Writing the American past : US history to 1877

Bibliographic Information

Writing the American past : US history to 1877

Mark M. Smith

Wiley-Blackwell, 2009

  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Writing the American Past reproduces dozens of untranscribed, handwritten documents, offering students the opportunity to transcribe, decipher, and interpret primary sources. Documents include diary entries from Massachusetts in the 1690s, a woman detailing the Great Awakening, an eighteenth-century treaty with Native Americans, a journal describing antebellum train travel, and a letter by a slave Skillfully teaches students to engage with the raw material of pre-1877 US history: the written document An introduction and headnotes to each document contextualize the sources and provide a foundation from which the student can explore the material

Table of Contents

Timeline vii Acknowledgments xi Editor’s Introduction: History, Handed Down 1 1 Old World Explores New: 7 Settling and Securing Newfoundland in the Early 1600s 2 The Chesapeake: 13 Indenturing Labor, 1694 3 Life in Seventeenth-century New England: 19 Massachusetts in the 1690s 4 The Middle Colonies: 25 A Philadelphia Furrier, 1738 5 The Lower South and Slave Society: 33 Slave Resistance and Imperial Contests, 1739 6 Social Order in the Eighteenth-century South: 39 Slavery and Virginia’s Gentry in the 1720s 7 The Great Awakening: 45 A Letter to George Whitefield, 1746 8 Empire and Native Americans: 51 The Treaty of Lancaster, 1744 9 Imperial Crises and the Coming of Revolution: 57 The Politicization of a Colonial Merchant, 1765 10 Fighting the Revolutionary War: 65 AWoman on the Homefront, 1776 11 Crisis, Constitution, Nation: 71 Probate Data and the Problem of Becoming American in the 1780s 12 The New Republic: 77 A Massachusetts Federalist in 1800 13 Jeffersonian America: 83 On the Road in 1818 14 Revolutions in Time and Space: 89 Tourism and Travel, 1850 15 The Age of Jackson: 95 The View from Abroad in 1828 16 The Southern Master Class: 103 An Elite Woman’s School Experience, 1838 17 Lives of the Enslaved: 111 Urban Slavery in 1862 18 The Modernizing North: 119 A Businessman’s Letter, 1836 19 The Age of Reform: 125 On the Need for Temperance, 1824 20 Westward Expansion: 133 Kansas and Free Labor in 1856 21 The Coming of the Civil War: 141 Bleeding in Kansas, 1856 22 Secession: 149 A South Carolinian Describes the Event, 1860 23 Americans in Civil War: 155 A Canadian Soldier’s Experience, 1864 24 Emancipation: 161 The Labor of Freedom, 1867

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