The Historian's History of the United States, Band 1Putnam, 1966 - 1384 Seiten Places the following historians' writings in perspective and provides the historical writing itself of Edward P. Cheney, John Fiske, Charles M. Andrews, Edward Gaylord Bourne, James Truslow Adams, Francis Parkman, Herbert L. Osgood, Edward Channing, Carl L. Becker, Sydney George Fisher, Moses Coit Tyler, George Bancroft, Richard B. Morris, Charles A. and Mary R. Beard, J. Franklin Jameson, Henry Adams, Claude G. Bowers, Theodore Roosevelt, John Bach McMaster, Alfred T. Mahan, Frederick Jackson Turner, Hiram Martin Chittenden, John Spencer Bassett, James Ford Rhodes, William E. Dodd, Albert Bushnell Hart, Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, Bruce Catton, Douglas Southall Freeman, John G. Nicolay, and William Archibald Dunning, Vernon Louis Parrington, Merle Curti, Walter Prescott Webb, Allan Nevins, Oscar Handlin, Arthur Meier Schlesinger, Ida M. Tarbell, Richard Hofstadter, Samuel Flagg Bemis, and Henry Steele Commager. |
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Seite 216
... Congress , " and the chairman should be styled " The President . " Thus originated the two principal titles in our present governmental organization . The Congress provided for by the Constitution of 1787 is in a real sense the ...
... Congress , " and the chairman should be styled " The President . " Thus originated the two principal titles in our present governmental organization . The Congress provided for by the Constitution of 1787 is in a real sense the ...
Seite 263
... congress to any soldier . The state made some compensation to their masters . The powerlessness of congress admitted no effective supervision over officers of their own appointment . Unable to force a defaulting agent to a settlement ...
... congress to any soldier . The state made some compensation to their masters . The powerlessness of congress admitted no effective supervision over officers of their own appointment . Unable to force a defaulting agent to a settlement ...
Seite 271
... Congress know how urgent it was for that body to spell out its terms for peace . To make sure that the members of Congress could have the benefit of his expert knowledge , he took a residence within a stone's throw of Congress ' meeting ...
... Congress know how urgent it was for that body to spell out its terms for peace . To make sure that the members of Congress could have the benefit of his expert knowledge , he took a residence within a stone's throw of Congress ' meeting ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
Edward P Cheyney | 19 |
Andrews | 39 |
Urheberrecht | |
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