From James Currie, 8 January -- From Henry Dearborn, 8 January -- To George Jefferson, 8 January -- To James Taylor, Jr., 8 January -- From Albert Gallatin, 9 January
    Content: To George Jefferson, 9 January
    Additional Edition: 9780691137742
    Additional Edition: Print version Jefferson, Thomas The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, Volume 36 : 1 December 1801 to 3 March 1802 Princeton : Princeton University Press,c2018 9780691137742
    Language: English
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  • 5
    UID:
    (DE-605)HT020727209
    Format: 1 online resource , 8 duotones
    ISBN: 9781400833726
    Series Statement: Papers of Thomas Jefferson 45
    Content: The period covered by this volume brings to a conclusion Thomas Jefferson's first year as president. On 8 December he communicates his first annual message to Congress: peace between France and England is restored; a rise in population will increase revenue and help abolish internal taxes; the standing army can be done away with; "peace & friendship" prevail with Indian neighbors. He recommends two particular matters to the attention of Congress: a revision of the laws on naturalization and a review of the Judiciary Act. Two delegations of Indian nations hold conferences with Jefferson and Secretary of War Henry Dearborn in Washington. Jefferson observes that it is good for them to "renew the chain of affection." The president receives a "Mammoth Cheese" as a token of esteem from the citizens of Cheshire, Massachusetts, and the letter from the Danbury Baptists arrives. In his famous reply to the Baptists, Jefferson states that "religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god." Shortly after legislators arrive in town for the opening of Congress, he begins to entertain at the President's House. He uses such occasions to bridge the divide between the executive and legislative branches and foster political understanding between Republicans and Federalists. As he moves into his second year as president, he is optimistic about his legislative program and the Republican majority in Congress
    Language: English
    URL: Cover
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press | Berlin : Walter de Gruyter GmbH
    UID:
    (DE-603)439571758
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource , 8 duotones
    Edition: [2018]
    ISBN: 9781400833726
    Series Statement: Papers of Thomas Jefferson
    Content: The period covered by this volume brings to a conclusion Thomas Jefferson's first year as president. On 8 December he communicates his first annual message to Congress: peace between France and England is restored; a rise in population will increase revenue and help abolish internal taxes; the standing army can be done away with; "peace & friendship" prevail with Indian neighbors. He recommends two particular matters to the attention of Congress: a revision of the laws on naturalization and a review of the Judiciary Act. Two delegations of Indian nations hold conferences with Jefferson and Secretary of War Henry Dearborn in Washington. Jefferson observes that it is good for them to "renew the chain of affection." The president receives a "Mammoth Cheese" as a token of esteem from the citizens of Cheshire, Massachusetts, and the letter from the Danbury Baptists arrives. In his famous reply to the Baptists, Jefferson states that "religion is a matter which lies solely between man & his god." Shortly after legislators arrive in town for the opening of Congress, he begins to entertain at the President's House. He uses such occasions to bridge the divide between the executive and legislative branches and foster political understanding between Republicans and Federalists. As he moves into his second year as president, he is optimistic about his legislative program and the Republican majority in Congress.
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 23. Nov 2018)
    Language: English
    URL: Cover
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