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         American Tract Society The:     more books (100)
  1. The Cross-Bearer: A Vision (1861) by American Tract Society, 2010-09-10
  2. The Missionary's Daughter: A Memoir Of Lucy Goodale Thurston, Of The Sandwich Islands (1842) by American Tract Society, 2010-02-17
  3. My Picture-Book (1860) by American Tract Society Publisher, 2010-09-10
  4. Edna Harrington Or The Daughter's Influence In The Home Circle (1871) by American Tract Society, 2008-06-02
  5. Little Verses For Good Children (1848) by American Tract Society, 2010-05-23
  6. THE CHILD'S PAPER - DECEMBER, 1859 - VOL. 8. - NO. 12 by THE AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, 1859
  7. Folded Hands (1878) by American Tract Society, 2010-09-10
  8. Homes And Hospitals: Or Two Phases Of Woman's Work, As Exhibited In The Labors Of Amy Dutton And Agnes E. Jones (1872) by American Tract Society, 2009-12-07
  9. Memoir of the Rev. David Tappan Stoddard, missionary to the Nestorians by Joseph Parrish Thompson, 2010-06-19
  10. Moral Stories (1836) (Latin Edition) by American Tract Society, 2010-05-22
  11. Ecumenical Missionary Conference V2 (1900) by American Tract Society, 2008-06-02
  12. The color-bearer: Francis A. Clary
  13. Fireside Pictures (1865) by American Tract Society, 2010-09-10
  14. Songs of Zion: A Manual of the Best and Most Popular Hymns and Tunes for Social and Private Devotion by Tract Society American Tract Society, 2003-07-26

41. I Am A Witness Tract
see picture of Tract (side one) (side two). BRAND NEW Tract— pack of 25 for$3 I Am A Witness by the American Tract Society, published April 2000.
http://www.freeminds.org/sales/iam.htm
see the whole store NEW WATCHTOWER TRACTS! see picture of tract ( side one side two BRAND NEW TRACT— pack of 25 for I Am A Witness IAM back to Main Page

42. Biology And The Watchtower Bible And Tract Society
18 Awake!, p. 8, Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, Inc., Brooklyn,NY 22 Theodore W. Pietsch and David B. Grobecker, Scientific American, New York
http://www.freeminds.org/science/bio.htm
Biology and the Watchtower Society by Alan Feuerbacher The Design of Life
Existing Features

Fossil Evidence

Adaption and Evolution
...
Animals at Peace

The Design of Life
Awake! When the design argument is considered, we are compelled to conclude that some animals have always eaten meat. (Does a tiger seem designed to graze on grass?) This in turn means either the Awake! Awake! answered this point in a reply to a letter from a reader in the January 8, 1983 issue, which reply said with reference to Genesis 1:29, 30: and examine some of its consequences. Existing Features
One of Awake! as man turned toward lawlessness, the earthly creation, too, became chaotic. Man lost his loving dominion over the animals. Since humans could not control themselves peacefully, it is no surprise that the animals are in the same condition.... The animals.... began to live off one another. How about spiders? There are probably no more efficient predators in existence. Many are poisonous and many build webs. All eat other animals; none eat vegetation. An article in Technology Review , in discussing the application of natural toxins to medical treatment, mentioned how spider poison works: In the early 1980s, a team of researchers in Japan discovered the mechanism by which a joro spider paralyzes its prey. Experimenting with the nerve cells of squid, the scientists showed that spider venom acted very precisely to block the effects of glutamate, an amino acid that is an important neurotransmitter.

43. Resource Listing - American Tract Society
Resource Listing Miscellaneous. American Tract Society http//www.gospelcom.net/ATSamTract@aol.com PO Box 462008, 1624 N. 1st St.
http://www.reentry.org/cgi-bin/resourceDet.cfm?MinID=3024

