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  1. The Civil War's Last Campaign is a narrative history of General James B. Weaver's 1880 Presidential campaign as the Greenback-Labor party candidate. In the course of its narrative of the campaign, this study describes a complex coalition with interdependent conservative, radical and pragmatic currents essential to a mass insurgency. This account of his active campaigning offers a new look at ...

  2. 美国政治家詹姆斯·B·韦弗(James B. Weaver)倾向于农业激进主义。他曾两次竞选美国总统,但均以失败告终,分别是绿皮书劳工候选人(1880年)和民粹主义候选人(1892年)。韦弗于1856年获得律师资格,并在爱荷华州布卢姆菲尔德(Bloomfield)从事法律工作,并涉足政治领域,

  3. His birth date was listed as 1953-04-30. His age is 70. 1001 David Str, Centre, AL 35960 is the last known address for James. Debra W Weaver and Tommie Weaver spent some time in this place. (256) 927-7964 is his phone number. Debra W Weaver, Debra W Bard were identified as possible owners of the phone number (256) 927-7964.

  4. 14. März 2001 · The Civil War's Last Campaign is a narrative history of General James B. Weaver's 1880 Presidential campaign as the Greenback-Labor party candidate. In the course of its narrative of the campaign, this study describes a complex coalition with interdependent conservative, radical and pragmatic currents essential to a mass insurgency.

    • Mark A. Lause
  5. James B. Weaver. Born in Ohio, he moved to Iowa as a boy when his family claimed a homestead on the frontier. He became politically active as a young man and was an advocate for farmers and laborers. He joined and quit several political parties in the furtherance of the progressive causes in which he believed. After serving in the Union Army in ...

  6. 1. Nov. 2015 · An unexpectedly fascinating account of James B. Weaver, a proud son of Iowa who managed to play a critical but largely overlooked role in many political reform movements of the late 19th century. The real delight of this book is not so much in discovering Weaver himself, who, truth be told, seems to have been rather a self-righteous (albeit utterly sincere) prig, but in the vast tawdry ...

    • Paperback
    • Robert B. Mitchell
  7. Populist James B. Weaver, calling for free coinage of silver and an inflationary monetary policy, received such strong support in the West that he became the only third-party nominee between 1860 and 1912 to carry a single state.