The Resource Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors]
Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors]
Resource Information
The item Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors] represents a specific, individual, material embodiment of a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in Morton Public Library District.This item is available to borrow from 1 library branch.
Resource Information
The item Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors] represents a specific, individual, material embodiment of a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in Morton Public Library District.
This item is available to borrow from 1 library branch.
- Summary
-
- Includes over 150 eyewitness accounts of events in American history including works from prominent historical figures and ordinary people
- Contains primary source material
- Language
- eng
- Edition
- 1st ed.
- Extent
- xv, 605 pages
- Note
-
- "A Lou Reda book."
- Rev., updated ed. of: The heritage of America / edited by Henry Steele Commager and Allan Nevins. Rev. and enl. ed. 1949
- Contents
-
- The coming of the Revoution. Mohawks spill tea in Boston Harbor ; John Adams journeys to the Continental Congress ; "Give me liberty or give me death!" ; Colonel Washington scouts the idea of independence ; Adams nominates Washington commander in chief ; A shot is fired that is heard around the world ; Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- The winning of independence. Ethan Allen captures Fort Ticonderoga ; The American army suffers at Valley Forge ; The world turned upside down at Yorktown ; America, the hope of the world -- Confederation, Constitution, and launching the new government. The thirteen states establish a confederation ; "A rising, not a setting sun" ; Washington is inaugurated president ; Jefferson and Hamilton strike a bargain ; Washington bids farewell to his countrymen ; How Jefferson lived in the White House -- The War of 1812. Tecumseh pledges support to the British ; The British burn Washington city ; Andrew Jackson routs the Redcoats at New Orleans ; "Peace!" -- The hardy frontiersman. "Old America is moving westward" ; "Leave England for America" ; Timothy Flint appraises the frontiersmen ; William Howells remembers neighborliness in Ohio -- Sailing, whaling, and steamboats. The first lowering ; How to cut and boil a whale ; Launching the first steamboat on western waters ; Mark Twain learns to be a pilot -- Social life in the early republic. Harriet Martineau finds a working girls' paradise ; Edward Everett Hale recalls a New England boyhood ; Rebecca Felton describes country life in Georgia ; Joseph Jefferson tries playacting in Springfield, Illinois ; Samuel Morse invents the telegraph ; Dr. Morton discovers anesthesia -- The reformers. "A fertility of projects for the salvation of the world" ; The lunatic fringe of reform ; Dorothea Dix pleads the cause of the insane ; A woman's declaration of independence ; Henry Thoreau builds a cabin at Walden Pond -- The South, slavery, and abolition. A Connecticut Yankee invents the cotton gin ; Luxury among the planters of Louisiana ; The Reverend Mr. Walsh inspects a slave ship ; Social classes among the slaves ; Field hands on the Combahee ; Thomas Dabney runs a model plantation ; Garrison is mobbed by the Boston conservatives ; John Brown makes a speech at Harper's Ferry -- Westward the course of empire. Trading furs on the Northwest coast ; The rendezvous of the mountain men ; John C. Fremont conquers the Sierras in midwinter ; Starvation and death at Donner Lake ; The Pony Express -- The rush for western riches. Sarah Royce braves the desert and the mountains ; Vigilante days and ways in Montana -- Texas and the Mexican War. Davy Crockett defends the Alamo ; Sam Houston whips the Mexicans at San Jacinto ; General Winfield Scott captures Mexico City -- Politics. Andrew Jackson is inaugurated president ; "John Quincy Adams is no more" ; William Herndon remembers Abraham Lincoln ; Abraham Lincoln is nominated in the wigwam -- O captain, my captain. Nathaniel Hawthorne sees President Lincoln ; Lincoln reads the Emancipation Proclamation ; Lincoln frees the slaves ; Lincoln consoles Mrs. Bixby ; President Lincoln is assassinated -- Behind the lines. Writing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" ; The Confederates burn their cotton ; Anna Dickinson sees draft riots in New York City ; Suffering in Andersonville Prison ; The disintegration of the Confederate Army -- The Blue and the Gray. Mrs. Chesnut watches the attack on Fort Sumter ; Abner Doubleday defends Fort Sumter ; "Bull Run" Russell reports the rout of the Federals ; The Monitor and the Merrimac ; Eating mules at Port Hudson ; Blue and Gray fraternize at Port Hudson ; General Lee invades Pennsylvania ; High tide at Gettysburg ; General Sherman marches from Atlanta to the sea ; Eliza Andrews comes home to the "burnt country" ; General Lee surrenders at Appomattox
- The coming of the Revoution. Mohawks spill tea in Boston Harbor ; John Adams journeys to the Continental Congress ; "Give me liberty or give me death!" ; Colonel Washington scouts the idea of independence ; Adams nominates Washington commander in chief ; A shot is fired that is heard around the world ; Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- The winning of independence. Ethan Allen captures Fort Ticonderoga ; The American army suffers at Valley Forge ; The world turned upside down at Yorktown ; America, the hope of the world -- Confederation, Constitution, and launching the new government. The thirteen states establish a confederation ; "A rising, not a setting sun" ; Washington is inaugurated president ; Jefferson and Hamilton strike a bargain ; Washington bids farewell to his countrymen ; How Jefferson lived in the White House -- The War of 1812. Tecumseh pledges support to the British ; The British burn Washington city ; Andrew Jackson routs the Redcoats at New Orleans ; "Peace!" -- The hardy frontiersman. "Old America is moving westward" ; "Leave England for America" ; Timothy Flint appraises the frontiersmen ; William Howells remembers neighborliness in Ohio -- Sailing, whaling, and steamboats. The first lowering ; How to cut and boil a whale ; Launching the first steamboat on western waters ; Mark Twain learns to be a pilot -- Social life in the early republic. Harriet Martineau finds a working girls' paradise ; Edward Everett Hale recalls a New England boyhood ; Rebecca Felton describes country life in Georgia ; Joseph Jefferson tries playacting in Springfield, Illinois ; Samuel Morse invents the telegraph ; Dr. Morton discovers anesthesia -- The reformers. "A fertility of projects for the salvation of the world" ; The lunatic fringe of reform ; Dorothea Dix pleads the cause of the insane ; A woman's declaration of independence ; Henry Thoreau builds a cabin at Walden Pond -- The South, slavery, and abolition. A Connecticut Yankee invents the cotton gin ; Luxury among the planters of Louisiana ; The Reverend Mr. Walsh inspects a slave ship ; Social classes among the slaves ; Field hands on the Combahee ; Thomas Dabney runs a model plantation ; Garrison is mobbed by the Boston conservatives ; John Brown makes a speech at Harper's Ferry -- Westward the course of empire. Trading furs on the Northwest coast ; The rendezvous of the mountain men ; John C. Fremont conquers the Sierras in midwinter ; Starvation and death at Donner Lake ; The Pony Express -- The rush for western riches. Sarah Royce braves the desert and the mountains ; Vigilante days and ways in Montana -- Texas and the Mexican War. Davy Crockett defends the Alamo ; Sam Houston whips the Mexicans at San Jacinto ; General Winfield Scott captures Mexico City -- Politics. Andrew Jackson is inaugurated president ; "John Quincy Adams is no more" ; William Herndon remembers Abraham Lincoln ; Abraham Lincoln is nominated in the wigwam -- O captain, my captain. Nathaniel Hawthorne sees President Lincoln ; Lincoln reads the Emancipation Proclamation ; Lincoln frees the slaves ; Lincoln consoles Mrs. Bixby ; President Lincoln is assassinated -- Behind the lines. Writing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" ; The Confederates burn their cotton ; Anna Dickinson sees draft riots in New York City ; Suffering in Andersonville Prison ; The disintegration of the Confederate Army -- The Blue and the Gray. Mrs. Chesnut watches the attack on Fort Sumter ; Abner Doubleday defends Fort Sumter ; "Bull Run" Russell reports the rout of the Federals ; The Monitor and the Merrimac ; Eating mules at Port Hudson ; Blue and Gray fraternize at Port Hudson ; General Lee invades Pennsylvania ; High tide at Gettysburg ; General Sherman marches from Atlanta to the sea ; Eliza Andrews comes home to the "burnt country" ; General Lee surrenders at Appomattox
