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DDOOCCUUMMEENNTTSS SSEETT DDooccuummeennttss iinn UUnniitteedd SSttaatteess HHiissttoorryy CD-ROM PP HH ,, UU SS RR ,, NN JJ 0077445588 RREENNTTIICCEE AALLLL PPPPEERR AADDDDLLEE IIVVEERR EEWW EERRSSEEYY CCOONNTTEENNTTSS PPaarrtt OOnnee MMEEEETTIINNGG OOFF TTHHRREEEE CCUULLTTUURREESS 1-1 Marco Polo Recounts His Travels Through Asia (1324) 1 1-2 Christopher Columbus, Letter to Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain (1494) 3 1-3 Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, “Indians of the Rio Grande” (1528-1536) 5 1-4 Jacques Cartier: First Contact with the Indians (1534) 7 1-5 Bartolomé de Las Casas, “Of the Island of Hispaniola” (1542) 10 1-6 Thomas Mun, from England’s Treasure by Foreign Trade (1664) 11 1-7 Don Juan de Oñate, Plaus: A Settlement in New Mexico (1599) 13 1-8 The Founding of St. Augustine, 1565 17 1-9 The Columbian Exchange (1590) 21 1-10 Thomas Harriot, The Algonquian Peoples of the Atlantic Coast (1588) 24 1-11 Jose de Acosta, A Spanish Priest Speculates on the Origins of the Indians (1590) 28 PPaarrtt TTwwoo CCOOLLOONNIIZZIINNGG TTHHEE NNEEWW WWOORRLLDD 2-1 John White, The Lost Colony (1590) 33 2-2 Samuel de Champlain’s Battle With the Iroquois, July 1609 41 2-3 An Act Concerning Servants and Slaves 44 2-4 Reasons for the Plantation in New England (1629) 50 2-5 John Winthrop, “A Model of Christian Charity” (1630) 54 2-6 The Taking of the Fort at Mystic: A Brief History of the Pequot Wark 56 2-7 The Trial of Anne Hutchinson (1638) 59 2-8 A Jesuit Priest Describes New Amsterdam (1642) 65 2-9 George Alsop, The Importance of Tobacco (1660) 67 2-10 The Examination and Confession of Ann Foster at Salem Village (1692) 68 2-11 Onandogas and Cayugas: Iroquois Chiefs Address the Governors of New York and Virginia (1684) 69 2-12 James Oglethorpe: The Stono Rebellion (1739) 71 2-13 Gottlieb Mittelberger, The Passage of Indentured Servants (1750) 73 PPaarrtt TThhrreeee CCOOLLOONNIIAALL AAMMEERRIICCAA ((AA MMAATTUURRIINNGG CCOOLLOONNIIAALL SSOOCCIIEETTYY IINN TTHHEE LLAATTEE 11660000SS AANNDD 11770000SS)) 3-1 Navigation Act of September 13, 1660 75 3-2 Nathaniel Bacon’s Challenge to William Berkeley and the Governor’s Response (1676) 77 3-3 Early French Explorations of the Mississippi River (1673) 80 3-4 Edward Randolph Describes King Philip’s War (1685) 83 3-5 Excerpt from Cotton Mather’s “Memorable Providences, Relating to Witchcrafts and Possessions” (1689) 85 3-6 William Penn’s Charter of Privileges (1701) 88 3-7 William Byrd II, Diary (1709) 91 3-8 Manners and Etiquette in the Eighteenth Century 92 3-9 “The Storm Arising in the West,” George Washington Delivers a Warning to the French (1753) 96 3-10 The Closing of the Frontier (1763) 101 3-11 The Adventures of Daniel Boone (1769) 104 3-12 Alexander Falconbridge, The African Slave Trade (1788) 107 3-13 Olaudah Equiano, The Middle Passage (1788) 109 ii Contents PPaarrtt FFoouurr PPRREELLUUDDEE TTOO RREEVVOOLLUUTTIIOONN 4-1 John Peter Zenger and the Responsibility of the Press (1734) 111 4-2 Declaration of the Injured Frontier Inhabitants [of Pennsylvania] (1764) 113 4-3 Benjamin Franklin, Testimony Against the Stamp Act (1766) 115 4-4 “Letters From a Farmer in Pennsylvania” (1767) 117 4-5 John Dickinson, from Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania(1768) 119 4-6 The Boston “Massacre” or Victims of Circumstance? (1770) 120 4-7 John Andrews to William Barrell, Letter Regarding the Boston