A Song: ‘Come, join hand in hand, brave Americans all’ |
Liberty-Tree—A New Song by Thomas Paine (1737–1809) |
Destruction of the Tea, 1774 |
Free America by Joseph Warren (1741–1775) |
American Independence by Francis Hopkinson (1737–1791) |
The Land of Love and Liberty |
The Goddess of Liberty |
Columbia by Timothy Dwight (1752–1817) |
National Gratitude |
American Freedom by Edward Rushton (1756–1814) |
Hail America |
Land of Liberty |
The Praise of Columbia |
Liberty Hall |
New Columbia by H. Bliss |
The Irish Emigrant |
Sons of Hibernia |
The Scotch Emigrant by Thomas Muir (1765–1798) |
The Temple of Liberty |
The Genius of Ireland |
Universal Freedom |
Hail, Liberty |
War |
Washington’s Birth-day |
The Federal Constitution |
The Raising |
Independence by James H. Price |
Royal Sport |
For the Fourth of July |
For the Fourth of July |
Hail Columbia by Joseph Hopkinson (1770–1842) |
New Hail Columbia |
Hail, Independence |
Rise, Columbia by Robert Treat Paine, Jr. (1773–1811) |
American Happiness |
The Federal Constitution by Mr. Milns |
The Green-Mountain Farmer by Robert Treat Paine, Jr. (1773–1811) |
For the Fourth of July |
For the Fourth of July by Joseph Story (1779–1845) |
Sacred Independence by E. D. Bangs |
Freedom and Peace by Alexander Wilson (1766–1813) |
The Genius of Freedom |
Union and Liberty |
Freedom |
Independence and Union by Samuel G. Snelling (1787?–1815) |
National Maturity |
Embargo and Peace |
Liberty |
Washington’s Monument |
Light of Glory |
Franklin’s Tomb |
For the Fourth of July by Samuel Brazer (1785–1823) |
Patience Exhausted |
Freedom’s Star |
Independence |
Freemen of Columbia by Henry Stanley |
Liberty |
The Fourth of July |
Jefferson’s Election |
Conquer or Die |
The Fourth of July by Robert Treat Paine, Jr. (1773–1811) |
Gunpowder Tea |
Reparation or War |
Freedom’s Call by Colonel David Humphreys (1752–1818) |
The Times—1812 |
The Patriot |
A Free People |
Yankee Chronology |
Come, Ye Lads, Who Wish to Shine |
Let Feds, Quids, and Demos—1812 |
Spirits of the Mighty Dead—1812 |
An Ode: ‘See in the east refulgent rise’ by Henry Bickly |
Ode for the Fourth of July—1812 |
The Chief Who Fights—1812 by J. H. Pratt |
The Day to Freedom |
Columbia Triumphant |
Shout, America! |
An Ode: ‘Ye sons of Freedom! to the field repair’ |
Awake, Awake! to Glory Wake |
Farewell, Peace—1812 |
An Ode for the Brave—1812 |
A War Song—1797 by William Cliffton (1772–1799) |
The Tocsin Has Sounded—1812 |
An Ode: ‘While around the festive board’ by Samuel Woodworth (1784–1842) |
Elegy: ‘Strew, virgins, the cypress o’er Washington’s bier’ |
A Dirge: ‘Hush’d be every joyful sound!’ |
All Hail! to the Country |
The American Star |
Independence by William Ray (1771–1827) |
Once More, Fellow-Freemen |
When Our Great Sires |
Battle of the Kegs by Francis Hopkinson (1737–1791) |
Ode: ‘Behold! behold! with generous hand’ |
Ode: ‘Not two ages yet have fled’ |
New Song: ‘Brave sons of Columbia, your triumph behold!’ by William C. Foster |
The Fourth of July—1803 |
Ode: ‘Once more has the morn oped the portals of light’ by Walter Townsend |
Jefferson and Liberty—1801 |
Happy Columbia |
The Gift of the Gods |
The Settlement and Progress of the American Colonies |
Columbia’s Past and Present State |
The Republican Legion—1802 |
Jefferson and Liberty—1801 |
The Fourth of July—1803 |
Election Song |
Bleak Wintry Blasts |
The Death of the Brave |
Let the Drum Beat to Arms! |
