Results: 4732 books
Sort By:
NewTrending

The evolution of the oil industry

Victor Ross

"The evolution of the oil industry" by Victor Ross is a historical account written in the early 20th century. It charts how petroleum progressed from ancient curiosity to a globally organized, technology-driven industry, highlighting the United States’ pioneering role, standardization, and the systems that made oil vital in peace and war. Expect clear explanations of origins and geology, early Pennsylvania breakthroughs and figures like Edwin L. Drake, global fields, drilling and pipelines, refining, and the industry’s economic and social reach. The opening of this volume sets the tone with a preface arguing that petroleum enabled a new industrial “order,” reducing waste through standardized production and organization, with the U.S. leading and benefiting society broadly. It then surveys oil in history and legend—from biblical and classical references to Baku fire temples, Asian practices, Native American use, and George Washington’s remarks—before explaining what petroleum is, competing origin theories, geological migration, natural gas, gushers, and the diversity of crudes. The narrative turns to America’s beginnings: salt-brine drilling that revealed oil, Kier’s “rock oil,” Bissell’s vision, and Drake’s 1859 Titusville well, followed by booms like Pithole. A global overview follows (Russia, Roumania, Galicia, British imperial fields, Dutch East Indies, Japan, Mexico, Peru) and the rise of U.S. dominance across Pennsylvania, California, Oklahoma, and Texas. Practical chapters outline how geologists locate pools, how wells are drilled (cable-tool and rotary), “shooted” with nitroglycerin, and pumped, along with costs and risks. Finally, it explains early collection and storage, the shift from river barges and wagon caravans to pipelines, the teamsters’ resistance, and the large-scale, efficiently organized pipe-line systems that transformed transport—where the excerpt ends mid-discussion. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Trading in Scrabbletown

Alice Brayton

"Trading in Scrabbletown" by Alice Brayton is a historical account written in the mid-20th century. Drawing on a cache of early 19th-century shop papers, it reconstructs the trading world of Scrabbletown (Swansea, Massachusetts) through the life and work of trader Israel Brayton. The focus is on how his company store linked local farms, weavers, and small factories to regional markets, with recurring figures like his wife Keziah, partners John Mason and William Bowers, and clerk Wheaton Luther. The opening of the book explains the discovery of a barrel of never-published papers and uses them to identify Brayton and his network, then sketches his family background, brief wartime service, and marriage before following his return in 1815 to open a company store tied to the Swansea Union Cotton Manufacturing Company. It shows how he organized home weavers, paid largely in goods, and stocked an astonishing range of supplies sourced from Boston, Providence, and beyond, while juggling credit, counterfeit notes, and shortages. The narrative then follows his expansion to an Egypt (Somerset) branch, additional yarn from the Lyman and Georgia mills, and dealings with the Fall River (Troy) factory, alongside glimpses of community life—poor relief, school governance, church singing, and period reading tastes. A sizable section traces a straw-bonnet venture: placing braid with local young women, pressing and boxing bonnets, and testing markets via trips to Newport, Albany, and New York. It closes with William Bowers in Savannah trying to sell bonnets and textiles on commission, reporting frank market feedback on fashion, sizing, and quality. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Some forgotten Pennsylvania heroines

Henry W. Shoemaker

"Some forgotten Pennsylvania heroines by Henry W. Shoemaker" is a historical address and collection of brief biographical sketches written in the early 20th century. It challenges status-based notions of fame and spotlights overlooked Pennsylvania women from frontier, Revolutionary, and Civil War contexts, emphasizing courage, service, and moral character. The address opens by questioning familiar icons and then recounts vivid lives of lesser-known figures: Mary Jemison, the Seneca-adopted “White Woman of the Genesee”; Regina Hartman, recognized after captivity by a hymn at Carlisle; and “Molly Pitcher,” who manned a cannon at Monmouth and endured hardship afterward. It adds brisk vignettes of frontier bravery and sacrifice—Peggy Marteeny’s rescue under Indian pursuit, Sabina Wolfe’s rise from country girl to social leader, Barbara Frietchie’s defiant flag, Frances Slocum’s life among Native Americans, Elizabeth Zane’s frontier heroism, and Jennie Wade’s death at Gettysburg. The narrative links Pennsylvania roots to national figures like Nancy Hanks and tells the tragic tale of Mary Wolford, namesake of Young Woman’s Creek. It closes with a call to memorialize these women as exemplars of modesty, grit, and public spirit, noting contemporaries such as Jane Addams who carry their legacy forward. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Historical sketches of the south