Tea Party (1773) 123 4-8 Address of the Inhabitants of Anson County to Governor Martin (1774) 125 4-9 J. Hector St. John Crèvecoeur, “What Is an American?” (1782) 126 PPaarrtt FFiivvee TTHHEE AAMMEERRIICCAANN RREEVVOOLLUUTTIIOONN 5-1 Benjamin Franklin, “Observations Concerning the Increase of Mankind, Peopling of Countries, &c.” (1751) 128 5-2 James Otis, The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved (1763) 130 5-3 The Crisis Comes to a Head: April 19, 1775 133 5-4 A Freelance Writer Urges His Readers To Use Common Sense (1776) 137 5-5 Abigail Adams and John Adams Letters; Abigail Adams Letter to Mercy Otis Warren (1776) 141 5-6 Petition of “A Grate Number of Blackes of the Province” to Governor Thomas Gage and the Members of the Massachusetts General Court (1774) 143 5-7 Joseph Warren, “Account of the Battle of Lexington” (1775) 144 5-8 Thomas Jefferson, “Original Rough Draught” of the Declaration of Independence (1776) 146 5-9 Rights of Women in an Independent Republic 148 5-10 The Rise of Partisan Warfare in the South (1778) 150 PPaarrtt SSiixx FFOORRGGIINNGG AA CCOONNSSTTIITTUUTTIIOONN 6-1 Constitution of Pennsylvania (1776) 154 6-2 A Declaration of the Rights of the Inhabitants of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (1780) 156 6-3 George Washington, The Newburgh Address (1783) 161 6-4 Henry Knox, Letter to George Washington (1786) 163 6-5 Marquis de Chastellux, Travels in North America (1786) 164 6-6 Shays’s Rebellion: Letters of Generals William Shepard and Benjamin Lincoln to Governor James Bowdoin of Massachusetts (1787) 166 6-7 Divergent Reactions to Shays’s Rebellion 168 6-8 The “Distracting Question” in Philadelphia (1787) 170 6-9 Patrick Henry Speaks Against Ratification of the Constitution (1788) 174 6-10 Benjamin Banneker, Letter to Thomas Jefferson (1791) 176 6-11 James Wilson, An Introductory Lecture To a Course of Law Lectures (1791) 177 6-12 Molly Wallace, Valedictory Oration (1792) 179 PPaarrtt SSeevveenn TTHHEE FFEEDDEERRAALLIISSTT EERRAA 7-1 James Madison Defends the Constitution (1788) 180 7-2 [William Maclay], “For the Independent Gazetteer” (1790) 183 7-3 Alexander Hamilton, Final Version of “An Opinion on the Constitutionality of an Act to Establish a Bank” (1791) 184 7-4 Questions Concerning the Constitutionality of the National Bank (1791) 188 7-5 Opposing Visions for the New Nation (1791) 191 iii Contents 7-6 An African American Calls for an End to Slavery (1791) 195 7-7 Backcountry Turmoil Puts the New Government to the Test (1794) 198 7-8 George Washington, Farewell Address (1796) 200 7-9 The Alien and Sedition Acts (1798) 202 7-10 Questions of Constitutionality and the Roots of Nullification (1798) 205 7-11 Reverend Peter Cartwright on Cane Ridge and the “New Lights” (1801) 208 7-12 Marbury v. Madison(1803) 210 PPaarrtt EEiigghhtt JJEEFFFFEERRSSOONN AANNDD TTHHEE RREEPPUUBBLLIICC 8-1 “Memoirs of a Monticello Slave, as Dictated to Charles Campbell by Isaac” (1847) 211 8-2 Thomas Jefferson, “First Inaugural Address” (1801) 212 8-3 Margaret Bayard Smith Meets Thomas Jefferson (1801) 214 8-4 Constitutionality of the Louisiana Purchase (1803) 216 8-5 The United States Navy and the Bombardment of Tripoli (1803) 219 8-6 A Matter of Honor or Vengeance? (1804) 222 8-7 Fisher Ames, “The Republican. No. II” (1804) 226 8-8 Sacagawea Interprets for Lewis and Clark (1804) 228 8-9 An “Uncommon Genius” Advocates Indian Unity (1809) 230 8-10 Indian Hostilities (1812) 232 8-11 The British Attack