- Audio CD: 1. Introduction -- 2. Mowhawks spill tea in Boston Harbor -- 3. Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- 4. The American army suffers at Valley Forge -- 5. Tecumseh pledges support to the British -- 6. "Old America is moving westward" -- 7. Settlers recall growing up in the early Republic -- 8. Mark Twain on the Pony Express -- 9. Three accounts of pioneer life -- 10. The Reverend Walsh inspects a slave ship -- 11. Abraham Lincoln : O captain, my captain -- 12. Writing "The battle hymn of the Republic" -- 13. The Civil War ends with a surrender -- 14. Robert Louis Stevenson travels across the Plains -- 15. Henry Ford constructs a gasoline buggy -- 16. Jacob Riis discovers how the other half lives -- 17. Theodore Roosevelt takes charge of the Navy -- 18. The World Wars -- 19. The Marines cross a river under fire on Guadalcanal -- 20. An American plane ushers in the Atomic Age -- 21. The GIs and modern America -- 22. Edward R. Murrow on the meaning of television -- 23. John F. Kennedy delivers his inaugural address -- 24. Rosa Parks gets arrested in Montgomery -- 25. The Democratic convention, August 1968 -- 26. Neil Armstrong reminisces about his moon walk -- 27. The harrowing evacuation of Saigon -- 28. Bill Gates on the birth of the personal computer -- 29. Michael Kinsley on the impeachment of Bill Clinton -- 30. Toward the new millennium -- 31. Conclusion
- Isbn
- 9780965014311
- Label
- Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today
- Title
- Witness to America
- Title remainder
- an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today
- Statement of responsibility
- Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors]
- Language
- eng
- Summary
-
- Includes over 150 eyewitness accounts of events in American history including works from prominent historical figures and ordinary people
- Contains primary source material
- Cataloging source
- DLC
- http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/collectionName
- Heritage of America
- Dewey number
- 973
- Illustrations
- illustrations
- Index
- index present
- LC call number
- E173
- LC item number
- .W78 1999
- Literary form
- non fiction
- Nature of contents
- bibliography
- http://library.link/vocab/relatedWorkOrContributorName
-
- Ambrose, Stephen E
- Brinkley, Douglas
- http://library.link/vocab/subjectName
-
- United States
- United States
- United States
- United States
- United States
- United States
- United States
- Label
- Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors]
- Link
- Note
-
- "A Lou Reda book."
- Rev., updated ed. of: The heritage of America / edited by Henry Steele Commager and Allan Nevins. Rev. and enl. ed. 1949
- Accompanying material
- 1 audio disc (73 min., 56 sec. : digital, CD audio ; 4 3/4 in.)
- Bibliography note
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 591-597) and index
- Capture and storage technique
- unknown
- Carrier category
-
- volume
- audio disc
- Carrier category code
-
- nc
- sd
- Carrier MARC source
-
- rdacarrier
- rdacarrier
- Configuration of playback channels
- stereophonic
- Content category
-
- text
- spoken word
- Content type code
-
- txt
- spw
- Content type MARC source
-
- rdacontent
- rdacontent
- Contents
-
- The coming of the Revoution. Mohawks spill tea in Boston Harbor ; John Adams journeys to the Continental Congress ; "Give me liberty or give me death!" ; Colonel Washington scouts the idea of independence ; Adams nominates Washington commander in chief ; A shot is fired that is heard around the world ; Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- The winning of independence. Ethan Allen captures Fort Ticonderoga ; The American army suffers at Valley Forge ; The world turned upside down at Yorktown ; America, the hope of the world -- Confederation, Constitution, and launching the new government. The thirteen states establish a confederation ; "A rising, not a setting sun" ; Washington is inaugurated