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A story of espionage, intrigue, chicanery, and cynical self-interest, a diplomatic history.
Kraus, M. Richard B. Morris: an assessment.--Vaughan, A. T. The evolution of Virginia history: early historians of the first colony.--Ward, H. M. The search for American identity: early historians of New England.--Bonomi, P. U. The middle colonies: embryo of the new political order.--White, P. L. Herbert Levi Osgood: an intellectual tragedy.--Klein, M. M. Detachment and the writing of American history: the dilemma of Carl Becker.--Morris, R. B. The spacious empire of Lawrence Henry Gipson.--Oberholzer, E. Puritanism revisited.--Waters, J. J. From democracy to demography: recent historiography on the New England town.--Johnson, H. A. American colonial legal history: a historiographical interpretation.--Billias, G. A. The first un-Americans: the loyalists in American historiography.--Henderson, H. J. The first party system.--Kline, M.-J. The writings of Richard B. Morris (p. 375-385).
Traces the events of the fifteen year period following World War II through accounts drawn from letters, diaries, reminiscences, novels, poetry, press reports, selections from key public documents, and other contemporary sources.
Character sketches of Franklin, Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Jay, Madison, and Hamilton emphasize their reasons for turning against Britain and their prominence in the American Revolution.
State papers that changed the course of history from Washington to Reagan.
Uses excerpts from letters, diaries, novels, poetry, press reports, documents, and other contemporary sources to examine United States foreign policy from 1962 to 1975.