Henry O'Reilly
1806 – 1886
28 works on record
Works

American anthems, on the triumph of liberty and union over slavery and treason

Rochster in 1835

American political-antimasonry, with its "Good-enough Morgan." "One of the most singular features in American social, religious and political history, as well as in the annals of the masonic institutions throughout the world" ... Brief notices of some events in the history of the political-antimasonic excitement ...

Settlement in the West

Sketches of Rochester

Real motives of the rebellion

First connected account of the efforts of the people of New York for defending the union during the late civil war

Origin and objects of the slaveholders' conspiracy against Democratic principles, as well as against the national union--

Notices of Sullivan's campaign
Christopher Colles, and the first proposal of a telegraph system in the United States
Exposure of the schemes for nullifying the "O'Rielly contract," for extending the telegraph between the Atlantic, the Lakes and the Mississippi
The great questions of the times
Proceedings of the New-York state conventions
Origin and objects of the slaveholders' conspiracy against democratic principles, as well as against the national union
The telegraph controversy
Memorial of Henry O'Rielly [sic]
Proceedings of the New-York state conventions for "rescuing the canals from the ruin with which they are threatened"
The most eventful period in American history
American telegraph system, semaphoric as well as magnetic
The electric telegraph
Arming the slaves in the war for the Union
A brief report on the rise, progress and condition of the Rochester athenaeum-Young men's association
Memorial of Henry O'Rielly [sic] proposing a system of telegraphic & letter-mail communication between the Atlantic & Pacific
Rochester in 1835
Origin and objects of the slaveholders' conspiracy against Democratic principles
Recollections of Henry O'Reilly
Notices of Sullivan's campaign, or, The revolutionary warfare in western New-York
Memorial of Henry O'Rielly, proposing a system of intercommunication by mail and telegraph, along a military road through our own territories, between the Atlantic and Pacific states (being the plan approved by the St. Louis National Convention in 1849) ..