The American Historical Review, Volumen21

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John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler
American Historical Association, 1916
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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Página 91 - Animated by that confidence in your spirit and fortitude which never yet failed me, I announce to you, fellow-countrymen, that it is my purpose to maintain your cause with my whole heart and soul ; that I will never consent to abandon to the enemy one foot of the soil of any of the States of the Confederacy.
Página 763 - Presente vos lo encomendamos y cometemos e que sobrello deviamos mandar dar esta nuestra carta en la dicha Razon por la qual vos mandamos que por el tiempo que nuestra merced e Voluntad fuere vosotros tengays cargo de Repartir e Repartays las tierras e Aguas que en la dicha ysla se ovyeren de Repartir para los dichos yngenios guardando en ello la horden syguyente. primeramente vos mandamos que cada e quando...
Página 519 - ... not be able to keep their negroes so meanly afterwards; and partly through fear of the negroes growing too proud, on seeing themselves upon a level with their masters in religious matters.
Página 150 - Ireland in the last years of the eighteenth century and the early years of the nineteenth.
Página 318 - Excise, a monster worse than e'er before Frighted the midwife, and the mother tore. A thousand hands she has, a thousand eyes, Breaks into shops, and into cellars pries ; With hundred rows of teeth the shark exceeds...
Página 516 - The Testimony and Practice of the Presbyterian Church in reference to American Slavery...
Página 152 - A history of travel in America, showing the development of travel and transportation from the crude methods of the canoe and the dog-sled to the highly organized railway systems of the present, together with a narrative of the human experiences and changing social conditions that accompanied this economic conquest of the continent; with maps, colored plates and other illustrations reproduced from early engravings, original contemporaneous drawings and broadsides.
Página 91 - Jonesborough, our cause is not lost. Sherman cannot keep up his long line of communication, and retreat, sooner or later, he must; and when that day comes the fate that befell the army of the French Empire in its retreat from Moscow will be repeated.
Página 64 - It is a beautiful picture in Grecian story, that there was at least one spot, the small island of Delos, dedicated to the gods, and kept at all times sacred from war, where the citizens of hostile countries met and united in a common worship.
Página 14 - A paper read at the meeting of the American Historical Association in Chicago, July 12, 1893.

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