Sources for America's History, Volume 1: To 1877
, by Edwards, Rebecca; Hinderaker, Eric; Self, Robert O.; Henretta, James A.; Sheets, Kevin B.- ISBN: 9781319072902 | 1319072909
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 9/1/2017
Putting a human face on history, Sources for Americas History, Volume 1: To 1877 encourages you to develop historical thinking skills by providing between five and six sources per chapter that offer varying perspectives on a central theme, from well-known historical figures to everyday people living during that period.
Part 1: TRANSFORMATIONS OF NORTH AMERICA (1491–1700)
Chapter 1: Colliding Worlds, 1491–1600
1-1 An Englishman Describes the Algonquin People
THOMAS HARIOT, A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia (1588)
1-2 De Soto Encounters Incans in Peru
ARTIST UNKNOWN (SPANISH SCHOOL), Construction of the First Christian Church in San Miguel de Piura, and the Battle of Hernando de Soto with the Indians (1726)
1-3 Columbus Encounters Native Peoples
CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS, Journal of the First Voyage (1492)
1-4 Las Casas Describes European Atrocities
BARTOLOME DE LAS CASAS, A Brief Account of the Destruction of the Indies (1552)
1-5 Huejotzingo Petitions the Spanish King for Relief
COUNCIL OF HUEJOTZINGO, Letter to the King of Spain (1560)
1-6 Debating the Morality of Slavery
BROTHER LUIS BRANDAON, Letter to Father Sandoval (1610)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 2: American Experiments, 1521–1700
2-1 Indians Resist Spanish Conquest
Testimony of Acoma Indians (1599)
2-2 City Upon a Hill Sermon
JOHN WINTHROP, A Model of Christian Charity (1630)
2-3 English Planters in the New World
CAREL ALLARD, English Quakers Planting Tobacco on Barbados (1680)
2-4 Maryland Protects Religious Belief
Maryland Act of Religious Toleration (1649)
2-5 Slave Labor on the Rise
EDMUND WHITE, Letter to Joseph Morton (1687)
2-6 Spreading the Gospel Among the Iroquois
REV. FATHER LOUIS CELLOT, Letter to Father François Le
Mercier (1656)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 1 DOCUMENT SET: Developing Patterns of Atlantic World Exchange, 1491–1700
P1-1 The Aztec God Tlaloc with Maize
Meal of Maize and Beans, the Sixth Month of the Aztec Solar Calendar (c. 1585)
P1-2 Florida Natives Welcome the Returning French
THEODORE DE BRY, The Natives of Florida Worship the Column Erected by Commander on His First Voyage (1591)
P1-3 A European Encounters the Algonquin Indians
THOMAS MORTON, Manners and Customs of the Indians (of New England) (1637)
P1-4 The Trade in Goods and Slaves
THOMAS PHILLIPS, A Journal of a Voyage Made in the Hannibal (1693–1694)
P1-5 Making the Case for Colonization
RICHARD HAKLUYT, A Discourse of Western Planting (1584)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 2: BRITISH NORTH AMERICA AND THE ATLANTIC WORLD (1607–1763
CHAPTER 3: The British Atlantic World, 1607–1750
3-1 Bostonians Welcome the Glorious Revolution
[Broadside] At the Town-House in Boston: April 18th, 1689. A Letter to Sir Edmond Andros Knight (1689)
3-2 The Onondaga Pledge Support to Colonies
CANASSATEGO, Papers Relating to an Act of the Assembly of the Province of New York (1742)
3-3 Virginia Tightens Slave Codes
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF VIRGINIA, An Act for Suppressing Outlying Slaves (1691)
3-4 Gentility and the Planter Elite
WILLIAM BYRD II, Diary Entries (1709–1712)
3-5 Trade Creates Dynamic Commercial Economy
JOHN BARNARD, The Autobiography of the Rev. John Barnard (1766)
3-6 Colonists Assert Their Rights
LORD CORNBURY, Letter to the Lords of Trade (1704)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 4: Growth, Diversity, and Conflict, 1720–1763
4-1 The American Enlightenment
Benjamin Franklin’s Experiments with Electricity (Turned into an 18th-Century Parlor Game) (c. 1700s)
