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Storrs, [Henry Randolph]:

SUBSTANCE OF MR. STORRS' REMARKS, AT THE MEETING OF THE FRIENDS OF THE ADMINISTRATION, HELD AT WHITESBORO', JULY FOURTH, 1828, FOR THE PURPOSE OF NOMINATING AN ELECTOR OF PRESIDENT, AND VICE-PRESIDENT, FOR THE COUNTY OF ONEIDA.

Utica: 1828 23, [1 blank] pp. Stitched, untrimmed, and uncut. Light to moderate stain in upper quadrant, Good+. Storrs defends John Quincy Adams and his administration. He describes Adams as "a plain, unostentatious man" of "old-fashioned principles...accessible to all his fellow-citizens at all hours," when he is not "engaged in public business." He also lauds his Secretary of State, Henry Clay. The challenger, Andrew Jackson, however, is a tyrant and military despot who would grind the Constitution under his heel if given the opportunity to do so. AI 34519.


Book Id: 28633

Price: $50.00

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