|
Thomas' Legion |
American Civil War HOMEPAGE |
American Civil War |
Causes of the Civil War : What Caused the Civil War |
Organization of Union and Confederate Armies: Infantry, Cavalry, Artillery |
Civil War Navy: Union Navy and Confederate Navy |
American Civil War: The Soldier's Life |
Civil War Turning Points |
American Civil War: Casualties, Battles and Battlefields |
Civil War Casualties, Fatalities & Statistics |
Civil War Generals |
American Civil War Desertion and Deserters: Union and Confederate |
Civil War Prisoner of War: Union and Confederate Prison History |
Civil War Reconstruction Era and Aftermath |
American Civil War Genealogy and Research |
Civil War |
American Civil War Pictures - Photographs |
African Americans and American Civil War History |
American Civil War Store |
American Civil War Polls |
NORTH CAROLINA HISTORY |
North Carolina Civil War History |
North Carolina American Civil War Statistics, Battles, History |
North Carolina Civil War History and Battles |
North Carolina Civil War Regiments and Battles |
North Carolina Coast: American Civil War |
HISTORY OF WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA |
Western North Carolina and the American Civil War |
Western North Carolina: Civil War Troops, Regiments, Units |
North Carolina: American Civil War Photos |
Cherokee Chief William Holland Thomas |
HISTORY OF THE CHEROKEE INDIANS |
Cherokee Indian Heritage, History, Culture, Customs, Ceremonies, and Religion |
Cherokee Indians: American Civil War |
History of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indian Nation |
Cherokee War Rituals, Culture, Festivals, Government, and Beliefs |
Researching your Cherokee Heritage |
Civil War Diary, Memoirs, Letters, and Newspapers |
|
|
|
Founding Fathers of North Carolina
Related Reading:
Recommended Reading: Encyclopedia
of North Carolina (Hardcover: 1328 pages) (The University of North Carolina Press). Description: The first single-volume reference to the events, institutions,
and cultural forces that have defined the state, the Encyclopedia of North Carolina is a landmark publication that will serve
those who love and live in North Carolina for generations to come. Editor William S. Powell, whom the Raleigh News & Observer
described as a "living repository of information on all things North Carolinian," spent fifteen years developing this volume.
With contributions by more than 550 volunteer writers—including scholars, librarians, journalists, and many others—it
is a true "people's encyclopedia" of North Carolina. Continued below...
The volume
includes more than 2,000 entries, presented alphabetically, consisting of longer essays on major subjects, briefer entries,
and short summaries and definitions. Most entries include suggestions for further reading. Centered on history and the humanities,
topics covered include agriculture; arts and architecture; business and industry; the Civil War; culture and customs; education;
geography; geology, mining, and archaeology; government, politics, and law; media; medicine, science, and technology; military
history; natural environment; organizations, clubs, and foundations; people, languages, and immigration; places and historic
preservation; precolonial and colonial history; recreation and tourism; religion; and transportation. An informative and engaging
compendium, the Encyclopedia of North Carolina is abundantly illustrated with 400 photographs and maps. It is both a celebration
and a gift—from the citizens of North Carolina, to the citizens of North Carolina.
"Truly an exhaustive and exciting view of every aspect of the Old
North State!”
Recommended Reading: The Tar Heel
State: A History of North Carolina
(Hardcover). Description: The Tar Heel State: A History of North Carolina constitutes the most comprehensive
and inclusive single-volume chronicle of the state’s storied past to date, culminating with an attentive look at recent
events that have transformed North Carolina into a southern
megastate. Integrating tales of famous pioneers, statesmen, soldiers, farmers, captains of industry, activists, and community
leaders with more marginalized voices, including those of Native Americans, African Americans, and women, Milton Ready gives
readers a view of North Carolina that encompasses perspectives and personalities from the coast, "tobacco road," the Piedmont,
and the mountains in this sweeping history of the Tar Heel State. The first such volume in more than two decades, Ready’s
work offers a distinctive view of the state’s history built from myriad stories and episodes. The Tar Heel State is
enhanced by one hundred and ninety illustrations and five maps. Continued below...
