Reverdy Johnson
Personal Information
Description
There is no description yet, we will add it soon.
Books
Speech delivered by Hon. Reverdy Johnson, as president of the democratic conservative mass meeting, held in Baltimore, Sept. 15th, 1875
Speech of Hon. Reverdy Johnson on the questions conected with the condition of the country
Speech of Hon. Reverdy Johnson ... on organization of provisional governments within the states whose people were lately in rebellion against the United States, delivered in the Senate of the United States, January 11, 1866
A brave soldier, a true patriot, a noble man, defended against partisan malice
A reply to the Review of Judge Advocate General Holt, of the proceedings, findings and sentence, of the general court martial
Speech of Mr. Reverdy Johnson, of Maryland, on the bill making further appropriation to bring the existing war to an honorable conclusion, called the three million bill
The trial of the alleged assassins and conspirators at Washington City, D.C., May and June, 1865
"Being a full and verbatim report of the testimony of all the witnesses examined in the whole trial, with the argument of Reverdy Johnson on the jurisdiction of the commission, and all the arguments of counsel on both sides, with the closing argument of Hon. John A. Bingham, Special Judge Advocate, as well as the verdict of the military commission, and the President's approval of the same; with his official order for the execution of Mrs. Surratt, Payne, Harold, and Atzeroth; and full particulars in relation to the condemned, from the time of their having their sentences of condemnation read to them by Major-General Hancock, until the moment of their execution; with scenes on the scaffold, etc. With a sketch of the life of all the conspirators, and portraits and illustrative engravings of the principal persons and scenes relating to the foul murder and the trial. It also contains Mrs. Surratt's petition for a writ of Habeas Corpus on the morning of her execution, its endorsement by the Court, and process served on General Hancock, with his appearance in court, and return made to it, with the address of Attorney-General Speed, and the President's endorsement on the return, suspending the writ of Habeas Corpus in the case , and the remarks made on it by the Court, with other items of fact and interest not to be found in any other work of the kind published. The whole being complete and unabridged in this volume, being prepared on the spot by the special correspondents and reporters of the Philadelphia Daily Inquirer, expressly for this edition"--T.p.
An argument to establish the illegality of military commissions in the United States
The riparian rights of Virginia proprietors on the Potomac river
Addressed to the Great Falls Manufacturing Company, proprietors of a tract of land on the Virginia shore of the Potomac river called the "Toulson tract," on the right to divert water from the river for their use.