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Books with author Albert Deane Richardson

  • The Kneeling Christian

    Albert Richardson

    eBook (Aneko Press, Nov. 29, 2015)
    Why are many Christians often defeated? Because they pray so little. Why do most Christians see so few brought out of darkness to light by their ministry? Because they pray so little. Why are our churches simply not on fire for God? Because there is so little real prayer.We may be assured of this: The secret of all failure is our failure in secret prayer.This book explores, in depth:•God’s wonder at our lack of prayer•God’s incredible promises concerning those who do pray•God's condition for providing signs•God's desire for earnest prayer•God's perspective on hindrances to prayerThe Lord Jesus is as powerful today as ever before. The Lord Jesus is as anxious for men to be saved as ever before. His arm is not shortened that it cannot save, but He does not stretch forth His arm unless we pray more – and more genuinely. Prayer, real prayer, is the noblest, the sublimest, and the most stupendous act that any creature of God can perform. Lord, teach us how to pray.
  • Beyond the Mississippi

    Albert Deane Richardson

    eBook
    Albert Deane Richardson (1833 - 1869) was a well-known American journalist, Union spy, and author, born in Franklin, Mass. At eighteen years of age he went to Pittsburg, Pa., where he formed a newspaper connection, wrote a farce for Barney Williams, and appeared a few times on the stage. In 1857 he went to Kansas, taking an active part in the political struggle of the territory, attending antislavery meetings, making speeches, and corresponding about the issues of the hour with the Boston Journal. He was also secretary of the territorial legislature. Two years later he went to Pike's Peak, the gold fever being then at its height, in company with Horace Greeley, between whom and Richardson a lasting friendship was formed. In the autumn of 1859 he made a journey through the southwestern territories, and sent accounts of his wanderings to eastern journals. During the winter that preceded the civil war he volunteered to go through the south as secret correspondent of the Tribune, and returned, after many narrow escapes, just before the firing on Sumter. He next entered the field as war correspondent, and for two years alternated between Virginia and the southwest, being present at many battles. Contents:•Westward and 'Westward, American Wines of the West. •A Glance at Wyandotte, Kansas•A War Reminiscence. Origin of the Kansas Troubles. •First Visit to Leavenworth•Deadly Affray at the Polls. •Wild Fruits of the Prairies•Night Rides on the Prairies•Governor Denver makes his Debut•An Imaginary City•A Party of Peace-makers•Feminine Smokers of Tobacco•A Bit of Legislative Fun•Great Stampede for the Mines•Horace Greeley's Wide-spread Fame•Starting for the Gregory Diggings•Little Raven as a Devotee•The Great Missouri Iron Mountains•Life at Fort Smith Arkansas•News of Broderick's Death•Preaching Easier than Practice•From El Paso to Santa Fe•A Stray Printer and Journalist•From Taos to Denver, Colorado•A Night with a Squatter•A Summer Day in Denver•Starting up the Mountains•Starting Westward again, Indian Murders and Depredations•Virginia Dale•The City of the Future•From Salt Lake City Westward•Carson City and Carson Valley•Warm Climate of Pacific Coast•A Frontier Supreme Court•Discovery of Yosemite Valley•Invited to Celestial Hospitalities•The Raw Winds of San Francisco•Excursion on the Pacific Railroad•From Salt Lake to Montana.•Lewis and Clark's Great Expedition•A Visit to Owyhee. Ruby City•The Telegraph a Miracle•Steamer-day.•Native Costumes. Old Cathedral•A Ride through Illinois. Atchison; Sumner: Leavenworth; Topeka. A Convention•From Saint Joseph to Omaha•Pandemonium on Wheels•Comstock Lode•New Year's DayThis book originally published 1869 has been reformatted for the Kindle and may contain an occasional defect from the original publication or from the reformatting.
  • The Kneeling Christian: If ye have faith and doubt not … all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.

    Albert Richardson

    Paperback (Aneko Press, Nov. 30, 2015)
    Why are many Christians often defeated? Because they pray so little. Why do most Christians see so few brought out of darkness to light by their ministry? Because they pray so little. Why are our churches simply not on fire for God? Because there is so little real prayer.We may be assured of this: The secret of all failure is our failure in secret prayer.This book explores, in depth:•God’s wonder at our lack of prayer•God’s incredible promises concerning those who do pray•God's condition for providing signs•God's desire for earnest prayer•God's perspective on hindrances to prayerThe Lord Jesus is as powerful today as ever before. The Lord Jesus is as anxious for men to be saved as ever before. His arm is not shortened that it cannot save, but He does not stretch forth His arm unless we pray more – and more genuinely. Prayer, real prayer, is the noblest, the sublimest, and the most stupendous act that any creature of God can perform. Lord, teach us how to pray.
  • The Secrect Service: The Field, The Dungeon, and The Escape

