American Institutions and Their Preservation, Volume 1Norwood Press, 1929 - 833 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 58
Pagina 123
... French came to America separately from the Protestant French . The latter were the Huguenots . The Catholic French overran and owned Canada and by a chain of posts and forts controlled the Great Lakes , the Mis- sissippi River , and at ...
... French came to America separately from the Protestant French . The latter were the Huguenots . The Catholic French overran and owned Canada and by a chain of posts and forts controlled the Great Lakes , the Mis- sissippi River , and at ...
Pagina 129
... French Revolution , and by the later refugees after the fall of Napoleon — a large number in all . " 1 Detroit as late as 1805 had few Americans . Even in 1817 a majority of its population were French . It was long the center of French ...
... French Revolution , and by the later refugees after the fall of Napoleon — a large number in all . " 1 Detroit as late as 1805 had few Americans . Even in 1817 a majority of its population were French . It was long the center of French ...
Pagina 132
... French record has not been so good . In 1782 Vergennes , the French Minister of State , in a treaty of peace tried to confine the Ameri- cans to the Allegheny mountain line.2 In 1793 Citizen Genet , the French ambassador to America ...
... French record has not been so good . In 1782 Vergennes , the French Minister of State , in a treaty of peace tried to confine the Ameri- cans to the Allegheny mountain line.2 In 1793 Citizen Genet , the French ambassador to America ...
Inhoudsopgave
1 A written constitution | 1 |
2 Popular sovereignty and a republic 3 Universal suffrage | 16 |
XXXII | 23 |
Copyright | |
28 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Adams Ameri American institutions American Revolution aristocracy Boston British Bryce Catholic century character Christian church civilization colonies Congress Constitution corporation danger democracy Dutch election emigration Encyclopędia Britannica England English equality Europe fact favor federal form of government France freedom French German Henry Henry Cabot Lodge History Hugh McCulloch Huguenots hundred idea immigration industry influence Ireland Irish Italians Jewish Jews John Kentucky King labor unions land legislative legislature liberty living Lord Acton Massachusetts ment millions monarchy nation nature negro never North Ohio Pennsylvania political popular sovereignty population practically President principles produced Professor Puritans race railroad religion religious representative republic republican Revolution Revolutionary Richard Hildreth Roman rule Russian says schools Scotch Scotch-Irish self-government social South Carolina Southern sovereignty Supreme Court taxes thousand tion trade trust Ulster United Virginia vote wages wealth writer wrote York City