1849 description of Leon Pomarede's Mississippi Panorama. Mississippi panoramas were a phenomenon of the mid to late 1840s where artists would travel the length of the river taking sketches and compile their efforts into a single rolling canvas which would be displayed on a stage behind them as they presented scenes from their journeys. Pomarede's panorama was considered of higher quality as it was based off original detailed oil paintings rather than quick sketches.
Report by the Committee of the Public Lands from the citizens of Indiana, on the construction of a national railroad from the Mississippi to the Columbia River, a memorial for Asa Whitney, and a grant of public land to build a railroad from Lake Michigan to the Pacific Ocean.
Comprising: I. Sermon on Jesuit Instruction, by W. S. Potts II. Review of Dr. Potts' Sermon, by O. A. Brownson III. Reply to Brownson's Review by W. S. Potts
An address describing the differences between duties of a king and duties of a president, as well as the benefits of limiting presidential terms and the state of the Whig party at the time of publication.