Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Senator from Ohio (1861-77, 1881-97, Republican), John Sherman was the attorney and businessman who served as a Congressman (1855-61), before he took Salmon P. Chase’s seat in the Senate in March 1861. He came to national attention when he was serving on a House committee investigating violence in Kansas in 1856 – and writing the committee ...

  2. Sherman se mudó al norte de Cleveland en 1853, estableciendo una oficina de abogados allí con dos socios. Ciertos eventos pronto interrumpieron los planes de Sherman para una nueva firma de abogados, tales como la aceptación de la Ley Kansas-Nebraska de 1854 , le inspiró (y a muchos otros norteños antiesclavistas) para tomar un papel más activo en la política.

  3. 30 de ago. de 2006 · Sherman, John, 1823-1900, United States -- Politics and government 19th century Publisher Chicago : Werner Collection cdl; americana Contributor University of California Libraries Language English Volume 01

  4. William T. Sherman. Date of Birth - Death February 8, 1820 – February 14, 1891. William Tecumseh Sherman, although not a career military commander before the war, would become one of "the most widely renowned of the Union’s military leaders next to U. S. Grant.”. Sherman, one of eleven children, was born into a distinguished family.

  5. The John Sherman MSS. in the Library of Congress number approximately 110,000. incoming letters and 2,300 outgoing letters, scattered between March 1, 1846, and. June 1, 1894, with 8 volumes of undated material. The manuscripts of most other Republican political leaders of his period, especially those of the numerous Ohio men.

  6. 17 de mar. de 2020 · And that is what brought John Sherman to Philadelphia. Photograph of John Sherman, c. 1855-1865, from the Brady-Handy Photograph Collection. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. A high-profile member of the U.S. House from Ohio, Sherman arrived at Philadelphia’s National Hall on Wednesday evening, September 12, 1860.

  7. Correspondence, speeches, scrapbooks, biographical material, and other papers relating chiefly to Sherman's role in Ohio state politics after 1850. Subjects also include Sherman's service as U.S. representative and senator from Ohio, U.S. secretary of the treasury in the Rutherford B. Hayes presidential administration, and U.S. secretary of state under President William McKinley. Includes ...