Item #15966 Reply of Julius L. Brown Attorney Cincinnati and Georgia Rail Road Co., To Argument of General E. P. Alexander, First Vice-President and General Manager Louisville and Nashville Rail Road Company, Before Senate Committee on Internal Improvements and Rail Roads, Georgia Legislature, August 19, 1881. Is the Property of a Railroad Monopoly More Sacred Than That of An Individual? Julius Brown.

Reply of Julius L. Brown Attorney Cincinnati and Georgia Rail Road Co., To Argument of General E. P. Alexander, First Vice-President and General Manager Louisville and Nashville Rail Road Company, Before Senate Committee on Internal Improvements and Rail Roads, Georgia Legislature, August 19, 1881. Is the Property of a Railroad Monopoly More Sacred Than That of An Individual?

Atlanta: Constitution Publishing Company, 1881.

First Edition. Wraps. Wraps. 37 pages. Printed, stitched gray wraps. Ex-institutional copy from the New York Public Library with its stamp on the front cover. Front wrap and contents a bit loose. Rear wrap missing. Julius Brown, a prominent Atlanta attorney and brother of Georgia's Confederate Governor and later United States Senator Joseph E. Brown, attacks the opponents of the bill that would incorporate the Cincinnati and Georgia Rail Road. Instead of seeking the 'Public Good' Brown maintains the opponents (including the Louisville and Nashville Rail Road Co.) wish to maintain an unfair Railroad monopoly.

Derenne 795. Fair. Item #15966

Price: $150.00

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