Ready begins
with a study of the state’s geography and then invites readers to revisit dramatic struggles of the American Revolution
and Civil War, the early history of Cherokees, the impact of slavery as an institution, the rise of industrial mills, and
the changes wrought by modern information-based technologies since 1970. Mixing spirited anecdotes and illustrative statistics,
Ready describes the rich Native American culture found by John White in 1585, the chartered chaos of North Carolina’s
proprietary settlement, and the chronic distrust of government that grew out of settlement patterns and the colony’s
early political economy. He challenges the perception of relaxed intellectualism attributed to the "Rip van Winkle" state,
the notion that slavery was a relatively benign institution in North Carolina,
and the commonly accepted interpretation of Reconstruction in the state. Ready also discusses how the woman suffrage movement
pushed North Carolina into a hesitant twentieth-century
progressivism. In perhaps his most significant contribution to North Carolina’s
historical record, Ready continues his narrative past the benchmark of World War II and into the twenty-first century. From
the civil rights struggle to the building of research triangles, triads, and parks, Ready recounts the events that have fueled
North Carolina’s accelerated development in recent years and the many challenges that have accompanied such rapid growth,
especially those of population change and environmental degradation.
Recommended Viewing: Just The Facts - The United States
Constitution. Description: Just the Facts: The
United States Constitution is a superior video resource for history and social studies classrooms. Teachers and parents can
use this to make the Constitution accessible on many levels. The program is targeted at junior high and high school freshmen
and sophomores and is divided into sections corresponding to the articles of the Constitution. With contributions from experts
on constitutional history and theory, the program lacks flashy production values but is nonetheless engaging. “...Outstanding
for teachers and educators."
Recommended Reading: America's Constitution: A Biography (Hardcover). Publishers Weekly: Starred
Review. You can read the U.S. Constitution, including its 27 amendments, in about a half-hour, but it takes decades of study
to understand how this blueprint for our nation's government came into existence. Amar, a 20-year veteran of the Yale Law School
faculty, has that understanding, steeped in the political history of the 1780s, when dissatisfaction with the Articles of
Confederation led to a constitutional convention in Philadelphia,
which produced a document of wonderful compression and balance creating an indissoluble union. Amar examines in turn each
article of the Constitution, explaining how the framers drew on English models, existing state constitutions and other sources
in structuring the three branches of the federal government and defining the relationship of the government to the states.
Continued below...
Amar takes
on each of the amendments, from the original Bill of Rights to changes in the rules for presidential succession. The book
squarely confronts America's involvement with slavery, which the original Constitution
facilitated in ways the author carefully explains. Scholarly, reflective and brimming with ideas, this book is miles removed
from an arid, academic exercise in textual analysis. Amar evokes the passions and tumult that marked the Constitution's birth
and its subsequent revisions. Only rarely do you find a book that embodies scholarship at its most solid and invigorating;
this is such a book.
Recommended Reading:
The Heritage Guide to the Constitution,
by Edwin Meese (Author), Matthew Spalding (Editor), David F. Forte (Editor), Matthew Spalding (Author), David F. Forte (Author)
(Hardcover). Description: This guide is the first of
its kind, and presents the U.S. Constitution as never before, including a clause-by-clause analysis of the document, each
amendment and relevant court case, and the documents that serve as the foundation of the Constitution. About the Authors:
Edwin Meese III served as the 75th Attorney General of the United States
under President Reagan. Continued below...
The Chairman of the Editorial Advisory Board, he is a distinguished legal expert and holds the Ronald Reagan
Chair in Public Policy at the Heritage Foundation; Executive Editor Dr. Matthew Spalding is an expert in and teaches constitutional
history, is an Adjunct Fellow of the Claremont Institute, and is the Director of the B. Kenneth Simon Center for American
Studies at the Heritage Foundation; Senior Editor Dr. David F. Forte is a widely published legal scholar, a former Chief Counsel
to the United States Delegation to the United Nations, and the Charles R. Emrick, Jr. —Calfee Halter & Griswold
Professor of Law at Cleveland State University.