Baltimore (1814) 233 8-12 Report and Resolutions of the Hartford Convention (1814) 235 8-13 Davy Crockett, Advice to Politicians (1833) 237 PPaarrtt NNiinnee EECCOONNOOMMIICC AANNDD SSOOCCIIAALL CCHHAANNGGEE 9-1 “The Western Country,” Extracts from Letters Published in Niles’ Weekly Register (1816) 238 9-2 The Cherokee Treaty of 1817 239 9-3 The Case for the Erie Canal 243 9-4 John Marshall Affirms the Power of the Federal Government 245 9-5 Thomas Jefferson Reacts to the “Missouri Question” (1820) 250 9-6 The Monroe Doctrine and a Reaction (1823) 251 9-7 Henry Clay, “Defense of the American System” (1832) 252 9-8 Imminent Dangers to the Free Institutions of the United States through Foreign Immigration (1835) 254 9-9 The Harbinger,Female Workers of Lowell (1836) 257 9-10 James F. Cooper, Notions of the Americans (1840) 259 9-11 Resolutions of the Boston Carpenters’ Strike (1845) 261 9-12 The Trials of a Slave Girl 263 PPaarrtt TTeenn JJAACCKKSSOONNIIAANN DDEEMMOOCCRRAACCYY 10-1 Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism (1823) 267 10-2 A “Corrupt Bargain” or Politics as Usual? (1824) 271 10-3 A Disaffected Mason Speaks Out Against the Order (1826) 277 10-4 The “Commoner” Takes Office (1828) 280 10-5 Andrew Jackson, First Annual Message to Congress (1829) 282 10-6 “Memorial of the Cherokee Nation” (1830) 283 10-7 Andrew Jackson, Veto of the Bank Bill (1832) 284 10-8 President Andrew Jackson’s Proclamation Regarding Nullification (1832) 286 10-9 The Force Bill (1833) 295 10-10 Black Hawk, “Life of Black Hawk” (1833) 297 10-11 A French Traveler Reports on American Society (1835) 299 10-12 Female Industry Association, from the New York Herald (1845) 301 iv Contents PPaarrtt EElleevveenn RREEFFOORRMMIINNGG TTHHEE NNAATTIIOONN 11-1 Joshua and Sally Wilson Letters to George Wilson (1823) 303 11-2 Lyman Beecher, Six Sermons on Intemperance (1828) 304 11-3 “Early Habits of Industry,” The Mother’s Magazine (1834) 306 11-4 Charles Finney, “What a Revival of Religion Is” (1835) 308 11-5 Temperance and the Washingtonians (1836) 310 11-6 A Lowell Mill Girl Tells her Story (1836) 314 11-7 “Petition of the Catholics of New York” (1840) 316 11-8 Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Self-Reliance” (1841) 318 11-9 Ja Norcom, Letter to Mary Matilda Norcom (1846) 319 11-10 Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Woman’s Rights Convention, Seneca Falls, New York (1848) 320 11-11 Horace Mann on Education and National Welfare 322 11-12 John Humphrey Noyes and Bible Communism (1845 and 1849) 328 11-13 Sojourner Truth, Address to the Woman’s Rights Convention, Akron, Ohio (1851) 330 PPaarrtt TTwweellvvee MMAANNIIFFEESSTT DDEESSTTIINNYY 12-1 The Treaties of Velasco (May 14, 1836) 331 12-2 The Aroostook War (1839) 334 12-3 Across the Plains With Catherine Sager Pringle in 1844 336 12-4 John L. O’Sullivan, “The Great Nation of Futurity” (1845) 339 12-5 Thomas Corwin, Against the Mexican War (1847) 341 12-6 Chief Seattle, Oration (1854) 343 PPaarrtt TThhiirrtteeeenn AANNTTEEBBEELLLLUUMM SSOOUUTTHH 13-1 State v. Boon(1801) 345 13-2 A Black Abolitionist Speaks Out (1829) 346 13-3 Nat Turner, Confession (1831) 349 13-4 An Abolitionist Defends the AmistadMutineers (1839) 350 13-5 De Bow’s Review, “The Stability of the Union,” (1850) 353 13-6 Benjamin Drew, Narratives of Escaped Slaves (1855) 355 13-7 George Fitzhugh, “The Blessings of Slavery” (1857) 357 PPaarrtt FFoouurrtteeeenn TTHHEE SSEECCTTIIOONNAALL CCRRIISSIISS 14-1 William