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  • - The Jews of Colonial and Antebellum Charleston
    av James Hagy
    571,-

  • - Essays in Regional History and Political Economy
     
    480,-

    Owing to Yucatan's relative isolation, many assume that the history and economy of the peninsula have evolved in a distinctive way, apart from the central government in Mexico City and insulated from world social and economic factors. The essays in this volume suggest that this has not been the case: the process of development in Yucatan has been linked firmly to national and global forces of change over the past two centuries. The essays are by U.S., Mexican, Canadian, and Belizean social scientists representing both well-established and younger scholars. The result is a perspective on Yucatan's historical development that is at once international, interdisciplinary, and intergenerational. In this volume, all of the contributors are genuinely comfortable with the theories and approaches of several disciplines--economics, history, and anthropology, and sociology. All have used largely untapped, primary, archival sources, and the result is a fascinating offering of new information.

  • av Manfred Mayrhofer
    375,-

    A translation of the revised version of the 1965 German edition

  • - Hugh Otis Bynum and the Scottsboro First Monday Bombing
    av Byron Woodfin
    402

    Tells the story of a small southern town as it makes the transition from an agrarian hamlet to progressive New South suburbia. The book is also the story of a twisted but powerful character, bent on revenge, and of a young prosecutor, willing to risk a promising political future in order to pursue his sense of justice.

  • - A Study in Frontier Democracy
    av Thomas Abernethy
    532,-

  • - Gentle Progressive
    av Hugh Bailey
    428,-

  • - Father John B. Bannon
    av Phillip Tucker
    428,-

  • - A Study in the Political, Social, and Cultural Life of the Old Southwest
    av Hugh Bailey
    376,-

    A biography of Alabama's first Senator, this book is also the fascinating story of Southern frontier life as portrayed in contemporary letters and documents. When Madison County, Alabama, was still wilderness, Walker trekked across the mountains from Georgia with his bride, Matilda Pope, his slaves, and all his household possessions, to build a plantation near Huntsville. Here he began his extraordinary political career: member of the first territorial legislature; speaker of the house in the second; U.S. territorial judge; president of Alabama's Constitutional Convention; and when statehood was won, first U.S. Senator. Though his term in the Senate was cut short by illness, resignation, and death, in the four years he served, he met head-on the most controversial issues of his day--the Missouri Compromise, acquisition of Florida, and land relief legislation. It was in land relief that he made his most significant contribution, for he fathered the 1821 Land Law upon which new public-lands legislation for a decade thereafter was based. His own state wildly acclaimed him upon its passage; other frontier states had good reason to make him the public hero he became. But a year later, at 40, he was dead of tuberculosis.

  • - Abolitionist and Racist
    av Hugh Bailey
    428,-

    Statistical fanatic, abolitionist, militant racist

  • - TheDiary of Sergeant Mathew Woodruff, June-December, 1865
    av Mathew Woodruff
    298,-

  • - Ceramics, Chronology, and Catawba Indians
    av David Moore
    700,-

  • - St. Stephens, Huntsville, and Cahawba, 1818-1826
    av William Brantley Jr
    480,-

  •  
    428,-

    The Federal Farmer's letters were written in opposition to the Constitution in the form in which it had come from the Federal Convention of 1787. Their immediate objective was to secure amendments to the Constitution before it was ratified by state convention. But the letters are valuable also for the basic political philosophy that they represent, specifically, the political philosophy of the revolution and the Bill of Rights. This philosophy stresses principles of federalism and republicanism and exemplifies the liberal idealism that took root in America during the Revolutionary War era. As first published, the letters comprised two separate pamphlets, one appearing in the fall of 1787 and consisting of five letters, the other appearing in the spring of 1788 and consisting of thirteen letters. The letters have seldom been reprinted, and until now they have never been issued together in a single edition. One of the merits of the present volume is that it includes all the letters exactly as they appeared in the original printed texts. A synoptic table of contents for the entire series has been supplied by the editor, in addition to an editor's introduction, which includes a critical analysis of the Federal Farmer's main arguments and also deals with the authorship of the letters. Richard Henry Lee of Virginia was early identified as the author of the letters, and in the course of the nineteenth century this attribution came to be generally accepted. However, Lee gave no hint in his known writings that he had written the letters, and in recent years the attribution of authorship to him has been questioned by competent scholars. The editor makes clear that he considers the evidence supporting the attribution to Lee to be strong, but he concludes, on the basis of his own investigation, that the question of authorship should not at this point be considered to have been settled. He makes no assumption that the matter will eventually be settled but suggests that a thoroughgoing linguistic and comparative analysis of Lee's known writings and the Federal Farmer's letters should be helpful in considering the question further. The letters have long been considered to be among the most significant of the political literature published in America during the great debate over the ratification of the Constitution. Alexander Hamilton refers to the Federal Farmer in the sixty-eight essay of The Federalist as "the most plausible" of the opponents of the Constitution to have appeared in print. Recent scholars probing into the literature of these so-called antifederalists have indicated that they have been quite impressed by the general content and comparatively moderate tone of the Federal Farmer's letters, and also by the seemingly substantial influence that the letters had in articulating arguments that appeared sooner or later in other writings against ratifying the Constitution in it original form.

  • - A History of Meharry Medical College
    av James Summerville
    480,-

  • - American Entomology, 1840-1880
    av Conner Sorensen
    571,-

    Draws together information from diverse sources to illuminate an important chapter in the history of American science

  • - A Biography
    av Mary Johnston
    376,-

  • - A History of the American Television Industry, 1925-1941
    av Joseph Udelson
    428,-

  • av Tinsley E. Yarbrough
    328 - 376,-

  • av John Thurmond
    376,-

    The only comprehensive description of the fossil-vertebrate content of this important part of the world.

  • - Alabama Women and the Second World War
    av Mary Thomas
    297,-

  • - The 1917-1919 Letters and Diary of USN CMM/A Irving Edward Sheely
    av Lawrence Sheely
    376,-

  • av Marcia Jacobson
    376,-

  • - The Autobiography of Frederick D. Patterson
    av Frederick Patterson
    376,-

  • - The History of American Jewish Preaching, 1654-1970
    av Robert Friedenberg
    376,-

  • - Studies in Culture and History
     
    573,-

    Multidisciplinary essays examinig the historical and cultural history of the Sephardic experience in the Americas, from pre-expulsion Spain to the modern era, as recounted by some of the most outstanding interpreters of the field.

  • - Atlanta, a Brave and Beautiful City
    av Harold E. Davis
    376 - 457,-

    Harold E. Davis's study of Henry Grady and the Atlanta Constitution

  • - Urban Development in Antebellum Mobile
    av Harriet Amos Doss
    428,-

    Amos's study delineates the basis for Mobile's growth and the ways in which residents and their government promoted growth and adapted to it.

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