Recommended Reading: Original Meanings: Politics and Ideas in the Making of the Constitution. Description:
Imagine, for a preposterous moment, that 55 national leaders convened to write a document to guide the country for hundreds
of years. It seems unlikely--given that our current contingent of so-called leaders can't agree on how to balance a checkbook--that
they could reach consensus on such issues as the allotment of congressional seats. The political and ideological issues that
faced the creators of the Constitution were similar in some ways to those at play today. And in some ways they were vastly
different ones. Jack Rakove, a history professor at Stanford University, has in this book framed the process that led to the
drafting of the constitution in its historical and political context to offer insight into the difficulty of interpreting
that most influential of documents.
Recommended Reading: American Creation: Triumphs and Tragedies at the Founding of the Republic (Hardcover).
Review: From the prizewinning author of the best-selling
Founding Brothers and American Sphinx,
a masterly and highly ironic examination of the founding years of our country. The last quarter of the eighteenth century
remains the most politically creative era in American history, when a dedicated and determined group of men undertook a bold
experiment in political ideals. It was a time of triumphs; yet, as Joseph J. Ellis makes clear, it was also a time of tragedies—all
of which contributed to the shaping of our burgeoning nation. Continued below...
From the first
shots fired at Lexington to the signing of the Declaration of Independence to the negotiations for the Louisiana Purchase,
Ellis guides us through the decisive issues of the nation’s founding, and illuminates the emerging philosophies, shifting
alliances, and personal and political foibles of our now iconic leaders—Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Hamilton, and
Adams. He casts an incisive eye on the founders’ achievements, arguing that the American Revolution was, paradoxically,
an evolution—and that part of what made it so extraordinary was the gradual pace at which it occurred. He shows us why
the fact that it was brought about by a group, rather than by a single individual, distinguished it from the bloodier revolutions
of other countries, and ultimately played a key role in determining its success. He explains how the idea of a strong federal
government, championed by Washington, was eventually embraced by the American people, the majority of whom had to be won over,
as they feared an absolute power reminiscent of the British Empire. And he details the emergence of the two-party system—then
a political novelty—which today stands as the founders’ most enduring legacy. But Ellis is equally incisive about
their failures, and he makes clear how their inability to abolish slavery and to reach a just settlement with the Native Americans
has played an equally important role in shaping our national character. He demonstrates how these misjudgments, now so abundantly
evident, were not necessarily inevitable. We learn of the negotiations between Henry Knox and Alexander McGillivray, the most
talented Indian statesman of his time, which began in good faith and ended in disaster. And we come to understand how a political
solution to slavery required the kind of robust federal power that the Jeffersonians viewed as a betrayal of their most deeply
held principles. With eloquence and insight, Ellis strips the mythic veneer of the revolutionary generation to reveal men
both human and inspired, possessed of both brilliance and blindness. American Creation is a book that delineates an era of
flawed greatness, at a time when understanding our origins is more important than ever. About the Author: Joseph J. Ellis received the Pulitzer
Prize for Founding Brothers and the National Book
Award for his portrait of Thomas Jefferson, American Sphinx. He is the Ford Foundation Professor of History at Mount
Holyoke College. He lives in
Amherst, Massachusetts, with
his wife, Ellen, and their youngest son, Alex.
Recommended Reading: The U.S. Constitution: And Fascinating Facts About It. Description: In The U.S. Constitution & Fascinating Facts About It you'll see the entire text
of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence--and much more! You'll find interesting insights
into the men who wrote the Constitution, how it was created, and how the Supreme Court has interpreted the Constitution in
the two centuries since its creation.
|
|
|
|
|
|