
Voices of the American Past Documents in U.S. History, Volume I
by Hyser, Raymond M.; Arndt, J. ChrisBuy New
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Summary
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xv |
A Guide to Reading and Interpreting Documents | p. xvii |
Diverse Beginnings | p. 1 |
The Spanish Letter of Columbus to Luis Sant' Angel (1493) | p. 1 |
Early New York (1626) | p. 3 |
Jesuit Comparison of French and Native Life (1657-1658) | p. 6 |
Captain John Smith Describes the Founding of Jamestown (1607) | p. 8 |
General Considerations for the Plantation in New England (1629) | p. 11 |
William Bradford on Sickness among the Natives (1633) | p. 12 |
"Captivity Account" of Mary Rowlandson (1675) | p. 14 |
The Pueblo Revolt (1680) | p. 15 |
Seventeenth-Century Florida as Described by Shipwrecked Englishman (1699) | p. 17 |
Emerging Colonial Societies | p. 21 |
A Treaty Between the Five Nations and the New England Colonies (1689) | p. 21 |
Petition of an Accused Witch (1692) | p. 24 |
"Pennsylvania, the Poor Man's Paradise" (1698) | p. 25 |
Of the Servants and Slaves in Virginia (1705) | p. 28 |
Cotton Mather on the Evils of "Self-Pollution" (1723) | p. 30 |
The Dilemma of New France (1724) | p. 32 |
Eliza Lucas, a Modern Woman (1741-1742) | p. 35 |
Toward an American Identity | p. 38 |
"Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" (1741) | p. 38 |
A Proposal for Promoting Useful Knowledge among the British Plantations of America (1743) | p. 41 |
Pennsylvania Assembly Comments on German Immigration (1755) | p. 43 |
The Albany Plan of Union (1754) | p. 45 |
Edmund Burke on British Motives in the Seven Years' War (1762) | p. 48 |
"The Pontiac Manuscript" (1763) | p. 49 |
"What Is an American?" (1770) | p. 51 |
Olaudah Equiano Describes the "Middle Passage" (1789) | p. 53 |
Coming of the Revolution | p. 56 |
John Locke on Political Society and Government (1689) | p. 56 |
Cato's Letters (1721) | p. 58 |
Stamp Act Riots (1765) | p. 60 |
Ann Hulton, Loyalist View of Colonial Unrest (1774) | p. 62 |
Englishwoman's Appeal to the People of Great Britain on the Crisis in America (1775) | p. 63 |
Abigail Smith Adams on the British Occupation of Boston (1775) | p. 66 |
A Loyalist Perspective on the Coming of the Revolution (1780) | p. 69 |
Introduction to Common Sense (1776) | p. 71 |
A Speech against Independence (1776) | p. 73 |
Creating the New Nation | p. 76 |
German Doctor's Account of War and Surgery (1777) | p. 76 |
The Articles of Confederation (1777) | p. 79 |
Voting Qualifications in Virginia (1779) | p. 81 |
The Battle of King's Mountain and Loyalism in the Carolinas (1780) | p. 83 |
Women's Contributions to the War Effort (1780) | p. 85 |
The Quock Walker Decision (1783) | p. 88 |
Failure of the Continental Congress (1786) | p. 89 |
The Northwest Ordinance (1787) | p. 91 |
Grievances of the Shays Rebels (1786) | p. 94 |
Pennsylvania Dissent to the Ratification of the Constitution (1787) | p. 96 |
Federalist Number 10 (1788) | p. 99 |
The Limits of Republicanism | p. 103 |
Judith Sargent Murray on the Equality of the Sexes (1790) | p. 103 |
Benjamin Banneker to Thomas Jefferson, Blacks and Liberty in the New Nation (1791) | p. 106 |
Alexander Hamilton Speaks in Favor of the National Bank (1791) | p. 108 |
Opposing Views of the Whiskey Rebellion (1794) | p. 112 |
George Washington's "Farewell Address" (1796) | p. 115 |
Description of a Conversion Experience at Cane Ridge, Kentucky (1801) | p. 117 |
Marbury v. Madison (1803) | p. 120 |
Resolutions of the Hartford Convention (1815) | p. 123 |
The New Nation and Its Place in the World | p. 125 |
Military Disaster on the Ohio Frontier (1791) | p. 125 |
Jefferson's Instructions to Robert Livingston, Minister to France (1802) | p. 127 |
Heading West with Lewis and Clark (1804) | p. 129 |
A Frontier View of the Chesapeake Affair (1807) | p. 132 |
Tecumseh on White Encroachment (1810) | p. 134 |
Margaret Bayard Smith on the Burning of Washington, DC (1814) | p. 136 |
Tennessee Expansionists on the Adams-Onis Treaty (1819) | p. 139 |