    Albert Deane Richardson

    eBook (Library of Alexandria, Aug. 14, 2018)
    Early in 1861, I felt a strong desire to look at the Secession movement for myself; to learn, by personal observation, whether it sprang from the people or not; what the Revolutionists wanted, what they hoped, and what they feared. But the southern climate, never propitious to the longevity of Abolitionists, was now unfavorable to the health of every northerner, no matter how strong his political constitution. I felt the danger of being recognized; for several years of roving journalism, and a good deal of political speaking on the frontier, had made my face familiar to persons whom I did not remember at all, and given me that large and motley acquaintance which every half-public life necessitates. Moreover, I had passed through the Kansas struggle; and many former shining lights of Border Ruffianism were now, with perfect fitness, lurid torches in the early bonfires of Secession. I did not care to meet their eyes, for I could not remember a single man of them all who would be likely to love me, either wisely or too well. But the newspaper instinct was strong within me, and the journalist who deliberates is lost. My hesitancy resulted in writing for a roving commission to represent The Tribune in the Southwest. A few days after, I found the Managing Editor in his office, going through the great pile of letters the morning mail had brought him, with the wonderful rapidity which quick intuition, long experience, and natural fitness for that most delicate and onerous position alone can give. For the modern newspaper is a sort of intellectual iron-clad, upon which, while the Editorial Captain makes out the reports to his chief, the public, and entertains the guests in his elegant cabin, the leading column, and receives the credit for every broadside of type and every paper bullet of the brain poured into the enemy,—back out of sight is an Executive Officer, with little popular fame, who keeps the ship all right from hold to maintop, looks to every detail with sleepless vigilance, and whose life is a daily miracle of hard work. The Manager went through his mail, I think, at the rate of one letter per minute. He made final disposition of each when it came into his hand; acting upon the great truth, that if he laid one aside for future consideration, there would soon be a series of strata upon his groaning desk, which no mental geologist could fathom or classify. Some were ruthlessly thrown into the waste-basket. Others, with a lightning pencil-stroke, to indicate the type and style of printing, were placed on the pile for the composing-room.
  • The Secret Service, the Field, the Dungeon, and the Escape

    Albert D Richardson

    eBook (AMERICAN PUBLISHING COMPANY, Feb. 9, 2014)
    Experiences of a correspondent of the New York Tribune within the Confederate lines in 1861, and later with the Union Armies and in southern prisons
  • The Secret Service, the Field, the Dungeon, and the Escape

    Albert Deane Richardson

    Hardcover (Palala Press, May 20, 2016)
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.As a reproduction of a historical artifact, this work may contain missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.
  • The secret service: The field, the dungeon, and the escape

    Albert Deane Richardson

    Hardcover (American Pub. Co, Aug. 16, 1866)
    A chronology of the Civil War written by a Tribune correspondent gives an insider's view of the times and the people involved in the war rather than the historical view of the battles involved. Black and white illustrations
  • Beyond the Mississippi

    Albert Deane Richardson

    Hardcover (American Publishing Do., March 15, 1867)
    None
  • The Secret Service, the Field, the Dungeon, and the Escape

    Albert D. Richardson

    eBook (BIG BYTE BOOKS, Nov. 3, 2015)
    "In view of the author's rich material, his well-known trustworthiness, and graphic descriptive powers, the publishers feel justified in predicting a work of unusual interest, containing more of the fact, incident, and romance of the war than any other which has yet appeared." NEW YORK TIMESThe remarkable Civil War career of famous New York "Tribune" journalist, Albert D. Richardson, was packed with more action, intrigue, and danger than many of his colleagues. Like war correspondents today, Richardson reported from where the shells were flying and men were dying.He was also a Union spy.He reported from the south before the war and from "Bleeding Kansas" in the fifties. He met with and discussed the war with Abraham Lincoln before heading to Vicksburg. That's all here in his classic book.And in 1863, Richardson and the other famous "Tribune" correspondent, Junius Browne, were captured while trying to run the Confederate batteries protecting the river at Vicksburg. They spent 20 months in harrowing prison conditions until their dramatic and dangerous escape through enemy territory.It's a story that should be known by every American. Richardson aspired to great literary writing but along with the danger, there is plenty of wonderful humor.Every memoir of the American Civil War provides us with another view of the catastrophe that changed the country forever.For the first time, this long out-of-print volume is available as an affordable, well-formatted book for e-readers, tablets, and smartphones. Be sure to LOOK INSIDE by clicking the cover above or download a sample.
  • The Secret Service. / The Field, The Dungeon, and The Escape by Albert D. Richardson