president ; Jefferson and Hamilton strike a bargain ; Washington bids farewell to his countrymen ; How Jefferson lived in the White House -- The War of 1812. Tecumseh pledges support to the British ; The British burn Washington city ; Andrew Jackson routs the Redcoats at New Orleans ; "Peace!" -- The hardy frontiersman. "Old America is moving westward" ; "Leave England for America" ; Timothy Flint appraises the frontiersmen ; William Howells remembers neighborliness in Ohio -- Sailing, whaling, and steamboats. The first lowering ; How to cut and boil a whale ; Launching the first steamboat on western waters ; Mark Twain learns to be a pilot -- Social life in the early republic. Harriet Martineau finds a working girls' paradise ; Edward Everett Hale recalls a New England boyhood ; Rebecca Felton describes country life in Georgia ; Joseph Jefferson tries playacting in Springfield, Illinois ; Samuel Morse invents the telegraph ; Dr. Morton discovers anesthesia -- The reformers. "A fertility of projects for the salvation of the world" ; The lunatic fringe of reform ; Dorothea Dix pleads the cause of the insane ; A woman's declaration of independence ; Henry Thoreau builds a cabin at Walden Pond -- The South, slavery, and abolition. A Connecticut Yankee invents the cotton gin ; Luxury among the planters of Louisiana ; The Reverend Mr. Walsh inspects a slave ship ; Social classes among the slaves ; Field hands on the Combahee ; Thomas Dabney runs a model plantation ; Garrison is mobbed by the Boston conservatives ; John Brown makes a speech at Harper's Ferry -- Westward the course of empire. Trading furs on the Northwest coast ; The rendezvous of the mountain men ; John C. Fremont conquers the Sierras in midwinter ; Starvation and death at Donner Lake ; The Pony Express -- The rush for western riches. Sarah Royce braves the desert and the mountains ; Vigilante days and ways in Montana -- Texas and the Mexican War. Davy Crockett defends the Alamo ; Sam Houston whips the Mexicans at San Jacinto ; General Winfield Scott captures Mexico City -- Politics. Andrew Jackson is inaugurated president ; "John Quincy Adams is no more" ; William Herndon remembers Abraham Lincoln ; Abraham Lincoln is nominated in the wigwam -- O captain, my captain. Nathaniel Hawthorne sees President Lincoln ; Lincoln reads the Emancipation Proclamation ; Lincoln frees the slaves ; Lincoln consoles Mrs. Bixby ; President Lincoln is assassinated -- Behind the lines. Writing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" ; The Confederates burn their cotton ; Anna Dickinson sees draft riots in New York City ; Suffering in Andersonville Prison ; The disintegration of the Confederate Army -- The Blue and the Gray. Mrs. Chesnut watches the attack on Fort Sumter ; Abner Doubleday defends Fort Sumter ; "Bull Run" Russell reports the rout of the Federals ; The Monitor and the Merrimac ; Eating mules at Port Hudson ; Blue and Gray fraternize at Port Hudson ; General Lee invades Pennsylvania ; High tide at Gettysburg ; General Sherman marches from Atlanta to the sea ; Eliza Andrews comes home to the "burnt country" ; General Lee surrenders at Appomattox
- The coming of the Revoution. Mohawks spill tea in Boston Harbor ; John Adams journeys to the Continental Congress ; "Give me liberty or give me death!" ; Colonel Washington scouts the idea of independence ; Adams nominates Washington commander in chief ; A shot is fired that is heard around the world ; Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- The winning of independence. Ethan Allen captures Fort Ticonderoga ; The American army suffers at Valley Forge ; The world turned upside down at Yorktown ; America, the hope of the world -- Confederation, Constitution, and launching the new government. The thirteen states establish a confederation ; "A rising, not a setting sun" ; Washington is inaugurated president ; Jefferson and Hamilton strike a bargain ; Washington bids farewell to his countrymen ; How Jefferson lived in the White House -- The War of 1812. Tecumseh pledges support to the British ; The British burn Washington city ; Andrew Jackson routs the Redcoats at New Orleans ; "Peace!" -- The hardy frontiersman. "Old America is moving westward" ; "Leave England for America" ; Timothy Flint