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Two typescript letters, the first from F. Stewart Graham to G. Murray Campbell, dated November 8th, 1951, and the second from G. Murray Campbell to F. Stewart Graham, dated March 26, 1952, in regard to the history of the Rutland Railroad Company, which later became the Manchester, Dorset & Granville Railroad Company.
Contributors Include J. Wallace Higgins, III, Walter F. Becker, F. Stewart Graham And Others.
The definitive volume on the sources of contemporary conflict and the array of possible responses to it.
Drawing on econometric evidence and in-depth studies of West Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia, this book explores how horizontal inequalities - ethnic, religious or racial - are a source of violent conflict and how political, economic and cultural status inequalities have contributed. Policies to reverse inequality would reduce these risks.
Diary kept during the First World War, including service at Gallipoli.
Drawing on a wide range of historical examples, Graham Stewart explores the intriguing question of whether friendship can survive the pressures of public life. He examines in detail three relationships from across centuries and nations to illustrate how people in power cope with the pleasures and pitfalls of friendship in public life. His first example, Courtiers, tells the story of Queen Anne and Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough, and shows how the introduction of a new 'favourite' can ensure a powerfully jealous reaction from the long standing friend who is displaced. His second example, Revolutionaries, relates the tale of one of the United States' greatest Founding Fathers, Benjamin Franklin...