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Paul M. Angle (1900–1975)

Author of The Lincoln Reader

64+ Works 1,448 Members 11 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Philosopedia

Works by Paul M. Angle

The Lincoln Reader (1947) 355 copies, 2 reviews
The Living Lincoln (1992) 182 copies
Mary Lincoln: Wife and Widow (1995) 60 copies, 2 reviews
The Great Chicago Fire (1946) 19 copies, 1 review
NEW NATION GROWS VOL. 2 (1964) — Author — 10 copies
Illinois Guide and Gazetteer (1969) 8 copies, 1 review
African Heritage (1969) 3 copies

Associated Works

The Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1985) — Editor, some editions — 350 copies, 4 reviews
The Historian as Detective: Essays on Evidence (1968) — Contributor — 281 copies, 2 reviews
Two Years' Residence on the English Prairie of Illinois (1968) — Editor, some editions — 32 copies
Great Stories of American Businessmen (1972) — Contributor — 15 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1900-12-25
Date of death
1975-05-11
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Education
Miami University
Occupations
librarian
Organizations
Illinios Historical Library
Chicago Historical Society

Members

Reviews

State sponsored book about items of interest for travelers to different parts of the state. Items of interest for amy localities are described. Things may have changed since publication.
 
Flagged
SR-VOC | Jul 15, 2014 |
Hard to believe it's non-fiction. I think the word "gripping" applies.
 
Flagged
gtross | 2 other reviews | Aug 14, 2013 |
This was the only biography of Mary Lincoln my library owns. I chose to give up on it today. I read the actual story line the author wrote (which had some interesting choices in terms of what to focus on) but then the last half of the book were the letters she used as her sources. I couldn't bring myself to read all of that, especially when I have so many other books on my plate. I'd love to hear if anyone knows of a better Mary Lincoln biography.
 
Flagged
scote23 | 1 other review | Mar 30, 2013 |
The author was an officer in the 123rd Illinois (mounted infantry). The 123rd Illinois replaced the 75th Indiana which voted against becoming a mounted infantry regiment of Wilder's brigade. The author was assigned to staff duty and removed from line duty. The book provides many insights to living in the field while campaigning in the western theater. The content includes letters to his wife while involved in the Atlanta campaign. The author switches to a diary while marching to Savannah since mail service was nonexistent. Most of the information is common knowledge however new information was related on Union General Jeff C. Davis isolating and abandoning 500 slaves that were following the union army around Savannah. The author provided information that would later affect Davis' promotion.
The author also relates the low opinion of the infantry of the cavalry especially of Kilpatrick’s forces which were assigned to Sherman’s army.
The editor relates that this book is the Union version of the Confederate Sam Watkins.
… (more)
 
Flagged
dhughes | Nov 23, 2009 |

Awards

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Statistics

Works
64
Also by
4
Members
1,448
Popularity
#17,749
Rating
3.8
Reviews
11
ISBNs
44
Languages
1

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