United States. President (1797-1801 : Adams)
54 works on record
Works
John Adams and the Spanish border crisis
1974
John Adams, 1735-1826
1967
President Adams' letter
1809
Message from the President of United States, transmitting his annual account of the contingent fund
1801
Message from the President of the United States
1800
A proclamation. By the President of the United States of America
1800
A proclamation
1799
Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a statement of the vessels with their tonnage, warlike force and complement of men to which commissions, as private armed vessels, have been issued since the ninth of July last
1799
House of Representatives of the United States, March 19
1798
Speech of the President of the United States, to both houses of Congress, December 8th, 1798
1798
Message from the President of the United States accompanying a representation from the judge of the district of Pennsylvania and a report of the Attorney-General
1798
The President's speech, to both houses of Congress
1798
President's answer to the inhabitants of Providence. Providence, Monday, May 7, 1798
1798
President's speech
1798
The president's address, to both houses of Congress
1798
President's speech. Providence. Saturday evening, December 15, 1798
1798
Newburyport Herald-Office. December 17, 1798
1798
By the president of the United States of America. A proclamation
1797
From the Mercury-Office. President's speech
1797
Message from the president of the United States, transmitting a report and sundry documents from the Secretary of State, of the depredations committed on the commerce of the United States since the first of October 1796, in pursuance of a resolution of the House, of the tenth instant
1797
Speech of the President of the United States to both houses of Congress, November 23, 1797
1797
Confidential message from the President of the United States inclosing [sic] sundry documents from the Departments of State and War
1797
Speech of the president of the United States, to both Houses of Congress
1797
Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a statement of the vessels with their tonnage, warlike force and complement of men to which commissions, as private armed vessels, have been issued since the ninth of July last
By the president of the United States. A proclamation
House of Representatives of the United States, March 19
Speech of the President of the United States to both houses of Congress, November 23, 1797
Speech of the president of the United States, to both Houses of Congress
Newburyport Herald-Office. December 17, 1798
Speech of the President of the United States, to both houses of Congress, December 8th, 1798
By the President of the United States of America, a proclamation
From the Mercury-Office. President's speech
Speech of Mr. John Quincy Adams on the case of Alexander McLeod
John Adam's inaugural
Message from the President of the United States, inclosing a letter to him from the Governor of South-Carolina, accompanying a number of depositions of witnesses to several captures and outrages committed within and near the limits of the United States by a French privateer, called the Vertitude, or Fortitude
Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury transmitting, in obedience to a resolution of the Senate, of the 22d ult., a copy of a patent, which issued under an act of Congress, passed on the 1st day of June, 1796, "conveying to the Society of United Brethren for Propagating the Gospel among the Heathen, three-tracts of land of four thousand acres each
Frankreichs Verfahren gegen Amerika
Message of the President of the United States to both houses of Congress. April 3d, 1798
Message from the President of the United States, transmitting certain documents on the subjects of the insurrection in Pennsylvania, the renewal of commerce with St. Domingo, and the mission to France
Report of the committee appointed on the tenth instant, to prepare an address to the president of the United States
Report of the committee, to whom was referred, on the 14th instant, the message of the president of the United States, together with a letter of John Randolph, Junr. a member of this House, for the state of Virginia
Marine rules and regulations
Postscript to the Mercury. Tuesday noon, March 27
America and France
Documents referred to in the president's speech to both Houses of Congress, on the sixteenth May, 1797
Report of the committee appointed on the fourth instant, to prepare an address to both houses of Congress
Message of the president of the United States, to both houses of Congress
Confidential message from the president of the United States
President's speech
Important documents and dispatches, which accompanied the message of the president of the United States, to both houses of Congress, April 3, 1798
Speech of the President of the United States, to both Houses of Congress. May 16, 1797
Message from the President of the United States, accompanying sundry papers relative to the affairs of the United States, with the French republic. 18th January, 1799
Message from the President of the United States, accompanying a report to him from the secretary of state, and sundry documents relative to the affairs of the United States on the Mississippi
Message from the president of the United States accompanying a report to him from the secretary of war of the 24th., instant, relative to the military establishment. 31st. December, 1798