Historians on America is a series of individual essays that selects specific moments, decisions, and intellectual or legislative or legal developments and explains how they altered the course of U.S. history. The book consists of 11 separate essays by major historians, ranging from The Trial of John Peter Zenger in 1735 to The Immigration Act of 1965.
The Birth of Freedom of the Press
George Washington and the Concept of a Limited Presidency
A Turning Point in American Educational History
A Strategy that Worked
The Law, the Legacy
The Gideon v. Wainwright Decision
Intended and Unintended Consequences
In Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1957, nine black teenagers volunteered to enroll at all-white Central High School. In the face of deep hostility, the dignity of the “Little Rock Nine” as they stood up for their rights woke the world to America’s civil rights movement.
Throughout U.S. history, immigrants have arrived to establish new lives. Whether fleeing oppression, seeking economic opportunity or pursuing dreams, each arrival contributed to the American mosaic
A chronological look at how the United States took shape -- from its origins as an obscure set of colonies on the Atlantic coast a little more than 200 years ago into what one political analyst today calls "the first universal nation."
Immigrants made the United States what it is. This edition of eJournal USA tells the story of immigration and diversity as it has played out through the centuries and continues to play out now.
This collection chronicles how 21 notable American women broke new ground, some by championing equal rights for all and others by their accomplishments in fields such as government, literature, and even in war.
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