Volume III : page 367

J. 338
Not in the Manuscript Catalogue.
1815 Catalogue, page 102. no. 295, Political Pamphlets, 1800-9, 8vo.
19 tracts, all but the last two in uncut state, bound together in one volume, 8vo., half calf. On the first page of the first tract is a slip pasted down, with the chapter and shelf number written in ink by Jefferson.
JA36 .P8 Vol. 108
1. JACKSON, John George.
Speech of Mr. John G. Jackson, delivered in the House of Representatives on Monday, February 6, 1809. Without name of place or printer, n.d. [ 1809.]
8vo. 16 leaves, caption title, no title-page.
Sabin 35437.
In favor of the Embargo.
John George Jackson, 1777-1825, barrister and Congressman, upheld the administrations of Jefferson and Madison, whose wife’s sister he had married. Jackson served on the commission whose recommendation to the legislators resulted in the establishment of the University of Virginia. He was the first U. S. judge for the Western district of Virginia.
On October 9, 1808, Jackson wrote from Charlestown, Jefferson County, to Jefferson relative to the Embargo, and to anti-Embargo remarks said to have been made by the Secretary of the Navy. To this Jefferson replied on October 13, that it was “ one of the poor efforts frequently tried by the federalists to sow tares among the members of the administration . . .
[3374]
2. The Monthly Register, and Review of the United States. No. IX.] For April, 1806. [Vol. I. [--The History of the American Revolution, including an Impartial Examination of the Causes which produced that Important Event; and Monthly Register of the United States, from the date of their Independence to the Present Time. Volume the First. [Copy-right secured according to law.] Charleston, S. C. Printed for the Proprietor, by Gabriel Manigault Bounetheau, at the Apollo Press, No. 3, Broad-Street, near the Exchange. 1806.]--[ The Monthly Review and Literary Miscellany of the United States. Volume the First. [Copy-right secured according to law.] Charleston, S. C. Printed for the Proprietor, by Gabriel M. Bounetheau, At the Apollo Press, No. 3, Broad-Street, near the Exchange. 1806.]
Contains Vol. I no. IX, and no. XII, April and July, 1806, the first part with caption title only.
Sabin 50194.
In the History of the Passing Times, pages 380 and 383, are printed Jefferson’s messages to the Senate of January 17 and January 27 (on the rights of neutrals) of which his original are in the Jefferson Papers in the Library of Congress.
On March 5, 1806, Charles Brockden Brown wrote to Jefferson from Charleston, S. C.: “The Author of “the Monthly Register, and Review of the United States,” requests the Presidents acceptance of that work.”
The History of the American Revolution was by Stephen Cullen Carpenter, who in 1809 published his Memoirs of the Hon. Thomas Jefferson .
[3375]
3. [COLVIN, John B.]
A Letter to the Honorable John Randolph. By Numa.
8vo. 18 letters only, should have 19, one leaf of Appendix missing. Caption title without title-page; dated at the end February 21, 1810.
Sabin 67849.
Not in Johnston.
A pro-Jefferson, anti-Randolph pamphlet, with numerous references to Jefferson.
Sent to Jefferson by the author, John B. Colvin, who wrote to him from Washington City on February 28, 1810:

Volume III : page 367

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