44. Lincoln/Net: Project Overview
In 1830 alone the American Bible Society was printing over one million biblesa year while the American Tract Society was turning out six million Tracts.
http://lincoln.lib.niu.edu/digitalprintculture.html
Print Culture
By Julie Roy Jeffrey, Ph.D.
Nineteenth century religion and reform were inextricably linked with the transformation of the means of communication in the early decades of the century. It is hard to imagine the spread of religious enthusiasm or reform sentiment without understanding how each effectively exploited print culture and contributed to technological change such as the development of paper making machines and the steam driven printing press. And it is hard to understand the character of print culture without seeing how both evangelical religion and reform promoted reading by creating easily understood and cheap forms of literature that could spread their message simply and quickly. In 1838, Grenville Nellen announced to an audience in Cambridge, Massachusetts, that they were living in "an ERA OF PAPER, and the AGE OF PRINT." While this news could hardly have been a surprise, many of those in the audience could doubtlessly remember a time when neither paper nor printed materials were especially plentiful and when printed matter reinforced what was already known rather than conveying what was novel and new. Perhaps some also recalled a time when books were so costly that they were to be read over and over again and implicitly contrasted that earlier day with the contemporary habit of reading widely and less intensively, of hurrying through the latest newspaper or novel, and then laying it aside permanently. "Shall we content ourselves with the post-coach speed of the eighteenth century, in the schemes for evangelization, while all worldly schemes are propelled with the locomotive speed of the nineteenth century?" asked the American Tract Society. "Shall we creep along . . . neglecting all the increased facilities Providence has given us for publishing the great salvation, while steam, and electricity, and the printing press are left to become the agents of ambition, avarice, and revolution?" The answer was a resounding no.

45. Lincoln/Net: Project Overview
Other interdenominational organizations included the American Tract Society (1825)that produced and circulated thousands of religious Tracts in the antebellum
http://lincoln.lib.niu.edu/digitalvoluntaryassocs.html
Voluntary Associations
By Julie Roy Jeffrey, Ph.D.
In the three decades before the Civil War, Americans joined numerous and varied organizations in a burst of voluntary activity to perfect the moral and religious character of American society. So significant was this campaign to transform American life that historian Stuart Blumin has suggested that the period represents "an era of voluntary innovation without parallel in American history." The voluntary associations date back to the 1790s, perhaps even earlier. The first societies, some exclusively male and others female, addressed the needs of "the poor and distressed" both within their own communities and beyond. While some of these conditions were economic and could be met with gifts of food, clothing or even money, others were not. Agreeing with clergy who emphasized the danger of religious indifference and ignorance or perhaps inspired by revivalism, many voluntary associations tried to meet spiritual needs. Some sought to provide families with Bibles or religious tracts while others raised funds for missionary efforts on the frontier or in foreign lands. Often initiated by a minister or members of a congregation, many voluntary organizations had a denominational affiliation. But as time passed, nondenominational societies with a broader membership also became common. Although some retained a local focus, perhaps the support of a local orphan asylum or a society for the relief of widows, societies began to form links with similar societies elsewhere through active correspondence (each society had a corresponding secretary). Broadening their perspective even further, many became auxiliaries to national organizations in New York. The opportunity for members of auxiliaries to attend national conventions usually held annually provided a broadening and unifying experience for people who shared similar goals but came from different places.

46. Koenig's International News Online Catalog
Can We Be Sure God Hears Our Prayers? Tract (3 Packs of 25 per pack, prepared bythe American Tract Society shipping included) Quantity Price USD$12.00.
http://www.watch.org/catalog/
Koenig's International News
Online Catalog
The one-time contribution box is located below under Shipping.

Quantity: Price: USD$Box at Bottom
Book: Israel: The Blessing or the Curse - John McTernan and Bill Koenig
Quantity: Price: USD$12.00
Book: God's Final Warning to America - John McTernan
Quantity: Price: USD$10.00
Can We Be Sure God Hears Our Prayers? Tract (3 Packs of 25 per pack, prepared by the American Tract Society - shipping included)
Quantity: Price: USD$12.00
'America Under Attack, Who Can Protect Us' Tract (3 Packs of 25 per pack, prepared by the American Tract Society - shipping included) Quantity: Price: USD$12.00 Why God? Tract (3 Packs of 25 per pack, prepared by the American Tract Society - shipping included) Quantity: Price: USD$12.00 Video: The Temple Mount Dilemma - With Ken Klein, Rabbi Chaim Richman and Dr. N.S. Hutchings Quantity: Price: USD$17.95 Video: Petra - Israel's Secret Hiding Place: With Dr. N.S. Hutchings and Ken Klein Quantity: Price: USD$18.95 Video: 25 Messianic Signs in Israel Today - With Dr. N.S. Hutchings and Ken Klein Quantity: Price: USD$16.95