    Albert D. Richardson

    eBook (, March 17, 2014)
    I. THE SECRET SERVICE. Going South in the Secret Service. Instructions from the Managing Editor. A Visit to the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky. Nashville, Tennessee. Alabama Unionists. How the State was Precipitated into the Rebellion. Reaching Memphis. Abolitionists Mobbed and Hanged. Brutalities of Slavery.In Memphis. How the Secessionists Carried the Day. Aims of the Leading Rebels. On the Railroad. A Northerner Warned. An Amusing Dialogue. Talk about Assassinating President Lincoln. Arrival in New Orleans. Hospitality from a Stranger. An Ovation to General Twiggs. Braxton Bragg. The Rebels Anxious for War. A Glance at the Louisiana Convention.Association with Leading Secessionists. Their Hatred of New England. Admission to the Democratic Club. Abuse of President Lincoln. Sinking Buildings, Cellars and Walls Impossible. Cemeteries above Ground. Monument of a Pirate. Canal Street. The Great French Markets. Dedication of a Secession Flag in the Catholic Church. The Cotton Presses. Visit to the Jackson Battle-ground. The Creoles. Jackson's Head-Quarters. A Fire in the Rear. A Life Saved by a Cigar. A Black Republican Flag. Vice-President Hamlin a Mulatto. Northerners leaving the South.How Letters were Written and Transmitted. A System of Cipher. A Philadelphian among the Rebels. Probable fate of a Tribune Correspondent, if Discovered. Southern Manufactures. A Visit to a Southern Shoe Factory. Where the Machinery and Workmen came from. How Southern Shoes were Made. Study of Southern Society. Report of a Slave Auction. Sale of a White Woman. Girls on the Block. Husbands and Wives Separated. A most Revolting Spectacle. The Delights of a Tropical Climate.A Northerner among the Minute Men. Louisiana Convention. A Lively Discussion. Boldness of the Union Members. Another Exciting Discussion. Secessionists Repudiate their Own Doctrines. Despotic Rebel Theories. The Northwest to Join the Rebels. The Great Swamp. A Trip through Louisiana. The Tribune Correspondent Invited to a Seat in the Mississippi Convention.The Mississippi State-House. View of the Rebel Hall. Its General Air of Dilapidation. A Free-and-Easy Convention. Southern Orators. The Anglo-African Delegate. A Speech Worth Preserving. Familiar Conversation of Members. New Orleans Again. Reviewing Troops. New Orleans Again. Hatred of Southern Unionists. Three Obnoxious Northerners. The Attack on Sumter. Rebel Bravado.Abolition Tendencies of Kentuckians. Fundamental Grievances of the Rebels. Sudden Departure from New Orleans. Mobile. The War Spirit High. An Awkward Encounter. "Massa, Fort Sumter has gone Up." Bells Ringing. Cannon Booming. Up the Alabama River. A Dancing Little Darkey. How to Escape Suspicion. Southern Characteristics and Provincialism. Visit to the Confederate Capital. At Montgomery, Alabama. Copperas Breeches vs. Black Breeches. A Correspondent under Arrest.A Journey Through Georgia. Excitement of the People. Washington to be Captured. Apprehensions about Arming the Negroes. A Fatal Question. Charleston. Looking at Fort Sumter. A Short Stay in the City. North Carolina. The Country on Fire. Submitting to Rebel Scrutiny. The North Heard From. Richmond, Virginia. The Frenzy of the People. Up the Potomac. The Old Flag Once More. An Hour with President Lincoln. Washington in Panic. A Regiment which Came Out to Fight. Baltimore under Rebel Rule. Pennsylvania. The North fully Aroused. Uprising of the whole People. A Tribune Correspondent on Trial in Charleston. He is Warned to Leave. His Fortunate Escape II. THE FIELD. Sunday at Niagara Falls. View from the Suspension Bridge. The Palace of the Frost King. Chicago, a City Rising from the Earth. Mysteries of Western Currency. A Horrible Spectacle in Arkansas. Patriotism of the Northwest. Missouri. The Rebels bent on Revolution. Nathaniel Lyon. Camp Jackson. Sterling Price Joins the Rebels. His Quarrel with Frank Blair. His Personal Character. St. Louis in a Convulsion. A Nashville Experience. Bitterne
  • The Secret Service, the Field, the Dungeon, and the Escape

    Albert D. Richardson

    eBook (Prabhat Prakashan, April 22, 2017)
    Firs5t published in the year 1865; the present book 'The Secret Service; the Field; the Dungeon; and the Escape' by famos writer Albert D. Richardson is a collection of his memoirs of his time as a United States Secret Service agent and journalist during the Civil War. Also includes his time as a military prisoner.
  • Beyond the Mississippi

    Albert D. (Albert Deane) Richardson

    Paperback (Cornell University Library, July 8, 2009)
    Originally published in 1867. This volume from the Cornell University Library's print collections was scanned on an APT BookScan and converted to JPG 2000 format by Kirtas Technologies. All titles scanned cover to cover and pages may include marks notations and other marginalia present in the original volume.