Description: If you purchase more than one item on the same day I will combine shipping to provide you with the cheapest rate. You are buying the vintage original 1883 printing of The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume IX. This is not a reprint! This is an original from 1883. The book was requested by Dr John Berrien Lindsley who is a famous figure in Tennessee history (see history below). The original request is found on the inside of the front cover. This book measures 9" H by 6" W by 1 3/4" D. The book has 802 pages. A one of a kind addition for any fan of American Civil War History. The book is hard cover without a dust jacket. The book itself is in very poor condition. The front cover and first two blank pages have separated from the book. The spine has come off but the binding is still intact. Dr Lindsley's name is stamped on the title page and on the last page of the book. There are no missing pages and I didn't see any rips on the interior. The front and back of the cover have very noticeable wear (see all pictures). All of my items come from a smoke free, pet free home. Please take a look at my other items for more American history and war books. Please be sure to ask all questions before buying. Thank you. This is from the Tennessee Encyclopeida.net: John B. Lindsley was a significant nineteenth-century educator, physician, Presbyterian minister, author, and civic leader in Nashville. He was born in Princeton, New Jersey, and came to Tennessee with his family at the age of two when his father, Philip Lindsley, accepted the presidency of the University of Nashville. He was educated at the University of Nashville and at the medical school of the University of Pennsylvania, where he received his M.D. degree in 1843. In 1846 Lindsley was ordained as an evangelist in the First Presbyterian Church and appointed to a pastorate at the Smyrna Church in Rutherford County. The next year he began preaching as a domestic missionary, ministering to slaves and the poor.In 1850 Lindsley helped to make one of his father's fondest hopes a reality by participating in the establishment of the Medical Department of the University of Nashville and serving as its first dean and professor of chemistry and pharmacy. In 1851 he was elected to the American Medical Association and to the Board of Trustees for the common schools of South Nashville, presiding as chair of its first meeting.All but the Medical Department of the University of Nashville suspended operations in 1850 due to the city's cholera epidemic and the resignation of President Philip Lindsley. In 1855 John Berrien Lindsley was elected chancellor of the university and given the charge to revitalize its Literary Department (liberal arts program). While the father was a man of impressive scholarship and discipline, the son was a man of prodigious energy and versatility. He completed negotiations for the merger of the Western Military Institute and the University of Nashville and undertook an ambitious program for the renovation of the curriculum and buildings of the university. Throughout the Civil War Lindsley served as post surgeon of Nashville hospitals and alone protected the library and laboratory of the University of Nashville from the occupying army. In 1857 he married Sarah McGavock, daughter of Jacob McGavock and granddaughter of Felix Grundy.In 1866 Lindsley was appointed superintendent of Nashville Public Schools. The following year, he arranged for the establishment of Montgomery Bell Academy and petitioned the Peabody Education Fund to appropriate funds for a normal school (teachers' college) at the university. In 1870, discouraged by the university's inability to recover from the decline caused by the Civil War, Lindsley resigned as chancellor and helped in organizing the Tennessee College of Pharmacy.During the last two decades of his life, Lindsley's efforts on behalf of public education, public health, and prison reform claimed most of his attention. He served at various times as president of the Tennessee State Teachers' Association, Health Officer of the City of Nashville, a director in the National Prison Association, treasurer of the American Public Health Association, and executive secretary of the Tennessee State Board of Health, and he guided the city through the 1878 outbreak of yellow fever. He wrote widely circulated pamphlets such as On Prison Discipline and Penal Legislation, Practitioners of Medicine as Men of Science, Public Health Movement, On the Cremation of Garbage, and Popular Progress in State Medicine. In 1886 he edited and published the monumental Military Annals of Tennessee: Confederate. Lindsley was a founder of the Tennessee Historical Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a charter member of the American Chemical Society, a fellow of the American Academy of Medicine, and a fellow of the Historical Society of London and of the American Historical Society. He died in 1897.
Price: 30 USD
Location: Brandon, Florida
End Time: 2024-11-17T18:33:58.000Z
Shipping Cost: 6.88 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Topic: American History
Book Title: The Revolutionary War
Narrative Type: Nonfiction
Genre: History
Author: Unknown
Subject: Military & War
Format: Hardcover
Features: Dust Jacket
Language: English
Publisher: Government Printing Office