47. American Tract Society Building
American Tract Society Building. New York, Usa, 1896, 88.5m, 23. Architects.RH Robertson. Client/Developers. American Tract Society. Address. 150 Nassaustreet.
http://www.ping.be/cosmopolitan/building/americantractsocietybuilding.htm
American Tract Society Building
- select - Agra Antwerp Budapest Chicago Cracow Detroit London Munich New York Paris Prague S Francisco Vancouver - select - Agra Antwerp Berlin Boston Budapest Chicago Cracow Delhi Denver Detroit Harare Helsinki Honolulu London Los Angeles Munich New Orleans New York Paris Prague S Francisco Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw - select - Antwerp Berlin Boston Budapest Chicago Detroit London Munich New York Paris Prague S Francisco Toronto Vancouver - select - Antwerp Berlin Boston Chicago Denver Detroit FrankFurt London Minneapolis New York Paris S Francisco Tokyo Toronto Vancouver
City Country Year Height Stories New York Usa Architects R. H. Robertson Client/Developers American Tract Society Address 150 Nassau street
Lever House
New York Buildings Beekman Tower (New York) (New York)

48. Small Collection 43 - Colporteur Letters Of The American Tract Society
Nor are they available for sale or rent.. Small Collection 43 ColporteurLetters of the American Tract Society. American Tract Society; 1825-.
http://www.wheaton.edu/bgc/archives/GUIDES/sc043.htm
Billy Graham Center Archives
[Note: What follows is a description of the documents in this collection which are available for use at BGC Archives in Wheaton, Illinois, USA. The actual documents are not, in most cases, available online, only this description of them. Nor are they available for sale or rent.]
Small Collection 43 - Colporteur Letters of the American Tract Society
Small Collection 43 [May 6, 1998] American Tract Society; 1825- Colporteur Letters; 1854-1858 1 Folder Restrictions There are no restrictions on the use of this collection. Historical Background The American Tract Society, a nondenominational Christian publishing house, was founded in 1825 by the merger of several small printing establishments. Believing that a very effective and inexpensive way to reach most of the world's peoples with the story of Jesus Christ is through the printed page, the Society produces Christian books, booklets, magazines, and leaflets. Each year the Society made available to prisons, hospitals, and missionary organizations free materials for their distribution. Military servicemen in seven major wars were provided Christian literature by the Society as well as the cadets at West Point who received Bibles each year. In the 1840s, the Society began distribution of their materials through messengers, known as colporteurs. These men, preferably single, were usually ministers or seminary students who were sent out and supported by various societies. Occasionally called on to preach, their primary tasks were distribution of materials and fund raising. Financial support for the Society's ministry depended (as they do now) upon the charitable contributions of their Christian friends.

49. SvybibAuthors01
American Reform Tract and Book Society. American Tract Society. American Tract Society(Boston, Mass.) Anderson, Rufus, 17961880. Andrew, John, 1815-1875.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award99/miemhtml/svybibAuthors01.html
INDEX NEW SEARCH Sunday School Books: Shaping the Values of Youth in Nineteenth-Century America
Authors
Abbott, Jacob, 1803-1879.
Abbott, John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot), 1805-1877.

Alexander, James W. (James Waddel), 1804-1859.

American Baptist Publication Society.
... NEW SEARCH

50. NcpmAuthors01
American SundaySchool Union. American Tract Society. American Union of Associationists. AmericanTract Society, New York. Ames, Mary Clemmer, 1839-1884.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpcoop/moahtml/ncpmAuthors01.html
NEXT INDEX NEW SEARCH The Nineteenth Century in Print: Books
Authors
1860 Association.
Abbot, Waldo, 1888-

Abbott, Jacob, 1803-1879.

Abbott, John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot), 1805-1877.
... NEW SEARCH

51. Guide To The Kaercher And Packer Family Papers,1789-1938
theology), Millerism (Millerite movement), the need of ministers among German immigrantsof Ohio and Pennsylvania, the American Tract Society, religion on the
http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/RMM00347.html
Guide to the Kaercher And Packer Family Papers,
Collection Number: 347
Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections
Cornell University Library
Contact Information: Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections
2B Carl A. Kroch Library
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853
Fax: (607) 255-9524
rareref@cornell.edu

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu

Compiled by: Date completed: EAD encoding: DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY Title: Kaercher and Packer family papers, 1789-1938. Collection Number: Creator: Quantity: 2.5 cubic ft; 4 v.; 2 museum folders. Forms of Material: Repository: Division of Rare and Manuscript Collectons, Cornell University Library Abstract: BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE George Kaercher was a divinity student at Burr Seminary, Manchester, Vermont, and Western Reserve, Ohio and a minister in Ohio. COLLECTION DESCRIPTION SUBJECTS Names: Kaercher family. Barnes, Albert. Kaercher, George. Mason family. Packer family. Packer, Johnathan. American Home Missionary Society.

