Discover

John G. Nicolay

Personal Information

Born January 1, 1832
Died January 1, 1901 (69 years old)
Essingen, United States
Also known as: John George Nicolay, John G. 1832-1901 Nicolay
13 books
0.0 (0)
2 readers

Description

There is no description yet, we will add it soon.

Books

Newest First

Abraham Lincoln

Joseph Fort Newton, George H. Yeaman, Lola M. Schaefer, William Osborn Stoddard, Clara Ingram Judson, Joseph H[odges] Choate, Ida Minerva Tarbell, Lord Charnwood, Albert Shaw, Theodore Roosevelt, Edgar Parin D'Aulaire, Robert Green Ingersoll, Drinkwater, John, Simeon D. Fess, Phebe A. Hanaford, Augustin Cochin, Kristin Cashore, John Carroll Power, Blanchard, Rufus, John Davis Long, Phillips Brooks, Edmond S. Meany, N. N. Rønning, William Eleazar Barton, Carl Schurz, James Wideman Lee, Nicholas Murray Butler, Goldwin Smith, David D. Anderson, William Henry Herndon, N. P. Chipman, Brand Whitlock, James M. McPherson, Elizabeth Raum, Walt Whitman, Marianne Farningham, Richard Lovett, D. W. Brogan, Storey, Moorfield, Mary Pope Osborne, Margaret Holland, Smith D. Atkins, Francis Grierson, William Jayne, John G. Nicolay, Stephen B. Oates, Thomas Curtis Clark, Halvdan Koht, Curtis, William Eleroy, Noah Brooks, Carl Sandburg, Karen Judson, John Torrey Morse, James Russell Lowell, Tanya Lee Stone, John Greenleaf Whittier, Justine Fontes, Ralph Waldo Emerson, George Haven Putnam, Manuel Komroff, Myers, Leonard, Rachel A. Koestler-Grack, Elihu Root, Norman Hapgood, Alexander H. Bullock, Margaret Davidson, Whitelaw Reid, Abraham Lincoln, Morris Sheppard, Wilbur Fisk Gordy, Emil Ludwig, Ernst Teofil Skarstedt, Little, Charles Joseph, Clark E. Carr, Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer, Library of Congress, Clark Prescott Bissett, David Decamp Thompson, Thomas Keneally, George Bancroft, William Hayes Ward, Charles Godfrey Leland, John Wesley Hill, Mary Hazelton Blanchard Wade, George Holmes Howison, Warfield, Ethelbert Dudley, Allen C. Guelzo, Isaac Newton Arnold, John P. Nicholson, Félix Bungener, Newton Bateman, Edward Fitzsimmons Dunne, Seth Grahame-Smith, McKinley, William, Henry Howard Brownell, Solomon Schechter, Henry Philip Tappan, Charles Carleton Coffin, George Sullivan, Selby, Paul, Cora L. V. Richmond, Adolph Spaeth, Frederick Trevor Hill, Russell Shorto, Elton Trueblood, Benjamin Platt Thomas, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., Ozora Stearns Davis, Louis Austin Warren, Cannon, Joseph Gurney, James Daugherty, Robert Rantoul, Grenville M. Dodge, Stryker, Melancthon Woolsey, Henry Clay Whitney, Ingri Parin D'Aulaire, Edward Lewis, Gary Jeffrey, Kate Petty, Mike Venezia, Henry Ketcham, Peter Benoît
0.0 (0)
0

"Abraham Lincoln was a fatalist who promoted freedom; he was a classical liberal who couched liberalism's greatest deed - emancipation of the slaves - in the unliberal language of divine providence; he was a religious doubter who became a national icon bordering on religion; and he was a rights-oriented liberal who appealed to natural law when confronting slavery"--Provided by publisher.

An oral history of Abraham Lincoln

0.0 (0)
0

John G. Nicolay, who had known Lincoln in Springfield, Illinois, served as chief White House secretary from 1861 to 1865. Trained as a journalist, Nicolay had hoped to write a campaign biography of Lincoln in 1860, a desire that was thwarted when an obscure young writer named William Dean Howells got the job. Years later, however, Nicolay fulfilled his ambition; with John Hay, he spent the years from 1872 to 1890 writing a monumental ten-volume biography of Lincoln. In preparation for this task, Nicolay interviewed men who had known Lincoln both during his years in Springfield and later when he became the president of the United States. "When it came time to write their massive biography, however," Burlingame notes, "he and Hay made sparing use of the interviews" because they had become "skeptical about human memory." Nicolay and Hay also feared that Robert Todd Lincoln might censor material that reflected "poorly on Lincoln or his wife.". Nicolay had interviewed such Springfield friends as Lincoln's first two law partners, John Todd Stuart and Stephen T. Logan. At the Iillinois capital in June and July 1875, he talked to a number of others including Orville H. Browning, U.S. senator and Lincoln's close friend and adviser for over thirty-five years, and Ozias M. Hatch, Lincoln's political ally and Springfield neighbor. Four years later, he returned briefly and spoke with John W. Bunn, a young political "insider" from Springfield at the time Lincoln was elected president, and once again with Hatch. Briefer and more narrowly focused than the Springfield interviews, the Washington interviews deal with the formation of Lincoln's cabinet, his relations with Congress, his behavior during the war, his humor, and his grief. To supplement these interviews, Burlingame has included Nicolay's unpublished essays on Lincoln during the 1860 campaign and on Lincoln's journey from Springfield to Washington in 1861, essays based on firsthand testimony.

With Lincoln in the White House

0.0 (0)
0

"For this volume, Michael Burlingame includes all of Nicolay's memoranda of conversations, all of the journal entries describing Lincoln's activities, and excerpts from most of the nearly three hundred letters Nicolay wrote to Therena Bates between 1860 and 1865. He includes letters and portions of letters that describe Lincoln or the mood at the White House or that give Nicolay's personal opinions. He also includes letters written by Nicolay while on troubleshooting missions for the president."--BOOK JACKET.

The Army in The Civil War - Outbreak of Rebellion, Volume 1 of 16

0.0 (0)
0

His [Nicolay's] story runs from Governor Gist's circular letter to Southern governors under date of October 5th, 1860, to the Battle of Bull Run, July 21st 1861. It is brilliant, well-proportioned, full of interest; written with intense convictions of right, an impatient contempt of opposite opinions, and a disposition not to mince words, but unhesitatingly to call treason treason, and civil war conspiracy...To him it was all a miserable conspiracy of office-holders, dragging the people after them by political jugglery at conventions..." -- The Century, vol. 23, issue 4 (Feb 1882).