4-2 Sarah Osborn on Her Experiences During the Religious Revivals
SARAH OSBORN, Memoirs of the Life of Mrs. Sarah Osborn (1814)
4-3 Anglican Minister on the Manners and Religion of the Carolina Backcountry
CHARLES WOODMASON, Journal (1766–1768)
4-4 Franklin Calls for Colonial Unity
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Albany Plan of Union (1754)
4-5 Colonists Argue for an Alliance with Indians Against the French
State of the British and French Colonies in North America (1755)
4-6 The North Carolina Regulators Protest British Control
Petition from the Inhabitants of Orange County, North Carolina (1770)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 2 DOCUMENT SET: The Causes and Consequences of the Peopling of North America, 1607–1763
P2-1 The Horrors of the Middle Passage
OLAUDAH EQUIANO, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African. Written by Himself (1794)
P2-2 German Immigrant Describes Carolina Opportunities
Letter from Christen Janzen to His Family (1711)
P2-3 An Indentured Servant Confesses to Murder
The Vain Prodigal Life and Tragical Penitent Death of Thomas
Hellier (1680)
P2-4 Dangers of Missionary Work
GREGOIRE HURET, The Death of Some Jesuit Fathers in
Nouvelle-France (1664)
P2-5 Colonial Settlements Raise Indian Alarms
Journal of James Kenny (1761–1763)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 3: Revolution and Republican Culture (1754–1800)
CHAPTER 5: The Problem of Empire, 1754–1776
5-1 A Virginia Planter Defends the Natural Rights of Colonies
RICHARD BLAND, Inquiry into the Rights of the British Colonies (1766)
5-2 Colonists Protest Parliament’s Acts
STAMP ACT CONGRESS, Declaration of Rights (1765)
5-3 A Loyalist Decries the Boston Mob
PETER OLIVER, Origin and Progress of the American Rebellion (1781)
5-4 Worcester Loyalists Protest the Committee of Safety
A Protest by the Worcester, Massachusetts, Selectmen (1774)
5-5 The Danger of Too Much Liberty
THOMAS HUTCHINSON, Letter to Thomas Whately (1769)
5-6 Thomas Paine Attacks the Monarchy
THOMAS PAINE, Common Sense (1776)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 6: Making War and Republican Governments, 1776–1789
6-1 Democratic Spirit Empowers the People
Instructions to the Delegates from Mecklenburg to the Provincial Congress at Halifax in November (1776)
6-2 A Call to Remember the Ladies
ABIGAIL AND JOHN ADAMS, Correspondence (1776)
6-3 Enslaved Blacks Adopt the Cause of Liberty
PRINCE HALL, Petition for Freedom to the Massachusetts Council and the House of Representatives (1777)
6-4 A Republican Hero Emerges
JAMES PEALE, General George Washington at Yorktown (c. 1782)
6-5 A Shaysite Defends the Risings of the People
DANIEL GRAY, Address to the People of Several Towns (1786)
6-6 Madison Defends the Constitution
JAMES MADISON, Federalist No. 10 and Federalist No. 51 (1787)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 7: Hammering Out a Federal Republic, 1787–1820
7-1 Hamilton Diverges from Jefferson on the Economy
ALEXANDER HAMILTON, Letter to Edward Carrington (1792)
7-2 Jefferson’s Agrarian Vision for the New Republic
THOMAS JEFFERSON, Notes on the State of Virginia (1781)
7-3 An Anti-Jefferson Political Cartoon
The Providential Detection (c. 1790s)
7-4 Anxiety Over Western Expansion
THE PANOPLIST AND MISSIONARY HERALD, Retrograde Movement of National Character (1818)
7-5 A Shawnee Chief Calls for Native American Unity
TECUMSEH, Sleep Not Longer, O Choctaws and Chickasaws (1811)
7-6 New England Federalists Oppose the War of 1812
Report of the Hartford Convention (1815)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 3 DOCUMENT SET: The Emergence of Democratic Ideals and a New National Identity, 1754–1820
P3-1 Mourning Washington
RICHARD ALLEN, Eulogy for Washington (1799)