52. Campus Crusade For Christ - ESM Recommended Resources
I Am a Witness (Jehovah's Witness) Tract, Leonard A. Chretien, AmericanTract Society. Michael Chang Tract, American Tract Society.
http://www.uscm.org/esm/resources.html
Choose State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington Washington D.C. West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Recommended Resources
This is a partial and not exhaustive list of some of the ESM staff's favorite readings which we hope you will find helpful and enjoyable too.
Apologetics Resource Author Publisher Africans Who Shaped Our Faith Jeremiah Wright, Jr. Urban Ministries Are Blacks Spiritually Inferior to Whites? Anthony Evans Renaissance Prod. Beyond Liberation: The Gospel In The Black American Experience Carl F. Ellis, Jr. Intervarsity Press Beyond Roots: In Search of Blacks In The Bible William D. McKissic

53. LUCILE Project -- PTLA Contributors 1878
Allyn, John, Boston American Catalogue Anerican News Co., NY American SwedenborgPrinting and Pub. Society, NY American Tract Society, Boston.
http://staffweb.lib.uiowa.edu/shuttner/ptla/1878.htm
To: The PTLA Project Index
To: The Lucile Project Publishers' Trade List Annual
List of Contributors and Advertisers Allyn, John, Boston
American Catalogue
Anerican News Co., NY
American Swedenborg Printing and Pub. Society, NY
American Tract Society, Boston. See American Tract Society, NY
American Tract Society, NY
American Unitarian Association, Boston
Authors' Pub. Co., NY
Blair, J.C., Huntingdon, Pa Bliss, J.W., Hartford, Ct Bryant, J.C., Buffalo, NY Catholic Publication Society, NY Challen, Howard, Phila Christern, F.W., NY Cogswell, Albert, NY Congregational Pub. Soc., Boston Crowell, Thomas Y., NY Cushing, E.H., Houston, Tex DeWitt, Clinton T., NY Draper, W.F., Andover, Mass Emmerich, Fr. J., NY Gardner's Portable Book-Shelving. See American News Co. Goodrich, E.J., Oberlin, O Happy Hours Co., NY Holbrook, M.L., NY Homans, I. Smith, NY Judd, Orange, Co., NY Kelly, Thomas, NY Lea, Henry C., Phila Library Journal Lindemann, Wm., NY Literary News Molleson Bros., NY Munro, George. See American News Co.

54. LUCILE Project -- PTLA Contirbutors 1877 
Soc., NY American Tract Society, Boston. American Tract Society, NY AmericanUnitarian Association, Boston Appleton, D., Co., NY Authors' Pub.
http://staffweb.lib.uiowa.edu/shuttner/ptla/1877.htm
To: The PTLA Project Index
To: The Lucile Project Publishers' Trade List Annual
List of Contributors and Advertisers
American Baptist Pub. Society, Phila
American News Co., NY
Americar Sunday-School Union, Phila
American Swedenborg Printing and Pub. Soc., NY
American Tract Society, NY
American Unitarian Association, Boston
Authors' Pub. Co., NY
Bennett, D.M., NY Benziger Bros., NY Bouton, J.W., NY Bryant, J.C., Buffalo, NY Campbell, James, Boston Catholic Publication Society, NY Central Publishing Co., St. Louis Challen, Howard, Phila Christern, F.W., NY Claremont Mfg. Co., Claremont, NH Clauder, Henry T., Bethlehem, Pa Cogswell, Albert, NY Crowell, Thomas Y., NY Cushing, E.H., Houston, Tex DeWitt, Clinton T., NY Dillingham, Charles T., NY Draper, W.F., Andover, Mass Eastman, Edson C., Concord, N.H. Gardner's Portable Book-Shelving. See American News Co. Gilbert, W.J., St. Louis Goodrich, E.J., Oberlin, O Graves, A.F., Boston Happy Hours Co., NY Harding, W.W., Phila Holmes, W.G., Chicago

55. Tract Stories
American Tract Society A nonprofit gospel outreach ministry Over 10Billion Bibles, Books, and Tracts Distributed Since 1825. ATS
http://www.goshen.net/AmericanTractSociety/stories.html

56. Religion And The New Republic (Religion And The Founding Of The American Republi
This exhibition demonstrates that many of the colonies that in 1776 became the United States of America Category Society Ethnicity African-American History Religion...... Education Society, the American Board of Foreign Missions, the American Bible Society,the American SundaySchool Union, the American Tract Society, and the
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/religion/rel07.html
HOME EXHIBITION OVERVIEW OBJECT LIST
SECTIONS: I. America as Refuge - II. 18th Century America
III. American Revolution - IV. Congress of the Confederation - V. State Governments
VI. Federal Government VII. New Republic
VII. Religion and the New Republic
T The Atheist's Bible
Pious Americans were shocked by Thomas Paine's The Age of Reason , part of which was written during the great pamphleteer's imprisonment in Paris during the French Revolution. Although denounced as the "atheist's bible," Paine's work was actually an exposition of a radical kind of deism and made an attempt at critical biblical scholarship that anticipated modern efforts. Paine created a scandal by his sardonic and irreverent tone. Assertions that the virgin birth was "blasphemously obscene" and other similarly provocative observations convinced many readers that the treatise was the entering wedge in the United States of French revolutionary "infidelity."
The Age of Reason. Being an Investigation of True and Fabulous Theology.

