John Gorham Palfrey
1796 – 1881
35 works on record
Works
A Chapter of American history

Review of the Rev. Jared Sparks' letters on the Protestant Episcopal church
A sermon at the installation of Samuel Kirkland Lothrop
A sermon preached in the Church in Brattle square, Boston, August 1, the Lord's day
A discourse on the life and character of the Reverend Henry Ware, D. D., A. A. S. ...
A letter to a friend
A discourse on the life and character
A discourse on the life and character of the Reverend Henry Ware, D. D., A. A. S., pronounced in the First Church in Cambridge, Sept. 28, 1845
The prospects and claims of pure Christianity
[Letter to John G. Palfrey, dated Aug. 30, giving a critical survey of Salma Hale's New grammar of the English language, 1834
The young child's prayer book
A sermon occasioned by the death of John Gorham, M.D.
The youth's prayer book
Biblia hebraica
The theory and uses of natural religion
An address delivered before the Society for Promoting Theological Education, June 5, 1831
History of New England
Letter of the Hon. E.C. Cabell, of Florida, on the subject of the election of Speaker of the House of Representatives, January 13, 1848
Remarks on the proposed state constitution
Papers on the slave power
Free Soil! Free Labor! Free Men!
Speech of Mr. Palfrey, of Massachusetts, on the bill creating a territorial government for Upper California
A sermon preached to the Society in Brattle Square, June 8th, 1923; the Lord's Day after the interment of the late Hon. John Phillips
On the use of poisoned drinks
Notice of Professor Farrar
House No. 26 Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Efficacy of prayer
Thoughts on providence and prayer
An address to the Society of Middlesex Husbandmen and Manufacturers
To the Free Soil members of the General Court of Massachusetts for the year 1851
Remarks at the mass convention, at Faneuil hall, Feb. 27, 1850
Speech, on postage reform
Report of John G. Palfrey, Solomon Lincoln, and Richard Frothingham, commissioners

Review of Lord Mahon's history of the American revolution

Letter to a Whig neighbor, on the approaching state election, by an old conservative