Author: Barack Obama
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
Keywords: inaugural, address, ralph, waldo, emerson, reliance, gettysburg, second, together, abraham, lincoln, first, addresses
Number of Pages: 112
Published: 2009-02-04
List price: $12.00
ISBN-10: 0143116428
ISBN-13: 9780143116424

Celebrate the inauguration of America’s 44th president with this New York Times bestsellerTying into the official theme for the 2009 inaugural ceremony, "A New Birth of Freedom" from Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, Penguin presents a keepsake edition commemorating the inauguration of President Barack Obama with words of the two great thinkers and writers who have helped shape him politically, philosophically, and personally: Abraham Lincoln and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Having Lincoln and Emerson’s most influential, memorable, and eloquent words along with Obama’s historic ina

Author:
Publisher: Applewood Books
Keywords: inaugural, presidents, addresses, states, united
Number of Pages: 196
Published: 2009-01-23
List price: $14.95
ISBN-10: 142909088X
ISBN-13: 9781429090889

This updated second volume of Inaugural Addresses of the Presidents of the United States now includes the January 20, 2009 address of President Barack Obama. Volume Two contains the speeches of Presidents Grover Cleveland, William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson, Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Richard Milhous Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George Bush, William Jefferson Clinton, George W. Bush, and, now, Barack Hussein Obama.

Author: D. Daube
Publisher: Brill Academic Pub
Keywords: inaugural, lectures, three, law, jewish, ancient
Number of Pages: 141
Published: 1997-08
List price: $42.50
ISBN-10: 9004065318
ISBN-13: 9789004065314

Author:
Publisher: Applewood Books
Keywords: states, volume, united, presidents, addresses, inaugural
Number of Pages: 160
Published: 2000-09-01
List price: $14.95
ISBN-10: 1557095035
ISBN-13: 9781557095039

The first volume in the two-volume collection of Inaugural Addresses of the Presidents of the United States. Outlining the life of a nation through its most famous speeches, United States presidential vision and policy is seen here through the addresses of the Presidents. Volume One contains the speeches of George Washington (1789) through James A. Garfield (1881). Vol. 1 of 2

Author: George T. Purves
Publisher: BiblioLife
Keywords: address, inaugural, inspiration, pual
Number of Pages: 62
Published: 2009-06-04
List price: $16.75
ISBN-10: 111060999X
ISBN-13: 9781110609994

Author: Douglas Brinkley
Publisher: Five Ties Publishing
Keywords: book, inaugural, official, obama, barack
Number of Pages: 192
Published: 2009-05-01
List price: $39.95
ISBN-10: 0979472792
ISBN-13: 9780979472794

The only book commemorating Barack Obama’s historic Inauguration to be licensed by the Presidential Inaugural Committee, Barack Obama: The Official Inaugural Book lavishly documents the entire inaugural week, from Obama’s “Whistle Stop” train ride to Washington to his first days in office. With exclusive access to inaugural events, former White House photographers David Hume Kennerly and Robert McNeely led a team of award-winning photojournalists to capture this historic celebration, from the vast crowd on the Mall to the grandeur of the President and First Lady taking their places on

Author: Ronald C. White Jr.
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Keywords: inaugural, second, speech, greatest, lincoln
Number of Pages: 256
Published: 2006-11-07
List price: $14.00
ISBN-10: 0743299620
ISBN-13: 9780743299626

As the day for Lincoln’s second inauguration drew near, Americans wondered what their sixteenth president would say about the Civil War. Would Lincoln guide the nation toward "Reconstruction"? What about the slaves? They had been emancipated, but what about the matter of suffrage? When Lincoln finally stood before his fellow countrymen on March 4, 1865, and had only 703 words to share, the American public was stunned. The President had not offered the North a victory speech, nor did he excoriate the South for the sin of slavery. Instead, he called the whole country guilty of the sin and
  
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