Thomas Paine. Philadelphia: Printed and sold by the Booksellers, 1794
Rare Book and Special Collections Division
, Library of Congress (181) Paine Rebuked
Even before the publication of the Age of Reason , Thomas Paine was hated and feared for his political and religious radicalism by conservatives in England, where he had periodically lived since 1787. Paine fled to France in December 1792 to avoid trial for treason. In this cartoon, Paine sleeps on a straw pillow wrapped in an American flag, inscribed "Vive L' America." In his pocket is a copy of

57. Project Gutenberg Author Record
Project Gutenberg Author record. American Tract Society, The. Titles.Step by Step; or Tidy's Way to Freedom. To the main listings page.
http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/american_tract_society__t.html
Project Gutenberg Author record
American Tract Society, The
Titles
Step by Step; or Tidy's Way to Freedom
To the main listings page
Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online)

58. Books On-line: Authors Starting With "A"
American Tract Society Kenny Carle's Uniform (HTML with page images at MSU); AmericanTract Society Step by Step or, Tidy's Way to Freedom (Gutenberg text);
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~shear/authorstart-a.htm

59. Stow, History Of Mount Holyoke Seminary... - Preface
of Mary Lyon; Hopkins, Bridgman Co., Northampton The Life of Mary Lyon; an abridgmentof the former, with additions; American Tract Society, 150 Nassau
http://clio.fivecolleges.edu/mhc/stow/preface.htm
[PAGE iv]
TO "The memory of Thy great goodness." Ps. cxlv. 7. [PAGE v]
PREFACE.
[PAGE vi] New matter has been added from Miss Lyon's correspondence and from other papers in the archives of the seminary. As Mrs. Pease, secretary of the Memorandum Society, is collecting materials for a biographical record of Holyoke alumnae, less space is given to individuals in these pages. Chapters XIV., XV., XVI., and XVII. were taken by Miss Mary O. Nutting, of the class of '52. Grateful acknowledgments are due to Rev. J. M. Greene, D. D., for the use of his memorial sketch of the life of Rev. Roswell Hawks; to the hundreds of alumnae who responded so cordially to the request for reminiscences or testimony; to present and former principals and teachers who have kindly aided in the work of preparation; to Rev. T. Laurie , D. D., and to Rev. Wm. S. Tyler, D. D., LL. D., for their valuable suggestions and careful revision; to the trustees, for their constant and cordial co-operation through their executive and library committees; and to all whose help has made it possible to issue the volume in season for the jubilee. SOUTH HADLEY, April, 1887.

60. Works Cited
2649. Brown, Helen E. John Freeman and his Family. Boston American Tract Society.1864. Plain Counsels For Freedmen. Boston American Tract Society. 1866.
http://www.wm.edu/CAS/ASP/faculty/Lowry/Amst2000/projects1999/Marms/workscited.h
Works Cited
Anderson, James D. The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860-1935 . Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
Bentley, George R. A History of the Freedmen’s Bureau . Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1955. Brazzell, Johnetta Cross. “Bricks without Straw: Missionary-Sponsored Black Higher Education in the Post-Emancipation
Era.” The Journal of Higher Education . V.63 n.1 1992. 26-49. Brown, Helen E. John Freeman and his Family . Boston: American Tract Society. 1864.
(reprinted as Freedman’s Schools and Textbooks: Volume 5 . New York: AMS Press, Inc. 1980.) Butchart, Ronald E. Northern Schools, Southern Blacks, and Reconstruction: Freedmen’s Education, 1862-1875
Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1980. Child, Lydia Marie. The Freedman’s Book . Boston: Ticknos and Fields. 1865.
(reprinted as Freedman’s Schools and Textbooks: Volume 6. New York: AMS Press, Inc. 1980.) Donald, Henderson H., Ph. D. The Negro Freedman: Life Conditions of the American Negro in the Early Years After
Emancipation . New York Henry Schuman, 1952.

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