Albert Gallatin Riddle (May 28, 1816 – May 15, 1902) was a 19th Century American lawyer and politician who served one term as a U.S. Representative from Ohio from 1861 to 1863.
He also served as law officer of the District of Columbia 1877-1889. He was in charge of the law department at Howard University for several years after its establishment.[1]
His papers are at the Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio. They include the unpublished manuscript Accounts of experiences in Cuba (1862–1864).[citation needed]
Works
Students and Lawyers, lectures (Washington, 1873)
Bart Ridgeley, a Story of Northern Ohio (Boston, 1873)
The Portrait, a Romance of Cuyahoga Valley (1874)
Alice Brand, a Tale of the Capitol (New York, 1875)
Life, Character, and Public Services of James A. Garfield (Cleveland, 1880)
The House of Ross (Boston, 1881)
Castle Gregory (Cleveland, 1882)
Hart and his Bear (Washington, 1883)
The Young Sugar Makers of the West Woods (Cleveland, 1885)[4][5]
The Hunter of the Chagrin (1882)
Mark Loan, a Tale of the Western Reserve (1883)
Old Newberry and the Pioneers (1884)
Speeches and Arguments (Washington, 1886)
Life of Benjamin F. Wade (Cleveland, 1886)
Recollections of War Times, 1860–1865
Ansel's Cave: A Story of Early Life in the Western Reserve (Cleveland, 1893)[6][7]