The American Heritage History of the Making of the NationAmerican Heritage Publishing Company; book trade distribution by Simon and Schuster, 1968 - United States - 416 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 138
... took him through the so recently disaffected Northeast , ostensi- bly to inspect coastal and border fortifications . In Bos- ton the Federalist Columbian Centinel referred locally to the visit as an Era of Good Feelings . That casual ...
... took him through the so recently disaffected Northeast , ostensi- bly to inspect coastal and border fortifications . In Bos- ton the Federalist Columbian Centinel referred locally to the visit as an Era of Good Feelings . That casual ...
Page 239
... took him to Klamath Lake and from there across the Nevada desert to the Humboldt River . It was not any easy trail , not even wholly safe , but it was at last a possible one all the way to Oregon . Each season the wheel ruts cut deeper ...
... took him to Klamath Lake and from there across the Nevada desert to the Humboldt River . It was not any easy trail , not even wholly safe , but it was at last a possible one all the way to Oregon . Each season the wheel ruts cut deeper ...
Page 387
... took the moral tone of his Peoria Speech . " Let us then , " he urged his listeners , " turn this government back into the channel in which the framers of the Con- stitution originally placed it . Let us discard all this quibbling about ...
... took the moral tone of his Peoria Speech . " Let us then , " he urged his listeners , " turn this government back into the channel in which the framers of the Con- stitution originally placed it . Let us discard all this quibbling about ...
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abolitionist Adams American Army attack Bank became Boston British Buchanan Buren Cabin Calhoun called candidate Carolina Clay Compromise Compromise of 1850 Confederation Congress Constitution convention Court debt delegates Democrats Douglas Dred Scott election England Erie farmers federal Federalist felt flag force Franklin free-soil Frémont French governor Hamilton Harrison Henry HISTORICAL SOCIETY House hundred ican inauguration Indians Jackson Jefferson John John Quincy Adams Kansas land later leaders Lecompton Constitution legislature Lincoln Madison Massachusetts ment Mexican Mexico miles militiamen Mississippi Missouri Missouri Compromise Monroe MUSEUM Negro NEW-YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY North Northern Ohio Orleans party peace Pennsylvania Philadelphia political Polk presidential Republicans Revolution River Scott Secretary Senate settlers ships slavery slaves South South Carolina Southern Taylor territory Texas thousand tion took treaty Uncle Tom's Cabin Union United Virginia votes Washington Webster West Western Whigs William York young