A History of Hope: When Americans Have Dared to Dream of a Better FutureThis book chronicles American history through the stories of the individuals and movements that dreamed of a better future and then took action to make that dream a reality, arguing that the much heralded American spirit was not born as a gift of our founding, but was forged through our adversity and triumphs. From colonial revolutionaries to abolitionists, labor organizers to suffragists, progressives to civil rights activists, it was individuals and movements who dared to go against the American majority that both guarded and created our best national self. |
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When Americans Have Dared to Dream of a Better Future James W. Fraser. Acknowledgments Foreword CONTENTS B.E ix xi Prologue : The First Revolution : Taos , 1680 1. The Revolutionaries of 1776 1 11 2. Utopian Communities 27 3. Mexico in ...
When Americans Have Dared to Dream of a Better Future James W. Fraser. Acknowledgments Foreword CONTENTS B.E ix xi Prologue : The First Revolution : Taos , 1680 1. The Revolutionaries of 1776 1 11 2. Utopian Communities 27 3. Mexico in ...
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Contents
The First Revolution Taos 1680 | 1 |
Mexico in the United States | 43 |
4 | 67 |
The First Civil Rights | 93 |
6 | 119 |
Feminists and Suffragists | 121 |
7 | 151 |
The Many Faces of the Progressive | 185 |
Hope in Hard Times | 215 |
The Civil Rights Movement | 253 |
The Movement Continues | 285 |
Bibliography | 319 |
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A History of Hope: When Americans Have Dared to Dream of a Better Future James W. Fraser No preview available - 2004 |
Common terms and phrases
abolitionists Addams African American anarchists Anthony arrested Autobiography became began Boston boycott California century church cited City civil rights movement Congress continued convention courage Debs decades Douglass dream DuBois early editor efforts emancipation Emma Goldman federal feminist Foner freedom future Garvey Goldman hope Horton Hull House industrial Jefferson John labor movement land later leaders liberty lived Malcolm Margaret Sanger Martin Luther King ment Mexican Mexico Mississippi Mother Jones move NAACP nation Negro Noyes Oneida organized political Popé president Pueblo radical Reconstruction religious revolution Rosa Parks Sacco and Vanzetti San Miguel County Sanger Sarah Grimké segregation Shaker slavery slaves social social gospel Socialist society South speech Stanton story strike suffrage teachers things tion told took union United Vallejo Vanzetti vision voice vote W. E. B. DuBois wanted Washington woman women workers wrote York young