Emma Langdon Roche

"Historical sketches of the south" by Emma Langdon Roche is a historical account written in the early 20th century. It traces the origins, laws, and persistence of American slavery, then narrows to a vivid, documentarian chronicle of the last known slave ship, the Clotilde, and the Africans (the Tarkars) brought to Alabama. Blending broad history with eyewitness testimony and the author’s own illustrations, it focuses especially on Mobile, the illegal trade’s networks, and the formation of a distinct African community. The opening of the work surveys how contrasting colonial cultures in Virginia and New England shaped attitudes toward slavery, outlines the rise of the tobacco economy and the 1619 arrival of enslaved Africans, and follows early Southern-led efforts (notably Jefferson’s) to restrict the trade amid Northern commercial complicity. It then details how illegal trafficking flourished despite the 1808 ban, covering diplomatic clashes with Britain, the Ashburton Treaty patrols, and notorious cases like the Wanderer and Echo. The narrative shifts to Mobile in 1858–1859—amid filibuster tensions and local defiance—where river-man Tim Meaher and Captain William Foster send the schooner Clotilde to Dahomey; it recounts the Dahomean raid on the Tarkars, their laws and customs, their sale at Whydah, and the harsh but comparatively less brutal “middle passage” under Foster. Finally, it describes the clandestine night tow up Mobile Bay, the burning and scuttling of the Clotilde, and the secret removal of 116 captives to a canebrake plantation, where they were hidden in whispered silence—marking only the beginning of their story. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

China collecting in America

Alice Morse Earle

"China collecting in America" by Alice Morse Earle is a historical account written in the late 19th century. It explores the passion, practice, and history of seeking old china and related tableware in the United States, especially New England, blending personal memoir with antiquarian research. The work likely appeals to collectors and readers of material culture, moving from anecdotes of “china hunting” into guidance, ethics, and the evolution of tableware from wood and pewter to Delft, English wares, and Oriental porcelain. The opening of the book recounts the author’s “midsummer madness” for hunting old china across New England, detailing the thrills, frequent disappointments, and crafty etiquette of buying from wary farm households. Vivid anecdotes include failed negotiations (a Nankin bowl used for mixing chicken-dough), misidentified “Martha Washington” plates, evasive hoarders, and the colorful stratagems of dealers—alongside a playful fantasy of collecting from a tin-peddler’s cart. The narrative weighs the ethics of the chase, from gentle persuasion to dubious ruses and even brushes with stolen goods, and sketches the social settings of auctions, schoolhouse intelligence-gathering, and unglamorous roadside meals. The next section turns to history, surveying wooden trenchers and pewter—porringers, platters, candlesticks, and communion services—their manufacture, household pride, and preservation, illustrated by a Shrewsbury homestead laden with shining pewter. The account then begins tracing early American porcelain use and importation: English misconceptions about china, Delft and stoneware appearances in colonial inventories, the silver-mounted Winthrop jug, Boston’s early 18th‑century advertisements for “chayney,” and regional contrasts showing New England’s lead. It closes this opening stretch with the culture of repairing cherished pieces and a glimpse of Franklin sending select English and Oriental wares home to Philadelphia. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The North-Americans of yesterday : a comparative study of North-American Indian life, customs, and products, on the theory of the ethnic unity of the race