appraises the frontiersmen ; William Howells remembers neighborliness in Ohio -- Sailing, whaling, and steamboats. The first lowering ; How to cut and boil a whale ; Launching the first steamboat on western waters ; Mark Twain learns to be a pilot -- Social life in the early republic. Harriet Martineau finds a working girls' paradise ; Edward Everett Hale recalls a New England boyhood ; Rebecca Felton describes country life in Georgia ; Joseph Jefferson tries playacting in Springfield, Illinois ; Samuel Morse invents the telegraph ; Dr. Morton discovers anesthesia -- The reformers. "A fertility of projects for the salvation of the world" ; The lunatic fringe of reform ; Dorothea Dix pleads the cause of the insane ; A woman's declaration of independence ; Henry Thoreau builds a cabin at Walden Pond -- The South, slavery, and abolition. A Connecticut Yankee invents the cotton gin ; Luxury among the planters of Louisiana ; The Reverend Mr. Walsh inspects a slave ship ; Social classes among the slaves ; Field hands on the Combahee ; Thomas Dabney runs a model plantation ; Garrison is mobbed by the Boston conservatives ; John Brown makes a speech at Harper's Ferry -- Westward the course of empire. Trading furs on the Northwest coast ; The rendezvous of the mountain men ; John C. Fremont conquers the Sierras in midwinter ; Starvation and death at Donner Lake ; The Pony Express -- The rush for western riches. Sarah Royce braves the desert and the mountains ; Vigilante days and ways in Montana -- Texas and the Mexican War. Davy Crockett defends the Alamo ; Sam Houston whips the Mexicans at San Jacinto ; General Winfield Scott captures Mexico City -- Politics. Andrew Jackson is inaugurated president ; "John Quincy Adams is no more" ; William Herndon remembers Abraham Lincoln ; Abraham Lincoln is nominated in the wigwam -- O captain, my captain. Nathaniel Hawthorne sees President Lincoln ; Lincoln reads the Emancipation Proclamation ; Lincoln frees the slaves ; Lincoln consoles Mrs. Bixby ; President Lincoln is assassinated -- Behind the lines. Writing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" ; The Confederates burn their cotton ; Anna Dickinson sees draft riots in New York City ; Suffering in Andersonville Prison ; The disintegration of the Confederate Army -- The Blue and the Gray. Mrs. Chesnut watches the attack on Fort Sumter ; Abner Doubleday defends Fort Sumter ; "Bull Run" Russell reports the rout of the Federals ; The Monitor and the Merrimac ; Eating mules at Port Hudson ; Blue and Gray fraternize at Port Hudson ; General Lee invades Pennsylvania ; High tide at Gettysburg ; General Sherman marches from Atlanta to the sea ; Eliza Andrews comes home to the "burnt country" ; General Lee surrenders at Appomattox
- Audio CD: 1. Introduction -- 2. Mowhawks spill tea in Boston Harbor -- 3. Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- 4. The American army suffers at Valley Forge -- 5. Tecumseh pledges support to the British -- 6. "Old America is moving westward" -- 7. Settlers recall growing up in the early Republic -- 8. Mark Twain on the Pony Express -- 9. Three accounts of pioneer life -- 10. The Reverend Walsh inspects a slave ship -- 11. Abraham Lincoln : O captain, my captain -- 12. Writing "The battle hymn of the Republic" -- 13. The Civil War ends with a surrender -- 14. Robert Louis Stevenson travels across the Plains -- 15. Henry Ford constructs a gasoline buggy -- 16. Jacob Riis discovers how the other half lives -- 17. Theodore Roosevelt takes charge of the Navy -- 18. The World Wars -- 19. The Marines cross a river under fire on Guadalcanal -- 20. An American plane ushers in the Atomic Age -- 21. The GIs and modern America -- 22. Edward R. Murrow on the meaning of television -- 23. John F. Kennedy delivers his inaugural address -- 24. Rosa Parks gets arrested in Montgomery -- 25. The Democratic convention, August 1968 -- 26. Neil Armstrong reminisces about his moon walk -- 27. The harrowing evacuation of Saigon -- 28. Bill Gates on the birth of the personal computer -- 29. Michael Kinsley on the impeachment of Bill Clinton -- 30. Toward the new millennium -- 31. Conclusion
- Control code
- ocm41400736
- Dimensions
- 29 cm +
- Dimensions
- 4 3/4 in. or 12 cm. diameter
- Edition
- 1st ed.
