A new age now begins volume 2
by Smith, Page
Series: a people's history of the American Revolution Volume 2 Published by : McGraw-Hill Book Company (New York ) Physical details: 875 - 1899 p ISBN:0070590974 . ISSN:978007059 Year: 1976Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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900 - 999 | 973.3 Smi (Browse shelf) | Available | In Memory of : Gerald M. Abercrombie | 44493 |
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973.3 Ran The American Revolution : Mirror of a People | 973.3 Rev Revolutionary War : America's fight for freedom | 973.3 Smi A new age now begins volume 1 | 973.3 Smi A new age now begins volume 2 | 973.3 Tre American Revolution | 973.3 Tyl Patrick Henry: | 973.30222 Fur Pictorial history of the American Revolution as told by eyewitnesses and participants |
Part VII: --
Howe tries the Jerseys again --
Burgoyne's invasion --
Forts Stanwix and Oriskany --
Bennington --
Saratoga --
Brandywine --
The Paoli Massacre and Germantown --
Foreign volunteers --
Forts Mifflin and Mercer --
The army goes into winter quarters, 1777-78 --
The Conway Cabal --
The British in Philadelphia --
The French Alliance --
England --
Part VIII: --
Monmouth --
The Battle of Rhode Island --
Winter quarters, 1778-79 --
Meanwhile congress ... --
Border warfare: the Wyoming valley --
Sullivan's expedition --
Border warfare: New York --
George Rogers Clark --
The capture of Vincennes --
The southern frontier --
The Sandusky expedition --
The end of the border war --
The war on the high seas --
Naval "militia" and privateers --
John Paul Jones --
The continuing war at sea --
Part IX: --
From Savannah to Brier Creek --
Prevost threatens Charles Town --
Failure at Savannah --
Stony Point and Paulus Hook --
Fort Wilson --
Parliament takes stock --
The surrender of Charles Town --
From the Waxhaw Massacre to Ramsour's Mill --
Camden --
King's Mountain --
Greene takes command --
Cowpens --
Greene runs --
Guilford court house --
Hobkirks Hill --
Greene turns south --
Part X: --
Morristown: 1779-80 --
Springfield and after --
Parliament --
General Arnold and the British --
Treason --
The mutiny of the Pennsylvania line --
Lafayette in Virginia --
Congress --
The episode at Green Spring Farm --
To Virginia --
The Battle of the Capes --
The seige of Yorktown --
Parliament reacts --
Peace negotiations --
The aftermath of Yorktown --
Congress: a rope of sand --
The army disbands --
Blacks in the revolution --
Women in the revolution --
Novus Ordo Seclorum.
A history of the United States from 1777 to 1783.; From review: Page Smith's history of the United States is a phenomenal work, packed with details and eyewitness reports from all sides of both the small and larger events that shaped the path of the modern United States. Page Smith presents both side's opinions, attitudes and angst. In doing so I feel that he brings out the real humanity of British officers like Howe trying to solve or suppress the Rebellion. The incomprehension of a King who couldn't understand the motivations of his citizens, or the endless confusion and misunderstanding created by the Atlantic time lag and his orders. The colonials who had grievances both real and manufactured. Whom felt pushed into an action they didn't want to take and then under the most amazing leadership, that spanned the arc from inept to magnificent struggled to gain their interpretation of liberty and government. In all of this Page Smith takes you through month by month and in the case of moments of destiny or defeat almost minute by minute. He, unlike others, does not descend into jingoism, or hero worship. All the characters of this historical pageant are alive, some hopelessly flawed but still brave, some perceptive and farsighted but hindered by chance or support. In the end this is not a dry recitation of revisionist history, it is alive and Page Smith as any good historian takes you to the heart of the events. - Gregory House's Reviews on GoodReads.com, 2 Jul. 2011.
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