Frederick Samuel Dellenbaugh

The North-Americans of yesterday : a comparative study of North-American…. by Frederick S. Dellenbaugh is a comparative ethnological study written in the late 19th century. It surveys the lifeways, arts, languages, governments, myths, and material culture of Indigenous peoples across North America, arguing for their ethnic unity while correcting romanticism and crude “stone-age” time scales. Drawing on fieldwork, museum collections, and the Bureau of American Ethnology, it offers a broad, illustrated synthesis for general readers and students of American archaeology and ethnology. The opening of this study explains its origin in public lectures, acknowledges major scholarly sources, and sets the author’s aim: to present Indigenous North Americans as a coherent, once-vigorous world-race whose cultures varied by environment and history rather than by kind. Dellenbaugh critiques rigid global “Paleolithic/Neolithic” schemes, proposes that pre- or early-glacial land connections and climate shifts drove latitudinal migrations, and sketches a cultural gradient from southern centers (e.g., Yucatec) through Uto-Aztecan, Siouan, Algonquian, Athapascan, to the distinct Eskimo. He contrasts lowland declines with highland florescence (e.g., Nahuatl), notes mountain barriers shaping east–west differences, and argues the glacial era’s effects persisted into recent times. The introductory chapter also repudiates the misnomer “Indian,” adopts “Amerind,” and frankly recounts European brutality while urging objective study beyond stereotype. The next chapter begins a linguistic overview: many stock families and dialects, the persistence of languages (e.g., Tewa at Hano), sign-language and trade jargons like Chinook, the polysynthetic structure (with a Basque analogy), phonetic peculiarities, efforts to standardize transcription, and the notable homogeneity of Eskimo speech. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Birth control laws : shall we keep them, change them, or abolish them

Mary Ware Dennett

"Birth Control Laws: Shall We Keep Them, Change Them, or Abolish Them" by Mary Ware Dennett is a public-policy treatise written in the early 20th century. It scrutinizes how U.S. federal and state statutes born of “Comstockery” restrict access to contraceptive information, and weighs whether these laws should be retained, modified, or repealed. The work maps the legal framework, recounts its origins, and considers practical and ethical consequences for families, physicians, and public institutions. The opening of the treatise sets its scope: it will not argue the merits of birth control itself, but will examine the laws that govern access to contraceptive knowledge and how those laws should change. Dennett outlines the book’s structure and then, through vivid examples—a mother’s letter to her daughter, a doctor-to-doctor exchange, and a lawmaker’s private plea—shows how federal statutes make even basic advice a crime. She summarizes key federal provisions and parallel state measures, highlighting their conflation of contraception with obscenity and abortion, peculiar extremes like Connecticut’s ban on use, and New York’s narrow medical carveout that enabled a clinic. The author defines birth control as prevention of conception (not abortion), exposes the absurdity of criminalizing knowledge but not its use, and illustrates distribution barriers that persist even in states without explicit bans, as seen in the Chicago clinic fight. Turning to origins, she describes the bill’s rushed passage in Congress under Anthony Comstock’s influence, the removal of an early physician exemption, and the unique American practice of classing contraceptive science with indecency, alongside Comstock’s methods, mindset, and critics. She notes that enforcement has been sporadic and often selective—citing politicized cases and light penalties—underscoring official inconsistency and the practical unenforceability of the laws. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The war in Nicaragua

William Walker

The war in Nicaragua by William Walker is a historical memoir written in the mid-19th century. It presents Walker’s firsthand account of his filibuster expedition amid Nicaragua’s civil strife between Democrats and Legitimists, mixing battlefield narrative, political argument, and self-justification. Readers can expect campaign planning and combat episodes, factional rivalries, and Walker’s claim that his small American force sought to impose order in a region he portrays as unstable. The opening of the narrative frames the work with a dedication to fallen comrades and a preface on the challenges of writing contemporary history, then swiftly sketches the 1854 Nicaraguan revolution, the rival constitutions, Democrats versus Legitimists, the siege of Granada, Chamorro’s death, and regional pressures from Guatemala and Honduras. Walker recounts his earlier Lower California venture to explain motives, then details Byron Cole’s colonization grant, the legal care taken to avoid U.S. neutrality violations, and the fraught charter, seizure, and midnight departure of the brig Vesta carrying 58 men. After arriving at Realejo, he meets Director Castellon and the haughty General Muñoz, forms the American Phalanx, and proposes seizing Rivas; the ensuing operation lands at El Gigante, pushes inland through storms, skirmishes at Tola, and attacks Rivas, where native commander Ramirez falters and the Americans fight house to house before retreating with heavy losses, including officers Crocker and Kewen. At San Juan del Sur they commandeer the schooner San José, a fire set by two rogues forces a harsh example—Dewey is shot at sea—then the force rejoins the Vesta and returns to Realejo, where Walker challenges Muñoz’s conduct while Castellon pleads for the Americans to remain; the excerpt closes as Castellon arrives to persuade Walker to continue the campaign. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Eccentricities of genius : memories of famous men and women of the platform and stage