Lloyd Garrison, from The Liberator(1831) 359 14-2 Harriet Beecher Stowe, from Uncle Tom’s Cabin(1852) 360 14-3 National Convention of Colored People, Report on Abolition (1847) 361 14-4 A Dying Statesman Speaks Out Against the Compromise of 1850 363 14-5 Frederick Douglass, Independence Day Speech (1852) 370 14-6 Kansas Begins to Bleed (1856) 372 14-7 A White Southerner Speaks Out Against Slavery (1857) 377 14-8 Dred Scott v. Sanford(1857) 381 14-9 Abraham Lincoln, “A House Divided” (1858) 382 PPaarrtt FFiifftteeeenn TTHHEE CCIIVVIILL WWAARR 15-1 Jefferson Davis, Address to the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States of America (1861) 383 15-2 The “Cornerstone Speech” (1861) 385 15-3 Mary Boykin Chesnut, A Confederate Lady’s Diary (1861) 388 15-4 Why They Fought (1861) 389 15-5 A Confederate General Assesses First Bull Run (1861) 391 v Contents 15-6 Charles Harvey Brewster, Three Letters from the Civil War Front (1862) 393 15-7 Clara Barton, Medical Life at the Battlefield (1862) 395 15-8 James Henry Gooding, Letter to President Lincoln (1863) 397 15-9 Abraham Lincoln, Gettysburg Address (1863) 398 15-10 John Dooley, Passages from a Journal (1863) 399 15-11 A Firsthand Account of the New York Draft Riots (1863) 401 15-12 Susie King Taylor, Reminiscences of an Army Laundress (1902) 403 15-13 General William Tecumseh Sherman on War (1864) 404 PPaarrtt SSiixxtteeeenn RREECCOONNSSTTRRUUCCTTIIOONN 16-1 “Address from the Colored Citizens of Norfolk, Virginia, to the People of the United States” (1865) 407 16-2 Carl Schurz, Report on the Condition of the South (1865) 410 16-3 Clinton B. Fisk, Plain Counsels for Freedmen (1865) 412 16-4 Mississippi Black Code (1865) 414 16-5 James C. Beecher, Report on Land Reform in the South Carolina Islands (1865, 1866) 416 16-6 The Memphis Riot (1866) 418 16-7 The Fourteenth Amendment (1868) 422 16-8 Albion W. Tourgee, Letter on Ku Klux Klan Activities (1870) 423 16-9 The Nation, “The State of the South” (1872) 426 16-10 Susan B. Anthony and the “New Departure” for Women (1873) 428 16-11 James T. Rapier, Testimony Before U.S. Senate Regarding the Agricultural Labor Force in the South (1880) 432 16-12 A Sharecrop Contract (1882) 435 PPaarrtt SSeevveenntteeeenn NNEEWW SSOOUUTTHH,, EEXXPPAANNDDIINNGG WWEESSTT 17-1 Edward Gould Buffum, Six Months in the Gold Mines (1850) 437 17-2 Lydia Allen Rudd, Diary of Westward Travel (1852) 438 17-3 Horace Greeley, An Overland Journey (1860) 441 17-4 Joseph G. McCoy, Historic Sketches of the Cattle Trade of the West and Southwest (1874) 443 17-5 Helen Hunt Jackson, from A Century of Dishonor(1881) 445 17-6 Congressional Report on Indian Affairs (1887) 447 17-7 Tragedy at Wounded Knee (1890) 449 17-8 Benjamin Harrison, Report on Wounded Knee Massacre and the Decrease in Indian Land Acreage (1891) 451 17-9 The Omaha Platform of the Populist Party (1892) 452 17-10 From Plessy v. Ferguson(1896) 454 17-11 W. E. B. Du Bois, from “Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others” (1903) 455 PPaarrtt EEiigghhtteeeenn IINNDDUUSSTTRRIIAALLIIZZIINNGG AAMMEERRIICCAA 18-1 Charles Loring Brace, “The Life of the Street Rats” (1872) 456 18-2 Progress and Poverty (1879) 457 18-3 The Gilded Age (1880) 460 18-4 Richard K. Fox, from Coney Island Frolics(1883) 463 18-5 Address by George Engel, Condemned Haymarket Anarchist (1886) 464 18-6 Edward Bellamy, from Looking Backward(1888) 466 18-7 The Assassination of President Garfield 467 18-8 Ida B. Wells-Barnett, from