Beginings Of Ameican People Hisotry

American history is not simple.
The hostile camps of Puritans and Church of England men, the Dutch of New Amsterdam and the Catholics of Maryland, could hardly be expected to merge into a single state without violent struggle. Nor could the hundreds of thousands of Scotch Calvinists, militant enemies of England and all her ways, who seized and held the fertile highlands of the Middle and Southern colonies, submit quietly to any program not of their own making. And again, in the thirties and fifties of the nineteenth century, millions of people speaking a strange tongue sought asylum in the Mississippi Valley—an isolated region whose early inhabitants, of whatsoever national strain, were strongly inclined to secession or revolt against the older Eastern communities. Never was a nation composed of more diverse ethnic groups and elements.


Private Policy:
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Beginings Of Ameican People Hisotry


The Discovery Of The Old World And The New

The Partition Of The New World

The English Migration In The Seventeenth Century

England And Her Colonies In The Seventeenth And Eighteenth Centuries

The American People In The Eighteenth Century

The Winning Of Independence