James B. (James Burton) Pond

"Eccentricities of genius : memories of famous men and women of the platform…" by Major J. B. Pond is a collection of reminiscences and character sketches written in the late 19th century. From the vantage point of a leading lecture manager, it surveys orators, preachers, actors, humorists, explorers, and authors who animated the lyceum and the stage, mixing backstage anecdotes with public portraits. The emphasis is on the quirks, habits, and magnetism that made them draw crowds, and on the culture of the lecture platform itself. The result is a lively insider’s tour of the era’s great public voices. The opening of the volume presents title matter, a contents and illustration list, and a playful preface stitched from other writers’ prefaces, then shifts to Pond’s own origin story: a frontier, abolitionist upbringing; a printer’s apprenticeship; time in “Bleeding Kansas”; and later journalism in Utah that led to managing Ann Eliza Young’s sensational lectures and a swift national stir. He recounts acquiring the Redpath Bureau, his credo for approaching famous people, and signals the book’s scope across orators, clergy, women lecturers, humorists, explorers, actors, and authors. The first profiles elevate the “triumvirate” of Gough, Beecher, and Wendell Phillips, then sketch Garrison, Sumner, Depew, Horace Porter, Ingersoll, Frederick Douglass, and Booker T. Washington with brisk judgments and vivid anecdotes. The section on Beecher becomes an intimate travel memoir, including Southern appearances where initial hostility turned to ovations—most memorably in Richmond—showcasing Beecher’s courage, persuasive power, and gift for reconciliation. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The army behind the army

E. Alexander (Edward Alexander) Powell

The Army Behind the Army by E. Alexander Powell is a historical account written in the early 20th century. It explores the often unseen services and technologies that sustained the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I—especially communications, engineering, transportation, and other logistical arms. The focus is on how specialists and technicians, rather than front-line troops alone, made large-scale modern warfare possible. The opening of the volume recasts the Signal Corps as the army’s “nerve-system,” replacing the flag-waving myth with telephones, radios, pigeons, runners, panels, lamps, and an extensive wire network. Powell outlines the corps’ rapid expansion, its recruitment of U.S. telephone talent (including female operators), the creation of color-coded outpost wire, and secrecy tools like buzzerphones and twisted-pair lines. He highlights listening-posts that tapped enemy currents, radio-intercept and direction-finding teams that mapped German nets and even staged a deceptive “false corps net,” and the reliability and heroism of carrier pigeons when every other link failed. A photographic branch—air and ground—trained specialists to map, report, teach, and buoy morale with films that countered enemy propaganda. The section closes with striking innovations: radiotelephony with aircraft, multiplexing many calls over a single wire, trees used as natural radio antennae, and a practical, unbreakable cipher-transmission device. The narrative then turns to the Engineers—motto “Essayons”—showing their vast remit from fighting as needed to building railways, ports, roads, and forests-to-lumber operations, operating inland waterways, shipping complete locomotives, and even fielding armored railcars, before introducing the life-or-death problem of supplying water to armies on the move. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Life of George Washington, volume 2 of 5

Washington Irving

"Life of George Washington, volume 2 of 5" by Washington Irving is a historical biography written in the mid-19th century. This volume centers on Washington’s early leadership of the Continental Army, charting the siege of Boston, the fraught Canadian venture, and the opening New York–New Jersey campaigns. It highlights battlefield decisions, supply and discipline challenges, and vivid portraits of both American and British commanders, revealing how Washington forged an army under pressure. The opening of the volume follows Washington’s arrival at Cambridge to take command, his survey of British leaders (Howe, Clinton, Burgoyne), and a stark contrast between well-ordered British lines and a raw, sprawling American force short on men, engineers, and supplies. Irving sketches the camp’s personalities and organization—Putnam’s energy, Greene’s promise, Gates’s role, Lee’s harsh discipline and irreverence, and Washington’s close reliance on Joseph Reed—while describing reforms in logistics and fortifications and the arrival of frontier riflemen under Daniel Morgan. Washington refuses to scatter his army along the coast, articulates a clear policy for defending the whole, and, amid efforts to provoke a British sortie at Boston, grapples with a near-ruinous powder shortage and asserts the dignity of the patriot cause in a firm exchange with General Gage over prisoner treatment. Parallel chapters trace turmoil on the northern frontier—Allen and Arnold’s rivalry after Ticonderoga, Congress’s legitimizing steps, Schuyler and Montgomery’s preparations, Indian diplomacy at Cambridge, and the conception of a bold overland thrust toward Quebec—culminating in Schuyler’s small force pushing to the Isle aux Noix and Washington’s unsuccessful attempt to draw the British out by seizing a forward hill near Charlestown Neck. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

