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Speeches and Writings Jefferson, Thomas Presidents
Speeches and Writings Jefferson, Thomas Presidents
  @Intermall |
Standard Listings
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- "Jefferson believed that the ethical system of Jesus was the finest the world has ever seen. In compiling what has come to be called the Jefferson Bible, he sought to separate these ethical teachings from the religious dogma".
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- HTML etext, with introduction.
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- 27,000 documents from the Manuscript Division at the Library of Congress digitized and available online. Also includes a timeline of Jefferson's life.
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- Chronological listing of the letters of Thomas Jefferson: 1743-1826.
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- from the Modern English Collection at the University of Virginia.
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- Etext with footnotes.
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- Jefferson's Bill for establishing religious freedom in the State of Virginia.
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- Selections from Jefferson's "Notes on Virginia," Queries XIV and XVIII. Presented by the Afro-American Almanac.
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- Chronological listing of original Jefferson manuscripts held by the University of Virginia Library.
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- The very rare address of the Danbury Baptist Association (Connecticut) October 7, 1801 to Thomas Jefferson, President, and his famous reply, the 'wall of separation' letter dated January 1, 1802.
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- Hyperlinked index from Yale Law School.
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- HTML etext, with introduction.
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- Searchable annotated bibliography provided by the University of Virginia, covering writings on Jefferson since his death in 1826.
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- The letter from the Danbury Baptist Association and Jefferson's 1801 reply in which he used the phrase, "wall of separation between church and state."
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- Jefferson's account of his life, written in 1821 and made available online by Bibliomania.
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- Text of the Act establishing the University of Virginia.
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- Jefferson's most important and controversial writings, and transcripts of 24 interviews conducted for Ken Burns' documentary.
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- The Memorial Edition of Jefferson's writings in 19 volumes, edited by Albert Ellery Bergh.
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- Jefferson's political philosophy in his own words. The collection contains over 2,700 quotations from the writings of Thomas Jefferson.
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- Text is broken down into general sections.
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