Background
Benjamin Franklin Wade was born on October 27, 1800, on a farm in Feeding Hills, Massachussets.
( Beyond Ramen & PBR: The Bachelor's Guide to Food and Win...)
Beyond Ramen & PBR: The Bachelor's Guide to Food and Wine Pairing This bachelor's guide to quick, easy meals and tasty intoxicating wine is one click away. Whether you want to impress a lady friend, or throw a dinner party for a few people this book has you covered. Beyond Ramen & PBR includes salads, appetizers, fish dishes, meat dishes, and main courses. I have collected my best, easiest, and most wine friendly meals that you can throw together in less than 20 minutes. This Book Offers You: The Components of Wine and How the Pros Taste All You Need To Know About Wine Pairing Nine Fast and Delicious Recipes The History and Fundamentals of Major Wine Styles Tasting Notes For All Wine Pairings Pictures For All Recipes And So Much More Scroll Up Now And Download Your Copy To Get Cooking and Drinking
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( He Dared to Dream an Impossible Dream. He risked Body ...)
He Dared to Dream an Impossible Dream. He risked Body and Soul to make it Real. on A VOYAGE BEYOND REASON In 1996, twenty four year old Benjamin Wade sets out on a solo voyage in a tiny sea kayak. His goal lies 6,000 miles away - and deep within his own soul. The chance discovery of his journals, buried on a Colombian cliff above the sea, uncovers a mystery which took many years to finally solve. His journals tell of misery and elation, of triumph and failure, of insight and insanity. Does the man make the journey, or does the journey make the man? Follow the tiny kayak, and follow the mind of a young man set on a goal that no amount of torture can dissuade him from reaching, on a journey that brings him face to face with himself.
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(The world of wine can be a confusing place: languages we ...)
The world of wine can be a confusing place: languages we don't speak, terms we aren't familiar with, grapes we've never heard of (if they're even listed at all) and a completely new way of describing it. All of these things come together and make wine, for lots of people, a very scary and intimidating thing - it certainly was for me. Chances are if you're reading this you like wine, are curious about learning more, but are fed up with the mumbo jumbo, flowery language, and pretentiousness of other "wine people". Lucky for you, you won't be getting any of that here. In this book, you will learn the nuts and bolts of wine: the major regions, countries, grapes, and styles that have come to shape the wine world into what it is today. So, kick back and pour yourself a big glass of grape juice (it's like stretching for your brain) as we dive into the world of wine. No complications, no mystery - just wine and real talk.
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(This reproduction was printed from a digital file created...)
This reproduction was printed from a digital file created at the Library of Congress as part of an extensive scanning effort started with a generous donation from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The Library is pleased to offer much of its public domain holdings free of charge online and at a modest price in this printed format. Seeing these older volumes from our collections rediscovered by new generations of readers renews our own passion for books and scholarship.
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(Ln the Sknatb op thk Dmited States, March 2, 18S3. Reetlv...)
Ln the Sknatb op thk Dmited States, March 2, 18S3. Reetlved, hythe Saiale qf tlie TJ aiied Stoles, (the House of Bepteseata Ures concurfing,) That in Older to enable Uie Joint Committee on (he Conduct of the War to complete their lares Ugatious of certain important matters non before them, and which the; have not heen ah1e to complete, bf reason of inability to obtain important witnesses, be authorized to continue their sessions for thirty days aft rthe close of the present Congresa, and to place theiv te Etimony and reports in the hands of the Secretary of the Senate. Seiolved, further, That the Secretary of the Senate is hereby directed to cause to be printed, of the reports and accompanying testimony of the Committee on the Conduct of the War, 6,000 copies for the uof Eepiesentatives. I of llie Senate, and 10,000 copies for the vso of the House J. TV. FOENEY, Secretary. I kthk House or Rephbseniatives, Miii-ch 2, Semi Btd, That the House concur In the foregoii resolution Bof the Senate to the sesdons of the Joint Committee on (he Conduct of the War for thirty days, and to direct the Secretary of the Senate to canse the printing of the reports, c., with the following amem Jment :insei-t at the end the words :of the present Congress. A ttest: EM. ETH lffilDGE, CU ri. if, That Uie Seoab to said resolution. A ttest; ES enate of ibe Ubmbb Statis, March 2, 1863. foregoing amem Jment of the House of Eepresea J. W. FORNEY, Sectdarj. Mr. %V adb, from the Joint Committee othe preceding resolution, placed in the hlug report in three parte. A pkii, G, 1863, lie Conduct of the War, in accordance with Is of the Secretary of Uie Senate the follow Paht 1. AKMY of the POTOMAC. PA ttT 2, BULL SUN BALLS BLUFF. Paht 3.WESTERN DEMHTMENT, OE MISSOURI MISCELLANEOUS. (Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.) About the Publisher Forgotten Books is a publisher of historical writings,
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lawyer senator Presiding Judge
Benjamin Franklin Wade was born on October 27, 1800, on a farm in Feeding Hills, Massachussets.
He had some scattered schooling before his family moved to Ohio's Western Reserve in 1821. He also taught school before studying law in Ohio with Elisha Whittlesey.
After studying law, in 1828 he settled in Jefferson, Ohio, where he became a partner of Joshua Giddings, the noted abolitionist.
His career there marked him as a product of the reform spirit so prevalent in the Western Reserve in the first half of the 19th century.
He vigorously challenged Ohio's Fugitive Slave Law compelling the return of escaped slaves.
When a coalition of Whigs and Free Soilers gained control of the legislature, they elected Wade as a compromise choice to the United States Senate in 1851.
Wade was firmly opposed to the Kansas-Nebraska Bill of 1854, took a prominent part in the ensuring debates, and ultimately joined the Republican party as it formed to carry on the abolition fight.
Wade and the other Radicals were outraged.
He and Representative Henry Winter Davis sponsored a bill making restoration of the seceded states much more difficult.
When Lincoln pocket-vetoed the measure, Wade again joined Davis in issuing a manifesto (August 5, 1864) violently attacking Lincoln's policies.
Instead Wade was himself defeated for reelection.
He retired to Ohio and resumed his law practice.
He supported a vigorous military effort against the South, emancipation, civil rights for African Americans, and a severe Reconstruction.
He chaired the Joint Congressional Committee on the Conduct of the War, which became the prime Radical instrument to spur on Abraham Lincoln's administration—which preferred more moderate war aims.
(The world of wine can be a confusing place: languages we ...)
(This reproduction was printed from a digital file created...)
( Beyond Ramen & PBR: The Bachelor's Guide to Food and Win...)
(Ln the Sknatb op thk Dmited States, March 2, 18S3. Reetlv...)
( He Dared to Dream an Impossible Dream. He risked Body ...)
An active member of the Whig Party, Wade entered the state senate in 1837.
Violently opposed to the Kansas-Nebraska Act, he helped found the Republican Party in Ohio and became identified with its most extreme wing in Congress.
His radicalism brought about an estrangement with President Abraham Lincoln, especially after the president's pocket-veto of the Wade-Davis Bill for Congressional reconstruction in July 1864.
He was elected to the Ohio Senate as a Whig in 1837 and 1841.
After the decline of the Whigs' power, Wade joined the Republican Party.
Wade opposed imprisonment for debt and special privileges for corporations, and, most of all, he established himself as a convinced opponent of slavery.
He became chairman of the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War in December 1861 and used his position to further his policies, to the detriment of conservative generals.
He was married to Caroline Rosekrans Wade.