A girl's life eighty years ago : Selections from the letters of Eliza Southgate Bowne

Eliza Southgate Bowne

"A girl''s life eighty years ago : Selections from the letters of Eliza…." by Eliza Southgate Bowne is a collection of letters written in the late 19th century. The volume gathers the spirited correspondence of a New England girl coming of age at the turn of the nineteenth century, tracing her education, family ties, travels, social whirl, and courtship. An editor’s framing introduction situates her life and underscores the cultural value of letter-writing, while portraits and notes enrich the social backdrop. The opening of the collection provides an editorial portrait of Eliza’s family origins in Scarborough, Maine; her schooling near Boston; her bright debut into society; her marriage to Walter Bowne; and her early death after a southern voyage, presented as a case for the vividness of letters. It then shifts to her earliest surviving letters from boarding school, where she reports crowded sleeping quarters, lessons in arithmetic and geometry, the prospect of French and dancing, and housework routines, all while appealing to her parents for more study and supplies. Subsequent notes from Boston and home mix theater and assembly-going with requests for bonnets, wigs, and gowns, news of siblings’ illnesses, and affectionate household management. The correspondence also starts to show her thoughtful voice—critiquing a severe teacher, defending her reputation, and debating with a cousin about women’s education, love, marriage, and social expectations—against a lively backdrop of visits, partners at balls, and encounters with prominent New England families. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The patriarch of one hundred years : being reminiscences, historical and biographical, of Rev. Henry Boehm

Henry Boehm

"The patriarch of one hundred years : being reminiscences, historical and…." by Rev. J. B. Wakeley, D.D. is a historical and biographical memoir written in the late 19th century. It presents the life and ministry of Rev. Henry Boehm, using his extensive journals to portray early American Methodism, its pioneers, revivals, and circuits, culminating in his centennial celebrations. Readers can expect vivid portraits of figures like Bishop Francis Asbury and accounts of frontier evangelism, camp-meetings, and the growth of the Methodist Episcopal Church. The opening of the volume lays out the project’s origin: Boehm explains in a preface that, urged by church leaders and aided by Wakeley, he shaped a massive journal into a narrative meant to preserve the spirit and facts of “primitive Methodism.” A table of contents promises a life told through circuits, conferences, and key personalities. The first chapters recount Boehm’s Swiss Mennonite ancestry, his father Martin’s conversion and eventual role with the United Brethren and Methodists, and Henry’s own upbringing, schooldays under a Hessian teacher, conversion in a mill loft, and the misstep of delaying church membership. He then sketches early preachers (notably Robert Strawbridge and the fiery Benjamin Abbott) and describes the building and influence of Boehm’s Chapel, where a revival led him to join the Church and become a class leader. Subsequent chapters narrate the General Conference of 1800 in Baltimore and the Philadelphia Conference at Duck Creek, both marked by powerful revivals and the election of Richard Whatcoat; the history of Barratt’s Chapel and Boehm’s vow of consecration during a bout of illness; and his early itinerant work on Dorchester and Annamessex Circuits, where sweeping awakenings among white and Black worshipers are punctuated by striking anecdotes (a preacher lost in the Cypress Swamp, a hawk dropping a fish for dinner). The extract closes as he moves to Kent Circuit, honors early lights like William Gill and John Smith, and visits the dying father of Shadrach Bostwick, pausing even to exhort a gathered roadside crowd when a house meeting is canceled. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Thrilling incidents of the Indian war of 1862 : being a personal narrative of the outrages and horrors witnessed by Mrs. L. Eastlick in Minnesota

