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The Winton M. Blount Postal History Symposia - Smithsonian ...

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1 1 8 • s m i t h s o n i a n c o n t r i b u t i o n s t o h i s t o ry a n d t e c h n o l o g yof the Pioneer Line, the General Union for the Promotion of theChristian Sabbath. Our suspicion is that these numbers refer toa republication in O’Reilly’s newspaper which he could freelydistribute.29. For a digest of geographic distribution of these memorials,a sampling of their content, and a list of selected signatorieswith their occupations, see An Account of Memorials Presentedto Congress During its Last Session, by Numerous Friends of<strong>The</strong>ir Country and its Institutions; praying that the mails may notbe transported, nor post- offices kept open, on the Sabbath, NewYork May, 1829. Authors’ copy includes on the wraps announcementof its availability at the bookstores of Jonathan Leavitt, 182Broadway, and John P. Haven, 142 Nassau Street. 32 pp.30. Printed circular datelined New- york January 1st, 1829.Signed by ten men, mailed “free” to Hon. Jonathan Harvey, Representativefrom New Hampshire.31. Reprinted in Niles’ Weekly Register. Third series. No.25- Vol. XL, Baltimore, Feb. 14, 1829, page 405.32. From the Annual Report of the Postmaster General,compiled in American State Papers. Class VII. Post Office Department.(Washington 1834), No. 121, page 351.33. Report of the Postmaster General, December 1, 1860.Table A, pages 489–490.34. Robert Dalton Harris “Sunday Post Offices”, P.S. AQuarterly Journal of <strong>Postal</strong> <strong>History</strong>, No. 1, February 1977.BibliographyAmerican Council of Learned Societies. Concise Dictionary ofAmerican Biography. New York: Scribner, 1997.An Account of Memorials Presented to Congress During its LastSession, by Numerous Friends of <strong>The</strong>ir Country and its Institutions;Praying that the Mails May Not be Transported,nor Post- Offices Kept Open, on the Sabbath. New York:May 1829.Blakely, William Addison. American State Papers Bearing onSunday Legislation. Washington. D. C.: Religious LibertyAssociation, 1911.Bradley, Abraham. “Letter.” Independent Chronicle and BostonPatriot, 31 August 1831, p. 2.Cross, Whitney R. <strong>The</strong> Burned- Over District: <strong>The</strong> Social and Intellectual<strong>History</strong> of Enthusiastic Religion in Western NewYork, 1800–1850. Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University, 1950.Emmons, William B. Authentic Biography of Colonel RichardM. Johnson, of Kentucky. New York: H. Mason, 1833.Feldman, Hugh V. U.S. Contract Mail Routes by Water (StarRoutes 1824–1875): A <strong>History</strong> of the U.S. Post Office Department’sContracts Made with Independent Contractorsfor the Carriage of the Mails by Water within the UnitedStates of America from the Inception of Such Contracts in1824 to 1875. Chicago: Collectors Club of Chicago, 2008.Fenn, Patricia, and Alfred P. Malpa. Rewards of Merit: Tokens ofa Child’s Progress and a Teacher’s Esteem As an EnduringAspect of American Religious and Secular Education. Schoharie,N. Y.: Ephemera Society of America, 1994.Fowler, Dorothy Ganfield. <strong>The</strong> Cabinet Politician: <strong>The</strong> PostmastersGeneral, 1829–1909. New York: Columbia UniversityPress, 1943.Fuller, Wayne E. Morality and the Mail in Nineteenth CenturyAmerica. Champaign, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 2003.Harris, Robert Dalton. “Sunday Post Offices.” P. S. A QuarterlyJournal of <strong>Postal</strong> <strong>History</strong>, 1(February 1977).Holmes, Oliver W. Shall Stagecoaches Carry the Mail? Washington,1972.John, Richard R. “<strong>The</strong> Invasion of the Sacred.” In Spreadingthe News: <strong>The</strong> American <strong>Postal</strong> System from Franklin toMorse. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995.Kendall, Amos. Autobiography of Amos Kendall, ed. WilliamStickney. Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1872.Kramnick, Isaac, and R. Laurence Moore. <strong>The</strong> Godless Constitution:<strong>The</strong> Case against Religious Correctness. New York:W. W. Norton. 1996.McLean, John. American State Papers, Class VII. Post OfficeDepartment. No. 56. Washington D. C.: 1834.Meschter, Daniel Y. “<strong>The</strong> Postmasters General of the UnitedStates Illa. Joseph Habersham and the Mail DistributingSystem.” La Posta, January 2004:31–38.Meyer, Leland Winfield. <strong>The</strong> Life and Times of Colonel RichardMentor Johnson of Kentucky. New York: Columbia University,1932.O’Reilly, Henry. Sketches of Rochester: With Incidental Notices ofWestern New- York. Rochester, N. Y.: William Alling, 1838.Palmer, Richard F. <strong>The</strong> “Old Line Mail”: Stagecoach Days inUpstate New York. Lakemont, N. Y.: North Country Books,1977.“Registers for Star Route Contracts 1814–1960.” Volume 021of 326, Entry 125. College Park, Md.: National Archivesand Records Administration.Silbey, Joel H. <strong>The</strong> American Party Battle: Election CampaignPamphlets 1826–1876. Cambridge: Harvard UniversityPress, 1999.Sunday Mails. Mr. Johnson’s Report on the Transportation of theMail on Sunday. Stereotype Edition. Boston: J.Q. Adams,Investigator Office. 1834.U.S. Congress. An Act, Regulating the Post- Office Establishment.11th Congress, 2nd Session. Enacted 30 April 1810.U.S. Congress. House. Report of the Select Committee to whichwas Referred Sundry Petitions Remonstrating against thePractice of Transporting and Opening the Mails on theSabbath, and Praying a Discontinuance <strong>The</strong>reof. Report 3.1 March 1817.U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Post Offices and PostRoads. Report of the Committee on the Post- Office andPost- Roads to whom Was Referred the Memorial of theAmerican Bible Society.25 January 1817.U.S. Congress. Senate. Report of the Committee of <strong>The</strong> Senate ofthe United States, appointed March 12, 1802, on the sub-

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