A Red Record(1895) 469 18-9 Booker T. Washington, Atlanta Exposition Address (1895) 471 18-10 United States Sanitary Commission, Sketch of Its Purposes (1864) 472 18-11 Lincoln Steffens, from The Shame of the Cities(1904) 474 18-12 Etiquette for the Upper Classes (1919) 475 18-13 Scientific Management (1919) 477 vi Contents PPaarrtt NNiinneetteeeenn IIMMMMIIGGRRAANNTT AANNDD UURRBBAANN NNAATTIIOONN 19-1 Memorial of the Chinese Six Companies to U.S. Grant, President of the United States (1876) 479 19-2 Plain Facts for Old and Young (1884) 481 19-3 Anglo-Saxon Culture Under Siege (1885) 486 19-4 How the Other Half Lives (1890) 488 19-5 The People’s Party Platform (1892) 491 19-6 The Secret Oath of the American Protective Association (1893) 493 19-7 Adna Weber, The Growth of Cities in the Nineteenth Century (1899) 494 19-8 Lee Chew, Life of a Chinese Immigrant(1903) 496 19-9 Lincoln Steffens, from The Shame of the Cities(1904) 498 19-10 William T. Riordon, from Plunkitt of Tammany Hall(1905) 499 19-11 John Spargo, From The Bitter Cry of Children(1906) 500 19-12 Mary Antin, The Promised Land (1912) 501 PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy AAMMEERRIICCAA AARROOUUNNDD TTHHEE GGLLOOBBEE 20-1 Josiah Strong, from Our Country(1885) 503 20-2 Henry Cabot Lodge, “The Business World vs. the Politicians” (1895) 505 20-3 Albert Beveridge, “The March of the Flag” (1898) 507 20-4 The Spanish-American War (1898) 508 20-5 William McKinley, “Decision on the Philippines” (1900) 510 20-6 The Boxer Rebellion (1900) 511 20-7 Theodore Roosevelt, Third Annual Message to Congress (1903) 513 20-8 Mark Twain, “Incident in the Philippines” (1924)) 515 PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--OOnnee TTHHEE PPRROOGGRREESSSSIIVVEE EERRAA 21-1 Frederick Winslow Taylor, “A Piece-Rate System” (1896) 516 21-2 William Graham Sumner, What the Social Classes Owe to Each Other (1883) 518 21-3 Eugene V. Debs, “The Outlook for Socialism in the United States” (1900) 519 21-4 Platform Adopted by the National Negro Committee (1909) 521 21-5 James H. Patten, Chairman of the National Legislative Committee of the American Purity Federation, Testimony Before Congress (1910) 522 21-6 Jane Addams, Twenty Years at Hull House (1910) 524 21-7 Theodore Roosevelt, from The New Nationalism (1910) 526 21-8 Walker Percy, “Birmingham under the Commission Plan” (1911) 527 21-9 Helen M. Todd, “Getting Out the Vote” (1911) 529 21-10 Louis Brandeis, Other People’s Money and How the Bankers Use It (1913) 531 21-11 Woodrow Wilson, from The New Freedom (1913) 533 21-12 Herbert Croly, Progressive Democracy (1914) 534 PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--TTwwoo WWOORRLLDD WWAARR OONNEE 22-1 The Great War (1896) 536 22-2 Boy Scouts of America from, “Boy Scouts Support the War Effort” (1917) 539 22-3 Letters from the Great Migration (1917) 541 22-4 American Troops in the Trenches (1918) 543 22-5 Eugene Kennedy, A “Doughboy” Describes the Fighting Front (1918) 546 22-6 Newton D. Baker, “The Treatment of German-Americans” (1918) 548 22-7 An Official Report 549 22-8 Woodrow Wilson, The Fourteen Points (1918) 550 22-9 Warren G. Harding, Campaign Speech at Boston (1920) 552 22-10 Edward Earle Purinton, “Big Ideas from Big Business” (1921) 553 vii Contents PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--TThhrreeee TTHHEE 11992200SS AANNDD MMOODDEERRNN AAMMEERRIICCAA 23-1 F. J. Grimke, “Address of Welcome to the Men Who Have Returned from the