L. (Lavina) Eastlick

"Thrilling incidents of the Indian war of 1862 : being a personal narrative of…" by Mrs. L. Eastlick is a first-person historical account written in the mid-19th century. It recounts a Minnesota settler’s ordeal during the Dakota War, focusing on the Lake Shetek attacks, her desperate flight, and the devastation visited on her family and neighbors. The work aims both to bear witness to what she saw and to solicit sympathy and support as she struggles to rebuild after the catastrophe. The opening of the narrative sets out the author’s purpose and need, then follows her family’s westward move to Lake Shetek, early cordial contacts with nearby Dakota, and the sudden eruption of violence. As the settlers attempt to flee together, they are overtaken on the prairie; she is wounded, her husband is killed, and children and neighbors are slain or taken, while she hides and then wanders injured for days. She eventually reconnects with survivors, learns that her son Merton has carried the baby Johnny many miles, and, with the help of a passing mail carrier, reaches an abandoned farm where they hide until a small detachment rescues them and takes them to New Ulm. There she receives hospital care and aid from soldiers and townspeople. The excerpt closes with her efforts to obtain official passes and assistance from state authorities to continue eastward to friends. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

An accurate and authentic journal of the siege of Quebec, 1759

Anonymous

"An accurate and authentic journal of the siege of Quebec, 1759 by Anonymous" is a first-hand historical account written in the mid-18th century. It traces the British campaign against French-held Quebec during the Seven Years' War, focusing on naval movements, siege operations, and the decisive battle that determined control of the city. The journal opens with a clear description of Quebec’s geography and formidable defenses, then follows the British fleet from Louisbourg into the St. Lawrence, the landing on Île d’Orléans, and the establishment of batteries at Point Lévis that set parts of the Upper Town, including the cathedral, ablaze. It recounts a failed assault at Montmorency after grenadiers advanced prematurely, followed by raids and maneuvers above the city as ships and troops slipped past Quebec under fire. The climax is a night landing west of the town, a daring ascent of the cliffs, and rapid deployment on the Plains of Abraham, where a disciplined close volley and bayonet charge routed the French. General Wolfe is mortally wounded at the moment of victory, and Montcalm dies of his wounds the next day. The city capitulates soon after; the terms are hastened by the season, the risk to the fleet, and reports of Bougainville’s approaching force. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The Molly Maguires and the detectives

Allan Pinkerton

"The Molly Maguires and the detectives" by Allan Pinkerton is a nonfiction investigative account written in the late 19th century. It chronicles Pinkerton’s covert campaign against the secretive Molly Maguires in Pennsylvania’s anthracite coal region, undertaken at the request of railroad executive Franklin B. Gowen, and follows undercover operative James McParlan (alias James McKenna) as he works to infiltrate the organization amid labor strife, violence, and political intrigue. The opening of the book sets Pinkerton’s pledge to tell a factual, unvarnished story of the coal fields and a violent secret society that, he argues, has evaded justice. Gowen solicits Pinkerton to penetrate the Mollies, whose alibis, intimidation, and sway over local politics have thwarted prosecutions, and Pinkerton accepts with strict conditions of secrecy and a plan to embed an Irish Catholic operative. Pinkerton then selects James McParlan, sketches his background and disguise, and launches him under the alias “James McKenna.” McKenna begins by tramping through towns like Port Clinton, Schuylkillhaven, Tremont, Tower City, and Minersville, posing as a job-seeking laborer while building contacts: he’s refused lodging by a drunken landlord, sheltered by an Irish family (with a comic drunk blocking a door), and quietly probes opinions by discussing scathing newspaper pieces on the Mollies with men like the switchman Fitzgibbons. He cultivates leads through saloon talk (including a former member’s hints that Mahanoy City is fertile ground), descends into a working mine to learn the setting, endures a snowbound stage ride and shabby lodging, and finally settles into a modest boarding house, using evenings in bars and card rooms to deepen his cover and map the society’s haunts. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

