Understanding Primary Sources
Legislation and Key Amendments
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; Freedmen's Bureau Act; Andrew Johnson's Veto of the Civil Rights Bill; Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; First Reconstruction Act of 1867; and Fifteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Understanding Primary Sources
Great Congressional Documents
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: The Continental Association, The Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation and an excerpt from the Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms.
Understanding Primary Sources
Recollections of War
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: Comments of Lieutenant John Whiting on (Benedict) Arnold's treason, General George Washington's announcement to the Continental Army of Arnold's treason, Closing lines of George Washington's summary of the treason story, and "An Acrostic-On Arnold"; and excerpts from Lord Dunmore's "Declaration of Martial Law in Virginia," Joseph Plumb Martin's "A Narrative of Some of the Adventures, Dangers, and Sufferings of a Revolutionary Soldier," Thomas Paine's "The Crisis," Eliza Wilkinson's account of the looting of her sister's home by British soldiers, Horace Walpole's letter to the Earl of Strafford, and George Washington's Farewell Address to the Armies of the United States.
Understanding Primary Sources
Key Events
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: The Emancipation Proclamation and The Gettysburg Address (Abraham Lincoln); Correspondence with the City Leaders of Atlanta, Georgia (William T. Sherman); excerpt from "The Surrender at Appomattox Court House" (General Horace Porter); and excerpt from Diary of Gideon Welles, recalling the day President Lincoln died.
Understanding Primary Sources
Reactions in the South
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: excerpt from Ten Years on a Georgia Plantation Since the War (Frances Butler Leigh); excerpt from "On Reconstruction" (Alexander Stephens); excerpt from The Prostrate State (James Shepherd Pike); excerpt from Letter from Rufus B. Bullock, of Georgia, to the Republican Senators and Representatives, in Congress Who Sustain the Reconstruction Acts; and excerpt from Recollections of the Inhabitants, Localities, Superstitions, and Ku Klux Outrages of the Carolinas (John Paterson Green).
Understanding Primary Sources
Civil Rights: Essays and Speeches
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: excerpt from Reconstruction (Frederick Douglass); excerpt from "Argument for the Impeachment of President Johnson" (Charles Sumner): excerpt from "On the Readmission of Georgia to the Union" (Hiram Revels); excerpt from his speech on the Civil Rights Bill of 1875 (James Rapier); and Rutherford B. Hayes, excerpt from his Inaugural Address.
Understanding Primary Sources
Slavery, Freedom and Abolition
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: excerpt from Uncle Tom's Cabin (Harriet Beecher Stowe); excerpt from "The American Apocalypse" (Frederick Douglass); A Black Soldier's Letter to President Abraham Lincoln (James Henry Gooding); excerpt from "I Claim the Rights of a Man" (Henry McNeal Turner); and excerpt from Thirty Years a Slave (Louis Hughes).
Understanding Primary Sources
The View from England
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: excerpts from the Stamp Act, the Declaratory Act, the Townshend Revenue Act, the Boston Port Act, the Quartering Act and Resolves of the House of Representatives, Respecting the Letters of the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and Others; and Letter of Thomas Hutchinson, June 18, 1768 and January 20, 1769.
Understanding Primary Sources
Colonial Reactions
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: Benjamin Franklin's letter to Thomas Cushing, Public Statement on the Hutchinson Letters and "An Edict by the King of Prussia"; and excerpts from Edmund Burke's "On Conciliation"; the first of the Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies by John Dickinson; Thomas Jefferson's "A Summary View of the Rights of British America"; Patrick Henry's "Give me liberty, or give me death!" speech; Thomas Paine's Common Sense; and King George's "A Proclamation by the King for Suppressing Rebellion and Sedition."
Understanding Primary Sources
Recollections of Combat
Part of the Understanding Primary Sources series
Drawn from Gale's acclaimed Reference Library products, this concise study guide helps you explore central ideas of primary sources in their historical context. Profiles of the authors and surrounding events; timelines and images; engaging research, discussion and activity ideas; "Did you know?" facts; and additional features make this guide valuable for students and lifelong learners. Primary sources covered: excerpt from "How Does One Feel Under Fire?" (Frank Holsinger); excerpt from War Years with Jeb Stuart (William Willis Blackford: Account of William C. Quantrill's 1863 Raid on Lawrence, Kansas (Richard Cordley); and excerpt from Journal of Edmund DeWitt Patterson, a captured Confederate soldier.