- Extent
- xv, 605 pages
- Groove width / pitch
- not applicable
- Isbn
- 9780965014311
- Kind of cutting
- not applicable
- Kind of disc cylinder or tape
- mass produced
- Kind of material
- plastic with metal
- Lccn
- 99023797
- Media category
-
- unmediated
- audio
- Media MARC source
-
- rdamedia
- rdamedia
- Media type code
-
- n
- s
- Other physical details
- illustrations
- Special playback characteristics
- digital recording
- Specific material designation
- sound disc
- Speed
- 1.4m. per second (discs)
- System control number
- (OCoLC)41400736
- Tape configuration
- not applicable
- Tape width
- not applicable
- Label
- Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors]
- Link
- Note
-
- "A Lou Reda book."
- Rev., updated ed. of: The heritage of America / edited by Henry Steele Commager and Allan Nevins. Rev. and enl. ed. 1949
- Accompanying material
- 1 audio disc (73 min., 56 sec. : digital, CD audio ; 4 3/4 in.)
- Bibliography note
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 591-597) and index
- Capture and storage technique
- unknown
- Carrier category
-
- volume
- audio disc
- Carrier category code
-
- nc
- sd
- Carrier MARC source
-
- rdacarrier
- rdacarrier
- Configuration of playback channels
- stereophonic
- Content category
-
- text
- spoken word
- Content type code
-
- txt
- spw
- Content type MARC source
-
- rdacontent
- rdacontent
- Contents
-
- The coming of the Revoution. Mohawks spill tea in Boston Harbor ; John Adams journeys to the Continental Congress ; "Give me liberty or give me death!" ; Colonel Washington scouts the idea of independence ; Adams nominates Washington commander in chief ; A shot is fired that is heard around the world ; Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- The winning of independence. Ethan Allen captures Fort Ticonderoga ; The American army suffers at Valley Forge ; The world turned upside down at Yorktown ; America, the hope of the world -- Confederation, Constitution, and launching the new government. The thirteen states establish a confederation ; "A rising, not a setting sun" ; Washington is inaugurated president ; Jefferson and Hamilton strike a bargain ; Washington bids farewell to his countrymen ; How Jefferson lived in the White House -- The War of 1812. Tecumseh pledges support to the British ; The British burn Washington city ; Andrew Jackson routs the Redcoats at New Orleans ; "Peace!" -- The hardy frontiersman. "Old America is moving westward" ; "Leave England for America" ; Timothy Flint appraises the frontiersmen ; William Howells remembers neighborliness in Ohio -- Sailing, whaling, and steamboats. The first lowering ; How to cut and boil a whale ; Launching the first steamboat on western waters ; Mark Twain learns to be a pilot -- Social life in the early republic. Harriet Martineau finds a working girls' paradise ; Edward Everett Hale recalls a New England boyhood ; Rebecca Felton describes country life in Georgia ; Joseph Jefferson tries playacting in Springfield, Illinois ; Samuel Morse invents the telegraph ; Dr. Morton discovers anesthesia -- The reformers. "A fertility of projects for the salvation of the world" ; The lunatic fringe of reform ; Dorothea Dix pleads the cause of the insane ; A woman's declaration of independence ; Henry Thoreau builds a cabin at Walden Pond -- The South, slavery, and abolition. A Connecticut Yankee invents the cotton gin ; Luxury among the planters of Louisiana ; The Reverend Mr. Walsh inspects a slave ship ; Social classes among the slaves ; Field hands on the Combahee ; Thomas Dabney runs a model plantation ; Garrison is mobbed by the Boston conservatives ; John Brown makes a speech at Harper's Ferry -- Westward the course of empire. Trading furs on the Northwest coast ; The rendezvous of the mountain men ; John C. Fremont conquers the Sierras in midwinter ; Starvation and death at Donner Lake ; The Pony Express -- The rush for western riches. Sarah Royce braves the desert and the mountains ; Vigilante days and ways in Montana -- Texas and the Mexican War. Davy Crockett defends the Alamo ; Sam Houston whips the Mexicans at San Jacinto ; General Winfield Scott captures Mexico City -- Politics. Andrew Jackson is inaugurated president ; "John Quincy Adams is no more" ; William Herndon remembers Abraham Lincoln ; Abraham Lincoln is nominated in the wigwam -- O captain, my