My country's part

Mary Synon

"My country's part" by Mary Synon is a patriotic educational work written in the early 20th century. It explains America’s role in the World War and what citizens—especially young people—can do to support it, blending an inspiring fictional vignette with clear, accessible history and civic guidance. Expect a strong emphasis on loyalty to the United States, the meaning of democracy, and practical home‑front duties like conservation, fundraising, and volunteer service. The opening of the book begins with a short story about John Sutton and his resolute, blind grandmother, who senses the danger of divided loyalties as John’s father attends a secret meeting where Irish and German sympathizers plot un-American acts. She confronts the conspirators, shaming them as immigrants who owe allegiance to their adopted country, then takes John to the Battery by Castle Garden to recount her famine-era immigration, love for Ireland and deeper gratitude to America, and to bind him by a pledge to put country first after God. The narrative then shifts to concise nonfiction: the arrival of American veterans from France, why the war is a fight of democracy versus autocracy, how German actions pushed the United States from neutrality to a congressional declaration of war, and how the nation mobilizes—selective service, training camps, Pershing’s forces, and the “rear-line trenches” of the home front through food and fuel conservation, Liberty Loans and Thrift Stamps, and Red Cross relief. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Le grand-ouest des États-Unis : Les pionniers et les peaux-rouges : les colons du Pacifique.

Louis Simonin

"Le grand-ouest des États-Unis : Les pionniers et les peaux-rouges : les colons…." by L. Simonin is an epistolary travel narrative and historical account written in the late 19th century. It follows a French traveler crossing the American Great West during the age of the transcontinental railroad, observing pioneers, Native nations, mining camps, and the swift rise of frontier towns, especially in Colorado. The work blends on-the-ground reportage with reflections on democracy and colonization, and signals an added study of early California. The opening of the book recounts how the Paris Exposition leads the narrator to accept an invitation to visit Colorado’s mines with J.-P. Whitney and Colonel Heine, framing the chapters as letters written en route. He sails to New York, speeds by rail to Chicago, and sketches that city’s explosive growth, grain elevators, lake-water tunnel, and pork industry before pushing on to Omaha, the launch point of the Pacific railroad. Crossing Illinois and Iowa alongside emigrants, he contrasts “civilization” with the Far West, describes Omaha and nearby tribes, and notes recent attacks on railway workers. He then rides the Union Pacific across the Platte country to Julesburg, evokes prairie fires, French toponyms, and buffalo, visits Fort Sedgwick, and boards the overland stage with an armed escort. The stage journey to Denver brings fortified stations, accounts of frontier violence (including Sand Creek), harrowing captivity tales, and admiration for the grit of settlers—ending with a safe arrival. In Denver he depicts a young but bustling city born of 1859 gold finds, its institutions, markets, and outsized produce, then outlines the territory’s origins and social life before setting off into the Rockies; the section closes with horseback travels to Central City and Georgetown and vivid notes on dusty roads and communal washing stops. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Jewish influences in American life : volume III of the International Jew, the world's foremost problem : being a reprint of a third selection from articles appearing in the Dearborn Independent

William John Cameron

"Jewish influences in American life : volume III of the International Jew, the…" is a polemical collection of newspaper articles written in the early 20th century. Drawn from the Dearborn Independent, it advances an antisemitic narrative that alleges sweeping Jewish influence over American culture, religion, politics, finance, and popular entertainment. The volume positions itself as an exposé of a so‑called “Jewish Question,” framing its arguments as fact-finding while leaning heavily on hostile interpretation and sensational claims. The opening of the book lays out a preface asserting that earlier installments spurred national debate and that the paper’s “facts” are indisputable, followed by a table of contents signaling targets such as religion, jazz, baseball, Bolshevism, Tammany Hall, Zionism, and the Federal Reserve. The first chapters argue that criticism of the series is not about “religious persecution” of Jews but, rather, that organized Jewish groups purportedly persecute Christianity; they cite selected press clippings and episodes involving public prayers, holidays, schools, and civic rituals to claim Jewish hostility to Christian symbols. The next chapter extends this line, alleging Jewish attacks on multiple Christian denominations and suggesting that “liberal” Christianity converges with Judaism, predicting the erosion of distinct Christian beliefs. The narrative then pivots to professional sports, using the Black Sox scandal to claim Jewish gamblers and businessmen corrupted baseball, naming figures like Arnold Rothstein and Abe Attell, and spinning managerial and governance struggles—such as the “Lasker Plan” and Judge Landis’s appointment—into a story of mounting Jewish control. Throughout, the text presents these accusations as documentation, but its opening portion is plainly a series of assertions and curated anecdotes designed to portray Jewish influence as pervasive and malign. (This is an automatically generated summary.)