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Additional Primary Souces are listed at the end of this Table of Contents. 1. New World Encounters. Primary Source Documents 1.1 Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, "Indians of the Rio Grande" (1528-1536). 1.2 Dekanawida Myth & the Achievement of Iroquois Unity (ca 1500s). 2.1 Captain John Smith, President in Virginia, to the Treasurer and Council of the Virginia Company, from Smith's The Generall Historie of Virginia (1624). 2.2 John Winthrop, "A Model of Christian Charity" (1630). 3.1 Alexander Falconbridge, The African Slave Trade (1788). 3.2 Gottlieb Mittelberger, On The Misfortune of Indentured Servants (1754). 4.1 Michel Guillaume Jean de Crèvecoeur, excerpt, Letters from an American Farmer (1782). 4.2 Virginia Law on Indentured Servitude (1705). 5.1 Boston Gazette, Description of the Boston Massacre (1770). 5.2 Slave Petition to the General Assembly in Connecticut (1779). 6.1 Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (1787). 6.2 Patrick Henry Speaks Against Ratification of the Constitution (1788). 7.1 George Washington, Sixth Annual Address to Congress (1794). 7.2 The Alien and Sedition Acts (1798). 8.1 Opinion of the Supreme Court for Marbury v. Madison (1803). 8.2 President Jefferson’s Confidential Message to Congress (1803). 9.1 Henry Clay, "Defense of the American System" (1832). 9.2 Black Hawk, Excerpt from “The Life of Black Hawk” (1833). 10.1 Female Industry Association, from the New York Herald (1825). 10.2 Ralph Waldo Emerson, “The Concord Hymn” (1837). 11.1 Slave Narrative, “The History of Mary Prince, A West Indian Slave, Related by Herself” (1831). 11.2 De Bow’s Review, “The Stability of the Union” (1850). 12.1 Mathew Carey, “Rules for Husbands and Wives,” (1830). 12.2 National Convention of Colored People, Report on Abolition (1847). 13.1 Levi Coffin, Reminiscences of the Underground Railroad in the 1850s. 13.2 Horace Greeley, “An Overland Journey” (1860). 14.1 Frederick Douglass, Independence Day Speech (1852). 14.2 George Fitzhugh, Slavery Justified (1849). 15.1 Letter from H. Ford Douglas to Frederick Douglass’s Monthly (January 8, 1863). 15.2 Clara Barton, Memoirs of Medical Life at the Battlefield (1862). 16.1 Carl Schurz, Report on the Condition of the South (1865). 16.2 Jourdon Anderson to His Former Master (1865). 17.1 Accounts of the Wounded Knee Massacre (1890s). 17.2 Joseph G. McCoy, Historic Sketches of the Cattle Trade of the West and Southwest (1874). 18.1 Mother Jones, “The March of the Mill Children” (1903). 18.2 Chinese Exclusion Act (1882). 19.1 Autobiographical Narrative by Zitkala-Sa on Her First Days at Boarding School in Indiana (1900). 19.2 Richard K. Fox, from Coney Island Frolics (1883). 20.1 Suit by the United States against the Workingman’s Amalgamated Council of New Orleans (1893). 20.2 Mary Elizabeth Lease, from Populist Crusader (1892). 21.1 Ernest Howard Crosby, “The Real ‘White Man’s Burden’,” (1899). 21.2 Extract from “Our Poorer Brother,” by Theodore Roosevelt (1897). 22.1 Events in Paris, Texas from Ida B. Wells, A Red Record (1895). 22.2 Adna Weber, “The Growth of Cities in the Nineteenth Century” (1899). 23.1 Charlotte Perkins Gilman, “If I Were a Man” (1914). 23.2 Report of the Vice Commission, Louisville, Kentucky (1915). 24.1 Eugene Kennedy, A ‘Doughboy’ Describes the Fighting Front (1918). 24.2 Rev. F. J. Grimke, Address to African American Soldiers Returning from War (1919). 25.1 Edward Earle Purinton, “Big Ideas from Big Business” (1921). 25.2 John F. Carter, “‘These Wild Young People’ by One of Them” (1920). 26.1 Franklin D. Roosevelt, First Inaugural Address (1932). 26.2 Huey Long, “Share Our Wealth” (1935). 27.1 Franklin D. Roosevelt, “The Four Freedoms” (1941). 27.2 Charles Lindbergh, Radio Address (1941). 28.1 Ronald Reagan, Testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee (1947). 28.2 President Harry S. Truman's Address before a Joint Session of Congress (March 12, 1947). 29.1 Executive Order 9981 (1948). 29.2 Ladies’ Home Journal, "Young Mother" (1956). 30.1 John Lewis, Address at the March on Washington (1963). 30.2 Shirley Chisholm, “Equal Rights for Women” (May 21, 1969). 31.1 House Judiciary Committee’s Conclusion on Impeachment (1974). 31.2 President Jimmy Carter, The “Crisis of Confidence” Speech (1979). 32.1 President Ronald Reagan, Address to the National Association of Evangelicals (1983). 32.2 Patricia Morrisroe, “Yuppies — The New Class” (1985). 33.1 President Bill Clinton's First Inaugural Address (1993). 33.2 The Balkan Proximity Peace Talks Agreement (1995). Glossary G-1. Table of Contents
2. Conflicting Visions: Seventeenth-Century Colonies.
3. Putting Down Roots: Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society.
4. Frontiers of Empire: Eighteenth-Century America.
5. The American Revolution: From Gentry Protest to Popular Revolt, 1763-1783.
6. The Republican Experiment.
7. Democracy in Distress: The Violence of Party Politics, 1788-1800.
8. Republican Ascendancy: The Jeffersonian Vision.
9. Nation Building and Nationalism.
10. The Triumph of White Men's Democracy.
11. Slaves and Masters.
12. The Pursuit of Perfection.
13. An Age of Expansionism.
14. The Sectional Crisis.
15. Secession and the Civil War.
16. The Agony of Reconstruction.
17. The West: Exploiting an Empire.
18. The Industrial Society.
19. Toward an Urban Society, 1877-1900.
20. Political Realignments in the 1890s.
21. Toward Empire.
22. The Progressive Era.
23. From Roosevelt to Wilson in the Age of Progressivism.
24. The Nation at War.
25. Transition to Modern America.
26. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal.
27. America and the World, 1921-1945.
28. The Onset of the Cold War.
29. Affluence and Anxiety.
30. The Turbulent Sixties.
31. A Crisis in Confidence, 1969-1980.
32. The Republican Resurgence, 1980-1992.
33. America in Flux.
Appendix A-1.
Credits C-1.
Index I-1.
What is Test Bank?
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