The Making of the American Republic (Paperback)


The Making ol tne American Republic BY ARCHER BUTLER HULBERT PROFESSOR OF HISTORY, COLORADO COLLEGE GARDEN CITY NEW YORK DOUBLEDAY, PAGE COMPANY 1923 COPYRIGHT, 1923, BY DOUBLEDAY, PACE COMJPANY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN TO THE MEMORY OF ELEAZER WHEELOCK NEW HAMPSHIRE PATRIOT AND FOUNDER AND FIRST PRESIDENT OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGE THIS VOLUME IS INSCRIBED WITH FILIAL DEVOTION PREFACE THIS volume is an attempt to put the vital facts of American history in readable form. Special effort has been made to give the relation of the economic and social to the political factors. The place and effect of western development are emphasized be yond what is usual in such texts, and soil and vegetation factors are given what is believed to be their merited place in our na tional story. In order that many individuals should not remain mere names, the Appendix carries a series of biographical sketches giv ing supplementary information concerning the more prominent persons mentioned in these pages. Of those of first rank addi tional information will, of course, be sought in the usual channels. Query and Discussion topics as well as Reading Lists accompany the respective sections of the book. Among the popular, in distinction from the scientific, books mentioned, place is given to the Chronicles of America Yale University Press. Never before has our history been so simply and in terestingly presented in expanded form by writers of scholarly rank. For map study Harpers Atlas of American History has been cited as one of the most convenient compilations of its kind its authoritative maps from the American Nation Series are veryserviceable, especially as interpreted by Dixon Ryan Foxs Map Studies. The book is cited, as Fox, Map Studies 9 In view of the fact that the text, especially after 1789, treats American history topically, a Table of the Presidencies has been included in the Appendix there, in chronological order, will be found listed the chief events of each presidential administra tion. Also, the Appendix carries the documents with which VU1 Preface every student should become familiar, the Declaration of In dependence and the Constitution. Among the numerous friends who have assisted and en couraged the writer, my colleague, Professor William C. Binkley, has kindly read the page proofs, but must be held blameless for errors which may still exist. For assistance in framing the Discussion Topics the writer is indebted to Miss Ernestine Parsons of the Colorado Springs High School. Another and a greater debt must not go unexpressed. To the trustees of Marietta College the writer is heavily obligated but for their liberality in allowing time for study and research, covering a period of many years, this volume, although not contemplated at the time, could never have been written. May I add, in conclusion, that this book has been written by an optimist by a sincere disbeliever in the theory that the evil men do lives after them. Our story presents a long line of individuals half a thousand who have played some part in this drama of republic building. Among these are splendid heroes and heroines, with here and there an impractical dreamer, a trickster, or a rogue. The writers vision has been fixed on the good that men have done, the constructive dreams they have dreamed, the struggles they have endured onbattlefields, on farms, in mines or mills, in halls of legislature, in schools, stores, and pulpits, at the bar or in editorial offices, to make our Re public great. Attention has been directed to the evil men have done only when a knowledge of that evil, or evil effort, is essential to a correct historical perspective, I arise from the reading of any sincere effort to present our national story with a sense of victory, a thrill of conquest the iron in the blood of the men and women of old enters into mine and I partake of their earnestness, patriotism, and devotion...

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The Making ol tne American Republic BY ARCHER BUTLER HULBERT PROFESSOR OF HISTORY, COLORADO COLLEGE GARDEN CITY NEW YORK DOUBLEDAY, PAGE COMPANY 1923 COPYRIGHT, 1923, BY DOUBLEDAY, PACE COMJPANY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN TO THE MEMORY OF ELEAZER WHEELOCK NEW HAMPSHIRE PATRIOT AND FOUNDER AND FIRST PRESIDENT OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGE THIS VOLUME IS INSCRIBED WITH FILIAL DEVOTION PREFACE THIS volume is an attempt to put the vital facts of American history in readable form. Special effort has been made to give the relation of the economic and social to the political factors. The place and effect of western development are emphasized be yond what is usual in such texts, and soil and vegetation factors are given what is believed to be their merited place in our na tional story. In order that many individuals should not remain mere names, the Appendix carries a series of biographical sketches giv ing supplementary information concerning the more prominent persons mentioned in these pages. Of those of first rank addi tional information will, of course, be sought in the usual channels. Query and Discussion topics as well as Reading Lists accompany the respective sections of the book. Among the popular, in distinction from the scientific, books mentioned, place is given to the Chronicles of America Yale University Press. Never before has our history been so simply and in terestingly presented in expanded form by writers of scholarly rank. For map study Harpers Atlas of American History has been cited as one of the most convenient compilations of its kind its authoritative maps from the American Nation Series are veryserviceable, especially as interpreted by Dixon Ryan Foxs Map Studies. The book is cited, as Fox, Map Studies 9 In view of the fact that the text, especially after 1789, treats American history topically, a Table of the Presidencies has been included in the Appendix there, in chronological order, will be found listed the chief events of each presidential administra tion. Also, the Appendix carries the documents with which VU1 Preface every student should become familiar, the Declaration of In dependence and the Constitution. Among the numerous friends who have assisted and en couraged the writer, my colleague, Professor William C. Binkley, has kindly read the page proofs, but must be held blameless for errors which may still exist. For assistance in framing the Discussion Topics the writer is indebted to Miss Ernestine Parsons of the Colorado Springs High School. Another and a greater debt must not go unexpressed. To the trustees of Marietta College the writer is heavily obligated but for their liberality in allowing time for study and research, covering a period of many years, this volume, although not contemplated at the time, could never have been written. May I add, in conclusion, that this book has been written by an optimist by a sincere disbeliever in the theory that the evil men do lives after them. Our story presents a long line of individuals half a thousand who have played some part in this drama of republic building. Among these are splendid heroes and heroines, with here and there an impractical dreamer, a trickster, or a rogue. The writers vision has been fixed on the good that men have done, the constructive dreams they have dreamed, the struggles they have endured onbattlefields, on farms, in mines or mills, in halls of legislature, in schools, stores, and pulpits, at the bar or in editorial offices, to make our Re public great. Attention has been directed to the evil men have done only when a knowledge of that evil, or evil effort, is essential to a correct historical perspective, I arise from the reading of any sincere effort to present our national story with a sense of victory, a thrill of conquest the iron in the blood of the men and women of old enters into mine and I partake of their earnestness, patriotism, and devotion...

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Product Details

General

Imprint

General Books LLC

Country of origin

United States

Release date

2010

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

2010

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152 x 23mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

402

ISBN-13

978-1-153-01677-3

Barcode

9781153016773

Categories

LSN

1-153-01677-X



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