Reid, Whitelaw, 1837-1912.
Reid, Whitelaw
Whitelaw Reid American journalist, diplomat and historian (1837–1912)
VIAF ID: 37234257 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/37234257
Preferred Forms
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Reid, Whitelaw
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Reid, Whitelaw
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Reid, Whitelaw ‡d 1837-1912
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Reid, Whitelaw, ‡d 1837-1912
- 100 1 _ ‡a Reid, Whitelaw, ‡d 1837-1912
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Whitelaw Reid ‡c American journalist, diplomat and historian (1837–1912)
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (13)
5xx's: Related Names (2)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Abraham Lincoln | |
After the war: | |
American and English studies | |
Biography, history, and journalism | |
Byron. Address at University college, Nottingham, on Speech day, 29th November, 1910, for the Byron chair of English literature. | |
Byron, the poet : a centenary volume | |
Careers for the coming men. Practical and authoritative discussions of the professions and callings open to young Americans. | |
The cipher dispatches ... | |
Colossal philanthropy. An address by Whitelaw Reid, in opening a public library at Luton, Saturday Oct. 1st, 1910. | |
A commencement address before the [Phi Beta Kappa] society of Vassar College, June 8, 1903. | |
A continental union; civil service for the Islands. Address... | |
Education in England; address | |
Government and education | |
Great Britain and the United States need each other. | |
The greatest fact in modern history [The rise and development of the United States] | |
Horace Greeley | |
How the United States faced its educational problem | |
Jenkins. | |
Later aspects of our new duties; | |
Letter from Whitelaw Reid to John Devoy regarding Chauncey M. Depew | |
Lettere | |
London commemorations. Winter of 1908-9. Remarks by the American Ambassador at the Poe centenary, Authors' club, March 1st (for Jan. 19th), 1909. The Bacon tercentenary, Gray's Inn, Oct, 17th, 1908. The Milton tercentenary, Mansion house, Dec. 9th, 1908. The Washington anniversary, London Section, U. S. Navy league, Feb. 22nd, 1909. | |
Lotos leaves : original stories, essays, and poems | |
Making peace with Spain; the diary of Whitelaw Reid, September-December, 1898. | |
The Monroe doctrine, the Polk doctrine and the doctrine of anarchism | |
New York tribune. [from old catalog] | |
Ohio in the war: her statesmen, her generals, and soldiers. | |
One Welshman: a glance at a great career. Inaugural address, autumn session, University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, October 31st, 1912. | |
"Our foremost friend in Great Britain." | |
Our new duties : a commencement address at the seventy-fifth anniversary of Miami University, Thursday, June 15, 1899 | |
Our new interests; an address at the University of California, on Charter day, March 23, 1900; | |
A political history of slavery; being an account of the slavery controversy from the earliest agitations in the eighteenth century to the close of the reconstruction period in America | |
The "practical side" of American education. John Bright and the Civil War. | |
Problems of expansion, as considered in papers and addresses. | |
A radical view : the "Agate" dispatches of Whitelaw Reid, 1861-1865 | |
Rise to world power : selected letters of Whitelaw Reid, 1895-1912 | |
Scientific and technological education in the United States | |
The Scot in America, and the Ulster Scot. | |
Some consequences of the last treaty of Paris: advances in international law and changes in national policy | |
Some newspaper tendencies; an address delivered before the editorial associations of New York and Ohio | |
Thackeray in America ... | |
Two speeches at the Queen's Jubilee, London, 1897. | |
Two witnesses at Gettysburg : the personal accounts of Whitelaw Reid and A.J.L. Fremantle | |
University tendencies in America. An address delivered at Leland Stanford, Jr., University, April 19, 1901 | |
Vanity fair | |
Whitelaw Reid correspondence | |
William Black : novelist : a biography |