The American Historical Review, 14 tomas

Priekinis viršelis
John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler
American Historical Association, 1909
American Historical Review is the oldest scholarly journal of history in the United States and the largest in the world. Published by the American Historical Association, it covers all areas of historical research.
 

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434 psl. - A re-arrangement of this, in accordance with the principle indicated above, will be found to increase the effect. Thus: Though probably true, a modern newspaper- statement quoted in a book as testimony, would be laughed at; but the letter of a court gossip, if written some centuries ago, is thought good historical evidence. By making this change, some of the suspensions are avoided and others shortened; while there is less liability to produce premature conceptions. The passage quoted below from...
286 psl. - Hartford ; and in 1846 was appointed chief of the bureau of provisions and clothing in the Navy Department, which office he held till 1849.
13 psl. - ... whole created carbon is slowly moving in a greater circle between earth and air. It rises from the earth at one end of the curve in the...
590 psl. - Mr. CHARLES PINCKNEY laid before the House the draft of a federal government which he had prepared, to be agreed upon between the free and independent States of America: PLAN OF A FEDERAL CONSTITUTION.
285 psl. - Nor must Uncle Sam's web-feet be forgotten. At all the watery margins they have been present, not only on the deep Sea, the broad Bay, and the rapid River, but also up the narrow, muddy Bayou, and wherever the ground was a little damp they had been, and made their tracks.
771 psl. - Corte e en todos los sus regnos e señoríos, fuy presente a todo lo que dicho es, en uno con los dichos testigos e...
727 psl. - I am no courtier of America. I stand up for this kingdom. I maintain that the Parliament has a right to bind, to restrain America. Our legislative power over the colonies is sovereign and supreme. When it ceases to be sovereign and supreme, I would advise everv ^entleman to sell his lands, if he can.
423 psl. - Dr. Dunbar Rowland, Director of the Department of Archives and History of Mississippi, contains not only a large amount of information, statistical and other, in regard to the state of Mississippi and its various institutions (it is a volume of more than thirteen hundred pages), but also valuable historical matter.
155 psl. - Stephens, of Georgia. How anything so small and sick and sorrowful could get here all the way from Georgia is a wonder. If he were...
727 psl. - I would advise every gentleman to sell his lands, if he can, and embark for that country. When two countries are connected together like England and her colonies without being incorporated, the one must necessarily govern. The greater must rule the less ; but so rule it, as not to contradict the fundamental principles that are common to both.

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