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. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 86
Seite 53
... York , Gloster , and Middlesex petitioned the council of Virginia regarding the great num- ber of " fellons and other desperate villanes sent hither from the prisons of England , " begging that body to prevent the barbarous designs and ...
... York , Gloster , and Middlesex petitioned the council of Virginia regarding the great num- ber of " fellons and other desperate villanes sent hither from the prisons of England , " begging that body to prevent the barbarous designs and ...
Seite 70
... York fami- lies like to trace their ancestry back to them . Their stay was a troubled one for they were in almost ... York , the King's brother , to whom the territory had been granted , the colony and town were renamed New York , and ...
... York fami- lies like to trace their ancestry back to them . Their stay was a troubled one for they were in almost ... York , the King's brother , to whom the territory had been granted , the colony and town were renamed New York , and ...
Seite 153
... York , was in closer touch with London than with Philadelphia or Charleston , knew more of what was going on there . When the English ship drew up to his wharf he invited the master to dine with him , and , to the accompaniment of good ...
... York , was in closer touch with London than with Philadelphia or Charleston , knew more of what was going on there . When the English ship drew up to his wharf he invited the master to dine with him , and , to the accompaniment of good ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
Edward P Cheyney | 19 |
Andrews | 39 |
Urheberrecht | |
38 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adams American American Revolution Andrew Johnson army assembly authority bank bill Boston Britain British century charter civil Colonel Burr colonies colonists command committee Confederate Congress Constitution convention Court declared delegates Democratic duty election enemy England English favor federal Federalist force France French frontier governor Hamilton historians House hundred Indians instructions interest Jackson Jefferson Jefferson Davis John John Adams John Quincy Adams land legislature letter Madison Marshall Massachusetts measures ment merchants miles military Mississippi Missouri Missouri Compromise Negro never North northern officers Ohio Parliament party passed patriots peace Pennsylvania Philadelphia political Polk President repeal Republican Revolution river Samuel Adams Secretary Senate sent settlement ships slavery slaves South Carolina Southern Spain Stamp Act territory thousand tion took town trade troops Union United Virginia vote Washington West western Whigs wrote York