Droop Not, Columbia |
Columbia Relieved |
Columbian Independence |
Columbia’s Great Glory |
The Fourth of July—1803 |
An Historic Song, in the Duitch Style |
The Fourth of July |
The Pilgrim Fathers |
New Orleans, or the Sons of the West |
Welcome, La Fayette |
La Fayette’s Welcome to Maryland by W. P. Farquhar |
La Fayette |
The Banks of Champlain—1812 |
The Terrestrial Paradise—1800 |
The American Constitution |
Old England, Forty Years Ago—1815 |
The Old Soldier’s Prayer |
The Tea Tax |
For the Fourth of July—1815 by Susanna Haswell Rowson (1762–1824) |
Day of Glory |
For the Fourth of July—1812 |
The Patriot Club |
The Patriotic Diggers—1814 |
Solomon of the West |
Lady Washington’s Lament—1799 |
French Claim |
Capture of Little York |
The Star-Spangled Banner by Francis Scott Key (1779–1843) |
Freedom’s Sons |
Freedom, Home, and Beauty |
Soldiers of Columbia |
Peace—1815 |
The American Volunteer |
The Relics of Washington by Silas Sexton Steele (b. 1812) |
The Yankee Volunteer |
Great National Whig Song |
Plough, Loom, and Chisel |
Ode for the Fourth of July by Robert Treat Paine, Jr. (1773–1811) |
Rise, Sons of Freedom |
Harrison and Liberty |
Old Fort Meigs |
Old Tippecanoe |
Tippecanoe |
Immortal Washington |
The Grand Constitution; or, the Palladium of Columbia |
The Constitution—1787 |
The Harrison Banner |
January—an Ode, for 1787 |
Ode to Charlestown |
Evacuation of New York by the British, 1783 |
Ode on the Anniversary of American Independence—1787 |
My Native Land by Hugh Peters |
Death of General Richard Montgomery |
The Ghost of Continental Money |
’Tis True That the Harp by William Wallace |
On General Arnold—1780 |
On Sir Henry Clinton’s Recall |
Ode for the Fourth of July |
Original Ode—New England by George Denison Prentice (1802–1870) |
The Gathering Song—1840 |
The Old Revolutionist |
The American Flag |
Freedom |
The Wyoming Monument |
Last Wish of Pocahontas by Miss Baker |
Our Country—a Lyric by Thomas Ward (Flaccus) (1807–1873) |
The Star in the West—1840 |
Pocahontas by George Pope Morris (1802–1864) |
Death of General Wolfe |
Liberty |
An American Parody |
An Ode: ‘Hark! the goddess of Fame’ |
Departed Patriots |
The Sweets of Liberty |
The Heads; or, the Year 1776 |
To the Memory of Major Fleming and Lieutenant Yates |
On the Death of General Wolfe |
To the Memory of Lieutenant Peter Mercier, Esq. |
Repeal of the Stamp Act |
The Death of Hale by William R. Lindsay |
An Essay: ‘Here rests from toil, in narrow bounds confined’ |
Stanzas: ‘His triumphs of a moment done’ |
On the Death of His Excellency, General Montgomery |
Virginia |
The Pilot of Hatteras by Philip Freneau (1752–1832) |
Lines Occasioned by the Detection of Dr. Church’s Traitorous Correspondence with General Gage |
Verses from the Other World |
Stanzas Occasioned by the Death of Dr. Franklin |
Freemen, If You Pant for Glory |
Columbia’s Triumph |
Columbia’s Favourite Son |
A Sonata: ‘Welcome, mighty chief! once more’ |
Ode to the President |
A Song: ‘Come, cheer up, my lads, like a true British band’ |
On the Liberties of the Nation |
On the Proceedings against America |
Return of Peace |
Home Manufactures |
Washington’s Arrival in Philadelphia |
Returning Peace |
The Gamester |
Cessation of War by Charles Smith |
Blush! Albion, Blush! |
Ode to the Inhabitants of Pennsylvania |
Lord North’s Recantation |
Columbia, the Home of the World by W. Grigg |
The Freedom of the Press |
