|
|
Eisenschiml, Otto ListingsIf you cannot find what you want on this page, then please use our search feature to search all our listings. Click on Title to view full description
|
|
|
1 |
The Chemist in Three Wars: A Paper Read Before the American Institute of Chemists at Chicago, September 18, 1942 Eisenschiml, Otto Very Good. Paperback. Softcover booklet with stapled binding. No publishing information provided. Very clean; no marks or creases; pages bright; binding tight. 35 pages. Language: English. 'In the Civil War three chemists kept the South in the running until the end; one chemist in the North made the United States independent of the most critical foreign material. In the first World War, a German chemist almost decided the issue in favor of his country through one brilliant thought. ... Our enemies have had the initiative in every theater of this war so far.... But we have no excuse whatever for letting the initiative slip from our hands in the chemical field; it is an even race....'--from page 35. Eisenschiml (1880-1963) was an Austrian-born industrial chemist and president of the Scientific Oil Compounding Company. An amateur historian who was especially interested in the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, he wrote several books about the Civil War. In his 1937 book, Why Was Lincoln Murdered?, he suggested that Secretary of War Edwin Stanton had conspired to kill the president. Eisenschiml's book inspired the 1977 book The Lincoln Conspiracy, by David Balsiger and Charles E. Sellier, and later the movie. This booklet is interesting in that it, in part, combines the author's primary interests of chemistry and the Civil War. Uncommon title. Keywords: America, U.S., warfare, military, organic, inorganic, history, technology, invention, engineer, process, processing, ordnance, gunpowder, saltpeter, mercury, industrialization, development, Josiah Gorgas, Gabriel J. Rains, John William Mallett, Lammot DuPont, War Between the States, Second, I, II, poison, gas, chlorine, Allies, Allied, Germany, oil, rubber, substitute, synthetic, science. No ISBN. Price:
150.00 USD
|
|
Add to Shopping Cart |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Eisenschiml, Otto on Allbooksconsidered.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Bibliodisia.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Boardsandwraps.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Bookhouseindinkytown.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Circlecitybooks.net Eisenschiml, Otto on Cupboardmaker.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Doreenstephensbooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Edconroybooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Eveleighbooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Everyotherbook.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Frontpagebooks.net Eisenschiml, Otto on Gibsonbooks.com
| Eisenschiml, Otto on Gloversbookery.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Hardingsbooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Hookedonhistory.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Johnbalebooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Lacroixbookseller.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Massbaymedia.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Mccauleybooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Melanienelsonbooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Michaeljosbornebooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Midwaybook.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Militaryhistorybookshop.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Moodybooks.net
| Eisenschiml, Otto on Mybookiejoint.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Pellabooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Riversedgebooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Rowbyrowbookshop.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Rwmilitarybooks.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Thebooksellerinc.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Thebooksend.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Thelibertybookshop.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Used-and-rare-books.com Eisenschiml, Otto on Vagabondbookstore.com |
|
|