P3-2 Defining the American Character
J. HECTOR ST. JOHN DE CRÈVECOEUR, Letters from an American Farmer (1782)
P3-3 Women’s Right to Education in the New Republic
JUDITH SARGENT MURRAY, On the Equality of the Sexes (1790)
P3-4 A Warning for the Young Republic
George Washington’s Farewell Address (1796)
P3-5 Depicting America’s New Identity
EDWARD SAVAGE, Liberty. In the Form of the Goddess of Youth, Giving Support to the Bald Eagle (1796)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 4: OVERLAPPING REVOLUTIONS (1800–1860)
CHAPTER 8: Economic Transformations, 1800–1848
8-1 Building the Economy
J. HILL, Junction of Erie and Northern Canal (c. 1830–1832)
8-2 In Praise of Domestic Manufacturing
THE WEEKLY REGISTER, Home Influence (1813)
8-3 A Factory Girl Remembers Mill Work
Lucy Larcom, Among Lowell Mill-Girls: A Reminiscence (1881)
8-4 Reporting on the South’s Peculiar Institution
Ethan Andrews, Slavery and the Domestic Slave-Trade (1836)
8-5 Workers Organize to Defend Their Rights
Ely Moore, Address Delivered Before the General Trades’ Union of the City of New-York (1833)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 9: A Democratic Revolution, 1800–1848
9-1 A Professional Politician on the Necessity of Political Parties
MARTIN VAN BUREN, The Autobiography of Martin Van Buren (1854)
9-2 Insurgent Democrats Flex Political Power
FITZWILLIAM BYRDSALL, The History of the Loco-Foco or Equal Rights Party (1842)
9-3 President Defeats Monopoly Threat
ANDREW JACKSON, Veto Message Regarding the Bank of the United States (1832)
9-4 Whig Leader Campaigns against Jacksonians
Henry Clay, Speech on the Presidential Election (1840)
9-5 Poking Fun at Van Buren
Capitol Fashions for 1837 (1837)
9-6 Native American Women Urge Resistance to Removal Policy
CHEROKEE WOMEN, Petition (1821 [1831?])
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 10: Religion, Reform, and Culture, 1820–1848
10-1 A Transcendentalist View of Women’s Rights
MARGARET FULLER, Woman in the Nineteenth Century (1845)
10-2 Mormon Leader’s Vision of Religious Community
JOSEPH SMITH, History of Joseph Smith, the Prophet (c. 1830s)
10-3 A Night at the Museum
Advertisement for the American Museum (1845)
10-4 Attacking the Legal Disabilities of Women
SARAH GRIMKÉ, Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Woman (1837)
10-5 Abolitionist Decries Slavery’s Dehumanizing Power
DAVID WALKER, Preamble to Walker’s Appeal in Four Articles (1830)
10-6 Antiabolitionist Attacks Reformers’ Efforts
CALVIN COLTON, Abolition a Sedition (1839)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 11: Imperial Ambitions, 1820–1848
11-1 Southern Hospitality on Display
SUSAN DABNEY SMEDES, Memorials of a Southern Planter (1887)
11-2 Private Life of Enslaved African Americans
Slave Songs of the United States (1867) and Slaves Dance to Their Own Music on a Southern Plantation (c. 1852)
11-3 The Lure of the West
LANSFORD HASTINGS, The Emigrants’ Guide to Oregon and California (1845)
11-4 Two Views of the War with Mexico
JOHN D. SLOAT, To the Inhabitants of California (1846) and GENERAL FRANCISCO MEJIA, A Proclamation at Matamoros (1846)
11-5 An Attack on Polk’s Mexican Policy
Richard Doyle, The Land of Liberty (1847)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 4 DOCUMET SET: Environment and Identity in an Age of Revolutions, 1800–1848
P4-1 Commerce Overcomes Nature’s Obstacles
Process of Excavation, Erie Canal, Lockport (c. 1820s)
P4-2 Cultivating the Garden of Graves
JOSEPH STORY, Address Delivered on the Dedication of the Cemetery at Mount Auburn (1831)
P4-3 A Woman’s Perspective on the Overland Journey West
EMMELINE B. WELLS, Diary (1846)
P4-4 Commentary on Civilization and the Native American
GEORGE CATLIN, Wi-jun-jon — Pigeon’s Egg Head: Going to and Returning from Washington (c. 1837–1839) and Letters and Notes (1841)