Battlefront” (1919) 555 23-2 The Sahara of the Bozart (1920) 556 23-3 National Origins Quota Act, 1924 559 23-4 Advertisements (1925, 1927) 562 23-5 Family Planning (1926) 564 23-6 Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Court Statement (1927) 567 PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--FFoouurr DDEEPPRREESSSSIIOONN AANNDD NNEEWW DDEEAALL 24-1 Herbert Hoover, Speech at New York City (1932) 568 24-2 FDR’s First Inauguration Speech (1932) 570 24-3 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Speech at San Francisco (1932) 573 24-4 Share the Wealth 575 24-5 The Victims of the Ku Klux Klan (1935) 578 24-6 Father Charles E. Coughlin, “A Third Party” (1936) 579 24-7 Mrs. Henry Weddington, Letter to President Roosevelt (1938) 580 PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--FFiivvee WWOORRLLDD WWAARR 1111 25-1 Albert Einstein, Letter to President Roosevelt (1939) 581 25-2 Charles Lindbergh, Radio Address (1941) 583 25-3 Franklin D. Roosevelt, The Four Freedoms (1941) 585 25-4 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Annual Message to Congress (1941) 587 25-5 A. Philip Randolph, “Why Should We March?” (1942) 589 25-6 Japanese Relocation Order February 19, 1942 591 25-7 Sterling A. Brown, “Out of Their Mouths” (1942) 592 PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--SSiixx CCOOLLDD WWAARR 26-1 George F. Kennan, “Long Telegram” (1946) 594 26-2 Kenneth MacFarland, “The Unfinished Work” (1946) 596 26-3 George Marshall, The Marshall Plan (1947) 598 26-4 Containment (1947) 599 26-5 Harry S Truman, The Truman Doctrine (1947) 603 26-6 Ronald Reagan, Testimony Before the House Un-American Activities Committee (1947) 604 26-7 Joseph R. McCarthy, from Speech Delivered to the Women’s Club of Wheeling, West Virginia (1950) 606 26-8 National Security Council Memorandum Number 68 (1950) 607 26-9 Senator Joseph McCarthy’s telegram to President Truman following the ‘Wheeling (W.Va.) Speech,’ February 11, 1950 609 PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--SSeevveenn CCOONNSSEENNSSUUSS AANNDD CCOONNFFOORRMMIITTYY 27-1 The Kinsey Report (1948) 610 27-2 Brown v. Board of Education(1954) 613 27-3 Ladies Home Journal, “Young Mother” (1956) 615 27-4 Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Statement of Purpose (1960) 618 viii Contents PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--EEiigghhtt TTHHEE CCHHAANNGGIINNGG LLIIBBEERRAALL SSTTAATTEE 28-1 Dwight D. Eisenhower, Decision Not to Intervene at Dien Bien Phu (1954) 619 28-2 Charles Sherrod, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Memorandum (1961) 621 28-3 John F. Kennedy, Cuban Missile Address (1962) 624 28-4 Students for a Democratic Society, The Port Huron Statement (1962) 625 28-5 John Lewis, Address at the March on Washington (1963) 626 28-6 The Civil Rights Act of 1964 627 28-7 The Tonkin Gulf Incident (1964) 628 28-8 Lyndon B. Johnson, Commencement Address at Howard University (1965) 630 28-9 Stokely Carmichael and Charles Hamilton, from Black Power (1967) 633 28-10 Donald Wheeldin, “The Situation in Watts Today” (1967) 634 28-11 Vietnamization (1969) 636 PPaarrtt TTwweennttyy--NNiinnee TTHHEE SSTTRRUUGGGGLLEE FFOORR SSOOCCIIAALL CCHHAANNGGEE 29-1 John F. Kennedy, Inaugural Address (1961) 640 29-2 The Feminist Mystique (1963) 642 29-3 Lyndon Johnson, The War on Poverty (1964) 646 29-4 National Organization for Women, Statement of Purpose (1966) 647 29-5 The Gay Liberation Front, Come Out(1970) 649 29-6 Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education (1971) 651 29-7 Roe v. Wade (1973) 655 29-8 Ione Malloy, Southie Won’t Go (1975) 657 29-9 Jimmy Carter, The “Malaise” Speech (1979) 660 PPaarrtt TThhiirrttyy AAMMEERRIICCAA AATT TTHHEE MMIILLLLEENNNNIIUUMM 30-1 House Judiciary Committee, Conclusion on Impeachment Resolution (1974) 661 30-2 Ronald Reagan, First Inaugural Address (1981) 663 30-3 Ronald Reagan, Speech to the House of Commons (1982) 665 30-4 Ronald Reagan, Address to the National Association of Evangelicals (1983) 666 30-5 T. Boone Pickens, “My Case for Reagan” (1984) 668 30-6 Paul Craig Roberts, The Supply-Side Revolution (1984) 670 30-7 Bill Chappell, Speech to the American Security Council Foundation (1985) 672 30-8 Patricia Morrisroe, “The New Class” (1985) 674 30-9 George Bush, Address to the Nation Announcing Allied Military Action in the Persian Gulf (1991) 677 ix PPAARRTT OONNEE MMEEEETTIINNGG OOFF TTHHRREEEE CCUULLTTUURREESS 1-1 Marco Polo Recounts His Travels Through Asia (1324) Marco Polo’s recollections of his travels through Asia planted seeds of curiosity, wanderlust, and want in the minds of Europeans within a century after his death in 1324. Known at the time as The Descrip- tion of the Worldor The Travels of Marco Polo, his account of the wealth of Cathay (China) and the exotic customs of the Orient made his book a bestseller. Although criticized by some as fiction, his nar- rative nevertheless captured readers through the centuries and served as the foremost description of the world outside Europe available at the time. Source:Marco Polo, Voyages and Travels of Marco Polo(New York: The F. M. Lupton Publishing Com- pany, [n.d.]). Ten miles off Cambalu is a certain great river named Pulisangan, emptying itself into the ocean, by which many ships with much merchandise ascend; and in that place there is a very fair bridge, all of serpentine stone, curiously wrought, containing three hundred paces in length, and eight in breadth, so broad that ten men may ride abreast; on each side it is secured with a wall of marble, and pillars set in a row, and in the height of this ascent is a great and high pillar, at the feet whereof is a great lion, and on the top another, and so quite through the bridge: one pace and a half distance are pillars with lions on the tops, and a fair wall with wrought marble work betwixt, to keep men from falling. Having passed over the river and bridge, and proceeding thirty miles westward (in which palaces are continually seen, with vineyards and fertile fields), you come to the city Gouza, both fair and great, having many monasteries of idols. Cloths of gold and silk are made there, and the purest and finest cambrics or lawns; and many common inns for strangers or travellers are found in that city. The cit- izens are artificers and merchants. Amile without this city the way parteth, one leading west, the other south-east; that to the west leadeth through the province of Cathay, but the other, towards the country of Mangi, from the city of Gouza to the kingdom of Tainfu. You ride ten days through Cathay, always finding many fair cities, well furnished with vineyards and tilled fields, from whence wine is carried to Cathay, where there is none; there are many mulberry-trees for silkworms, the people civil, and cities very numerous and populous. Tainfu is the name of the kingdom, and of the chief city, which is great and fair, hath much trade, with store of ammunition, fit for the