Lines Addressed to Governor Parr |
The Birthday of Freedom |
To a Quidnunc |
The Birth-Night Fireside |
Joel Barlow by Helen Maria Williams (1762–1827) |
The Farmer’s Letters |
Peace—1815 |
On the Death of Washington |
Honour and Glory with Plenty and Peace—1815 |
Jamestown, an Elegy by John Davis |
The Heroes of the West by Richard Dabney (1787?–1825) |
Lexington Ode by John Pierpont (1785–1866) |
Washington’s Remains by George Lunt (1803–1885) |
The Revolution by Thomas Gray, Jr. |
On the Death of General Joseph Reed by Philip Freneau (1752–1832) |
Stanzas: ‘Beneath these banks, along this shore’ by Philip Freneau (1752–1832) |
Pocahontas by Moses Y. Scott |
Manhattan City, (New York) by Philip Freneau (1752–1832) |
Columbia and Liberty by Robert Treat Paine, Jr. (1773–1811) |
Country Ode for the Fourth of July by Royall Tyler (1757–1826) |
Ode for Independence Day by William Davis Gallagher (1808–1894) |
On the Death of Washington by Timothy Dwight (1752–1817) |
West Point by Margaretta V. Faugeres (1771–1801) |
Song, in the Scotch Dialect—1815 |
On a Hessian Debarkation—1776 by Philip Freneau (1752–1832) |
National Song: ‘Swell the proud pæan! the day-star advances’ by Edwin Clifford Holland (1794–1824) |
Song: ‘Columbia! while the sons of Fame’ by William Ray (1771–1827) |
The Day That Washington Was Born by William Ray (1771–1827) |
Independence—an Ode—1816 by William Ray (1771–1827) |
The Vision of Liberty by Henry Ware, Jr. (1794–1843) |
The Triumphs of Liberty by Ebenezer Baily (1795–1839) |
The Jersey Prison-Ship by John W. Whitman |
Conflagration of Washington by Philip Freneau (1752–1832) |
To the Memory of Edward Rutledge, Esq. by Philip Freneau (1752–1832) |
Stanzas to the Memory of General Washington by Philip Freneau (1752–1832) |
On Seeking the Grave of Baron De Kalb |
To General Kosciusko by John Wolcot (Peter Pindar) (1738–1819) |
For the Fourth of July |
To Captain David Porter |
The Revolutioners by George B. Wallis |
The Birth-day of Washington by George Denison Prentice (1802–1870) |
An Elegy on the Burning of Fairfield by Colonel David Humphreys (1752–1818) |
The Genius of America by Colonel David Humphreys (1752–1818) |
Song: ‘Now the war-blast is blown, and the thunders are still’ by John Shaw (1778–1809) |
The Barbary Captive Released |
Inscription Proposed for the Monument of Washington |
New England by James Gates Percival (1795–1856) |
The Pilgrim Fathers by John Pierpont (1785–1866) |
Sonnet on the Revolutionary War in America by Colonel David Humphreys (1752–1818) |
Sonnet on the Death of Washington by Colonel David Humphreys (1752–1818) |
American Union |
Washington |
Address to Washington by William Livingston (1723–1790) |
Ode: ‘God of our fathers! need we trace’ |
Invitation to America |
The Vice-President |
On General Washington |
An American Song: ‘O’er fair Columbia’s awful brow’ |
Federal Song: ‘It comes! it comes! high raise the song!’ |
Sonnet to General La Fayette |
To La Fayette |
The Washington Coin |
Epitaph in General Greene by William Pierce |
America |
Verses: ‘The sage, whom rival nations join to praise’ |
The Fabric of Freedom by Jonathan Williams |
Address to Britain and America |
Peace—1815 by John M’Creary |
Death of Du Coudray |
To the Memory of Harrison |
On the Death of Harrison |
Harrison’s Return by J. W. Matthews |
The American Hero by Nathaniel Niles (1741–1828) |
The American Boy by John Hill Hewitt (1801–1890) |