captain. Nathaniel Hawthorne sees President Lincoln ; Lincoln reads the Emancipation Proclamation ; Lincoln frees the slaves ; Lincoln consoles Mrs. Bixby ; President Lincoln is assassinated -- Behind the lines. Writing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" ; The Confederates burn their cotton ; Anna Dickinson sees draft riots in New York City ; Suffering in Andersonville Prison ; The disintegration of the Confederate Army -- The Blue and the Gray. Mrs. Chesnut watches the attack on Fort Sumter ; Abner Doubleday defends Fort Sumter ; "Bull Run" Russell reports the rout of the Federals ; The Monitor and the Merrimac ; Eating mules at Port Hudson ; Blue and Gray fraternize at Port Hudson ; General Lee invades Pennsylvania ; High tide at Gettysburg ; General Sherman marches from Atlanta to the sea ; Eliza Andrews comes home to the "burnt country" ; General Lee surrenders at Appomattox
- The coming of the Revoution. Mohawks spill tea in Boston Harbor ; John Adams journeys to the Continental Congress ; "Give me liberty or give me death!" ; Colonel Washington scouts the idea of independence ; Adams nominates Washington commander in chief ; A shot is fired that is heard around the world ; Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- The winning of independence. Ethan Allen captures Fort Ticonderoga ; The American army suffers at Valley Forge ; The world turned upside down at Yorktown ; America, the hope of the world -- Confederation, Constitution, and launching the new government. The thirteen states establish a confederation ; "A rising, not a setting sun" ; Washington is inaugurated president ; Jefferson and Hamilton strike a bargain ; Washington bids farewell to his countrymen ; How Jefferson lived in the White House -- The War of 1812. Tecumseh pledges support to the British ; The British burn Washington city ; Andrew Jackson routs the Redcoats at New Orleans ; "Peace!" -- The hardy frontiersman. "Old America is moving westward" ; "Leave England for America" ; Timothy Flint appraises the frontiersmen ; William Howells remembers neighborliness in Ohio -- Sailing, whaling, and steamboats. The first lowering ; How to cut and boil a whale ; Launching the first steamboat on western waters ; Mark Twain learns to be a pilot -- Social life in the early republic. Harriet Martineau finds a working girls' paradise ; Edward Everett Hale recalls a New England boyhood ; Rebecca Felton describes country life in Georgia ; Joseph Jefferson tries playacting in Springfield, Illinois ; Samuel Morse invents the telegraph ; Dr. Morton discovers anesthesia -- The reformers. "A fertility of projects for the salvation of the world" ; The lunatic fringe of reform ; Dorothea Dix pleads the cause of the insane ; A woman's declaration of independence ; Henry Thoreau builds a cabin at Walden Pond -- The South, slavery, and abolition. A Connecticut Yankee invents the cotton gin ; Luxury among the planters of Louisiana ; The Reverend Mr. Walsh inspects a slave ship ; Social classes among the slaves ; Field hands on the Combahee ; Thomas Dabney runs a model plantation ; Garrison is mobbed by the Boston conservatives ; John Brown makes a speech at Harper's Ferry -- Westward the course of empire. Trading furs on the Northwest coast ; The rendezvous of the mountain men ; John C. Fremont conquers the Sierras in midwinter ; Starvation and death at Donner Lake ; The Pony Express -- The rush for western riches. Sarah Royce braves the desert and the mountains ; Vigilante days and ways in Montana -- Texas and the Mexican War. Davy Crockett defends the Alamo ; Sam Houston whips the Mexicans at San Jacinto ; General Winfield Scott captures Mexico City -- Politics. Andrew Jackson is inaugurated president ; "John Quincy Adams is no more" ; William Herndon remembers Abraham Lincoln ; Abraham Lincoln is nominated in the wigwam -- O captain, my captain. Nathaniel Hawthorne sees President Lincoln ; Lincoln reads the Emancipation Proclamation ; Lincoln frees the slaves ; Lincoln consoles Mrs. Bixby ; President Lincoln is assassinated -- Behind the lines. Writing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" ; The Confederates burn their cotton ; Anna Dickinson sees draft riots in New York City ; Suffering in Andersonville Prison ; The disintegration of the Confederate Army -- The Blue and the Gray. Mrs. Chesnut watches the attack on Fort Sumter ; Abner Doubleday defends Fort Sumter ; "Bull Run" Russell reports the rout of the Federals ; The Monitor and the Merrimac ; Eating mules at Port Hudson ; Blue and Gray fraternize at Port Hudson ; General Lee invades Pennsylvania ; High tide at Gettysburg ; General Sherman marches from Atlanta to the sea ; Eliza Andrews comes home to the "burnt country" ; General Lee surrenders at Appomattox