The Monroe Doctrine (1823) | p. 140 |
The Rise of Democracy | p. 143 |
Fanny Wright on Equality (1830) | p. 143 |
Daniel Webster's Second Reply to Robert Y. Hayne (1830) | p. 145 |
Commentary on Elections in Jacksonian America (1832) | p. 147 |
The American System (1832) | p. 149 |
Andrew Jackson's Bank Veto Message (1832) | p. 151 |
The Cherokee Phoenix on Georgia Policy Toward the Cherokee (1832) | p. 153 |
South Carolina Nullifies the Tariff (1832) | p. 155 |
"Spirit of Jacksonism" (1832) | p. 156 |
Society and Economy in the North | p. 160 |
Promoting the Erie Canal (1818) | p. 160 |
Charles G. Finney Describes the Rochester Revival (1830-1831) | p. 162 |
American Mania for Railroads (1834) | p. 164 |
"Americans on the Move" (1835) | p. 166 |
Urban Riots (1835) | p. 168 |
A German Traveler on Race Relations in the North (1839) | p. 170 |
Women Workers Protest "Lowell Wage Slavery" (1847) | p. 173 |
"On Irish Emigration" (1852) | p. 174 |
A Chinese American at Yale (1850) | p. 177 |
Social Reform | p. 180 |
Lyman Beecher on Intemperance (1825) | p. 180 |
"Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World" (1829) | p. 183 |
William Lloyd Garrison on Slavery (1831) | p. 185 |
Evidence against the Views of the Abolitionists (1833) | p. 187 |
Sarah Grimke Argues for Gender Equality (1837) | p. 190 |
Horace Mann on Educational Reform (1840) | p. 193 |
"Declaration of Sentiments," Seneca Falls Convention (1848) | p. 195 |
Manifest Destiny | p. 198 |
Texas and California Annexation (1845) | p. 198 |
American Description of Mexican Women in Santa Fe (1845) | p. 201 |
Mob Violence against Mormons (1846) | p. 203 |
Life on the Overland Trail (1846) | p. 205 |
Mexican View of U.S. Occupation (1841) | p. 207 |
San Francisco and the California Gold Rush (1848) | p. 209 |
"Civil Disobedience" (1849) | p. 211 |
The Question of Cuban Annexation (1853) | p. 213 |
Slavery and the Old South | p. 216 |
The Alabama Frontier (1821) | p. 216 |
The Trial of Denmark Vesey (1822) | p. 218 |
A Reaction to the Nat Turner Revolt (1831) | p. 220 |
The Plantation Labor Force (1838-1839) | p. 222 |
Labor at the Tredegar Iron Works (1847) | p. 224 |
Martin Delany and African American Nationalism (1852) | p. 226 |
A Slave Describes Sugar Cultivation (1853) | p. 228 |
A Defense of Southern Society (1854) | p. 230 |
The Southern Yeomen (1860) | p. 231 |
Origins of the Civil War | p. 234 |
An African American Minister Responds to the Fugitive Slave Law (1851) | p. 234 |
Southern Review of Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) | p. 236 |
Charles Sumner on "Bleeding Kansas" (1856) | p. 237 |
Chicago Tribune on the Dred Scott v. Sanford Decision (1857) | p. 240 |
Sensible Hints to the South (1858) | p. 242 |
The Freeport Doctrine (1858) | p. 243 |
Frederick Douglass on John Brown (1859) | p. 246 |
Inaugural Address of South Carolina Governor Francis Pickens (1860) | p. 249 |
The Civil War | p. 252 |
Mary Boykin Chesnut, the Attack on Fort Sumter (1861) | p. 252 |
"A War to Preserve the Union" (1861) | p. 254 |
Jefferson Davis Responds to the Emancipation Proclamation (1862) | p. 256 |
African American Troops in Combat (1863) | p. 258 |
George Pickett on the "Charge" (1863) | p. 259 |
New York City Draft Riots (1863) | p. 261 |
The Southern Home Front (1863) | p. 263 |
General William T. Sherman on War (1864) | p. 266 |
Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address (1865) | p. 268 |
Reconstruction | p. 271 |
A Northern Teacher's View of the Freedmen (1863-1865) | p. 271 |
Charleston, South Carolina, at the Conclusion of the Civil War (1865) | p. 214 |
African Americans Seek Protection (1865) | p. 276 |
Thaddeus Stevens on Reconstruction and the South (1865) | p. 278 |
A White Southern Perspective on Reconstruction (1868) | p. 281 |
The Ku Klux Klan during Reconstruction (1872) | p. 283 |
An African American Congressman Calls for Civil Rights (1874) | p. 287 |
The Situation for African Americans in the South (1879) | p. 290 |
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