The Spirit of '76: The Growth of American Patriotism Before IndependenceOxford University Press, 1975 - 162 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 11
Seite viii
... lived . Moreover , very early they recognized themselves as a new and markedly different breed of men from their European contemporaries . They knew that they were Americans and were proud of the distinction . It is this psychological ...
... lived . Moreover , very early they recognized themselves as a new and markedly different breed of men from their European contemporaries . They knew that they were Americans and were proud of the distinction . It is this psychological ...
Seite 3
... lived in America for three , four , five , and some even six , generations . During the more than a century and a half in which they had lived in this land , about which clustered considerable tradition and history , they had come to ...
... lived in America for three , four , five , and some even six , generations . During the more than a century and a half in which they had lived in this land , about which clustered considerable tradition and history , they had come to ...
Seite 14
... lived more comfort- ably like Englishmen than any of the rest of the planta- tions . . . to which I added , that there were more in New - England produced to bespeak us a commonwealth than in all the English plantations besides , the ...
... lived more comfort- ably like Englishmen than any of the rest of the planta- tions . . . to which I added , that there were more in New - England produced to bespeak us a commonwealth than in all the English plantations besides , the ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 3 |
The Sweetness of the Country 16071690 | 9 |
The Expanding Intercolonial Community | 40 |
Urheberrecht | |
4 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adams affection American appear August authority became become began body Boston Britain British called carried cause century Chronicle Church civil College colonies colonists common Connecticut continent early England English established existence fact families feeling forces Franklin French Gazette Governor growing growth House ideas important Independence Indian inhabitants intercolonial issue James John July land later leaders learned letter liberties live London Lord March Maryland Massachusetts meeting merchants middle ministers mother nature never newspapers North opinion patriotism Pennsylvania period Philadelphia Plantations political population present printed produced Providence provincial published Puritans Quakers religion religious Reverend Rhode Island rise royal settlement Society South spirit spread success things Thomas tion took town trade Travels true United unity Virginia wilderness World Yankee York