P4-5 Creating a Heaven on Earth
ALBERT BRISBANE, A Concise Exposition of the Doctrine of Association (184
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 5: CONSOLIDATING A CONTINENTAL UNION (1844–1877)
Chapter 12: Sectional Conflict and Crisis, 1844–1860
12-1 On the Santa Fe Trail
Susan Shelby Magoffin, Diary (1846)
12-2 Opposing Slavery’s Expansion into the Territories
John l. Magee, Forcing Slavery Down the Throat of a Freesoiler (1856)
12-3 A Southern Perspective on the Political Crisis
JOHN C. CALHOUN, Speech on the Slavery Question (1850)
12-4 Attacking the Slave Power Conspiracy
CHARLES SUMNER, The Crime of Kansas (1856)
12-5 Supreme Court Rules Against Antislavery Cause
Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857)
12-6 A Southern Woman Reacts to Lincoln’s Election
KEZIAH GOODWIN HOPKINS BREVARD, Diary (1860–1861)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 13: Bloody Ground, The Civil War, 1861–1865
13-1 View of Southern Women’s Role in War
Sowing and Reaping (1863)
13-2 A Witness to the War’s Terrible Toll
Ambrose Bierce, What I Saw of Shiloh (1881)
13-3 A Battlefield View of the Cost of War
CORNELIA HANCOCK, Letters of a Civil War Nurse (1863)
13-4 Political Divisions over Freeing the Slaves
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, Emancipation Proclamation (1863), and JEFFERSON DAVIS, President’s Message (1863)
13-5 Hearing the News of Emancipation
HARRY SMITH, Fifty Years of Slavery (1891)
13-6 Redistributing the Land to Black Refugees
WILLIAM T. SHERMAN, Special Field Order No. 15 (1865)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 14: Reconstruction, 1865–1877
14-1 President Focuses on Work of Reconstruction
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, Last Public Address (1865)
14-2 A Freed Family’s Dream of Landownership
BETTY POWERS, Federal Writers’ Project Interview (c. 1936)
14-3 A Former Slave Owner Complains of Negro Problem
FRANCES BUTLER LEIGH, Letter to a Friend in England (1867)
14-4 A Liberal Republican Opposes Universal Suffrage
CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS JR., The Protection of the Ballot in National Elections (1869)
14-5 Nast Lampoons Freedmen’s Government
THOMAS NAST, Colored Rule in a Reconstructed State (1874)
14-6 African American Congressman Urges Support of Civil Rights Bill
ROBERT BROWNE ELLIOTT, Speech to Congress (1874)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
CHAPTER 15: Conquering a Continent, 1860–1890
15-1 Opening the West
Indian Territory, That Garden of the World (c. 1880)
15-2 Railroad Transforms the Nation
CURRIER & IVES, Across the Continent (1868)
15-3 Harvesting the Bison Herds
J. WRIGHT MOOAR, Buffalo Days (1933)
15-4 Addressing the Indian Question
FRANCIS A. WALKER, Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs (1872)
15-5 Remembering Indian Boarding School Days
MOURNING DOVE, A Salishan Autobiography (1990)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
PART 5 DOCUMENT SET: Americans Debate the Meaning of the Constitution, 1844–1877
P5-1 Women Reformers Demand Citizenship Rights
ELIZABETH CADY STANTON, Declaration of Rights and Sentiments (1848)
P5-2 Defining Native American Rights and Limits
STATUTES OF CALIFORNIA, An Act for the Government and Protection of Indians (1850)
P5-3 The Catholic Threat to American Politics
SAMUEL F. B. MORSE, Foreign Conspiracy Against the Liberties of the United States (1855)
P5-4 Debating the Meaning of the Constitution
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, Cooper Union Address (1860)
P5-5 Southern Leader Contrasts Union and Confederate Constitutions
ALEXANDER STEPHENS, Cornerstone Speech (1861)
P5-6 Contesting African American Citizenship
THOMAS NAST, This Is a White Man’s Government (1868)
COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.