Khan’s armies. The wine about this city serveth the whole province. Seven days further westward is a pleasant country beautified with many castles and cities, in which also there is great trade in dif- ferent merchandise carried on. After which you come to a city very great, named Pianfu, in which there is vast abundance of silk and much trade. Westward from Pianfu stands a very pleasant castle, named Thaigin, anciently built by a king called Dor; in it is a spacious palace, wherein is a fine hall, in which are painted all the famous kings which have reigned there, and it is a fair spectacle. Of this king Dor, they say he was potent, and was attended only by young damsels, of which he had many in his court. These also, when he had a mind to take his pleasure, carried him in a small light chariot through the castle, which was so fortified by art and nature, that the governor thereof feared none, no, not Umcan his lord, against whom he rebelled. But seven men, professing fidelity and service to Dor, took him at a disadvantage in hunting, and brought him pris- oner to Presbyter John, or Umcan, who put him on vile cloths, and appointed him to keep his cattle, and set over him a strong guard, till two years were ended: after which he commanded him to be brought before him, and being dressed in princely apparel, he giving him his pardon, after a sharp admonition, sent him well attended to the re-possession of his kingdom. About twenty miles beyond the castle Thaigin is the river Caramaran, which, by reason of the exceeding breadth and depth thereof, hath no bridge over it in all the space from thence till it floweth to the ocean. On the shore thereof are many cities and castles built, wherein great trade is carried on. This country abounds with ginger, silk, and fowl, especially pheasants, so that three of them are bought for a Venetian groat. There grow reeds in vast plenty, so thick that some are a foot, and others a foot and a half in compass, which are applied to many uses. Passing this river, after two days’journey, is the famous city called Carianfu, where many cloths of gold and silk are made. Here grow ginger, galingale spike, and many spices. The people are idolaters. Proceeding seven days’journey westward, many cities and towns, lovely fields and gardens, are found, and every- where mulberries for silkworms. As for the people, they are mostly idolaters; but there are also Christians, Turks, Nesto- rians, and some Saracens. There is a vast abundance here of wild beasts and fowl. If you proceed seven days’journey farther, you shall come to a certain great city named Quensanfu, which is the chief city of the kingdom, in which have reigned many famous kings; and at this day the son of the Great Khan, called Mangalu, hath the command thereof. That country yields great plenty of silk, cloth of gold, and all other things necessary for furnishing an army, and for the preser- vation of man’s life. The inhabitants worship idols, and there are some Christians, Turks, and Saracens. Five miles without this city standeth the palace of Mangalu, seated in a plain, where are many springs, rivulets, and places of game. There is 1

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Questions Concerning the Constitutionality of the National Bank (1791) . 11-13 Sojourner Truth, Address to the Woman's Rights Convention, Akron, Ohio .. and castles are, which abound with silk merchandise and manufactures,
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