- Audio CD: 1. Introduction -- 2. Mowhawks spill tea in Boston Harbor -- 3. Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence -- 4. The American army suffers at Valley Forge -- 5. Tecumseh pledges support to the British -- 6. "Old America is moving westward" -- 7. Settlers recall growing up in the early Republic -- 8. Mark Twain on the Pony Express -- 9. Three accounts of pioneer life -- 10. The Reverend Walsh inspects a slave ship -- 11. Abraham Lincoln : O captain, my captain -- 12. Writing "The battle hymn of the Republic" -- 13. The Civil War ends with a surrender -- 14. Robert Louis Stevenson travels across the Plains -- 15. Henry Ford constructs a gasoline buggy -- 16. Jacob Riis discovers how the other half lives -- 17. Theodore Roosevelt takes charge of the Navy -- 18. The World Wars -- 19. The Marines cross a river under fire on Guadalcanal -- 20. An American plane ushers in the Atomic Age -- 21. The GIs and modern America -- 22. Edward R. Murrow on the meaning of television -- 23. John F. Kennedy delivers his inaugural address -- 24. Rosa Parks gets arrested in Montgomery -- 25. The Democratic convention, August 1968 -- 26. Neil Armstrong reminisces about his moon walk -- 27. The harrowing evacuation of Saigon -- 28. Bill Gates on the birth of the personal computer -- 29. Michael Kinsley on the impeachment of Bill Clinton -- 30. Toward the new millennium -- 31. Conclusion
- Control code
- ocm41400736
- Dimensions
- 29 cm +
- Dimensions
- 4 3/4 in. or 12 cm. diameter
- Edition
- 1st ed.
- Extent
- xv, 605 pages
- Groove width / pitch
- not applicable
- Isbn
- 9780965014311
- Kind of cutting
- not applicable
- Kind of disc cylinder or tape
- mass produced
- Kind of material
- plastic with metal
- Lccn
- 99023797
- Media category
-
- unmediated
- audio
- Media MARC source
-
- rdamedia
- rdamedia
- Media type code
-
- n
- s
- Other physical details
- illustrations
- Special playback characteristics
- digital recording
- Specific material designation
- sound disc
- Speed
- 1.4m. per second (discs)
- System control number
- (OCoLC)41400736
- Tape configuration
- not applicable
- Tape width
- not applicable
Subject
- United States -- History | Sources
- History
- Illustrated works
- Illustrated works
- Pictorial works
- Sources
- United States
- United States -- History -- Pictorial works
- United States -- History -- Pictorial works
- United States -- History -- Sources
- United States -- History -- Sources
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.mortonlibrary.org/portal/Witness-to-America--an-illustrated-documentary/QGn7mz-0ZxI/" typeof="Book http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Item"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.mortonlibrary.org/portal/Witness-to-America--an-illustrated-documentary/QGn7mz-0ZxI/">Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors]</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.mortonlibrary.org/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="https://link.mortonlibrary.org">Morton Public Library District</a></span></span></span></span></div>
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Data Citation of the Item Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors]
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.mortonlibrary.org/portal/Witness-to-America--an-illustrated-documentary/QGn7mz-0ZxI/" typeof="Book http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Item"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.mortonlibrary.org/portal/Witness-to-America--an-illustrated-documentary/QGn7mz-0ZxI/">Witness to America : an illustrated documentary history of the United States from the Revolution to today, Stephen Ambrose & Douglas Brinkley, [editors]</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.mortonlibrary.org/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="https://link.mortonlibrary.org">Morton Public Library District</a></span></span></span></span></div>