American History
A literary perspective
Frederic Edwin Church, After Attack on Fort Sumter, 1860 American History is rich with literary artifacts; beyond novels, short stories and essays, the American trail was blazed with story-telling, poetry, political speeches, folk songs and letters. The young country struggled first for freedom, then to define itself and even -- during the civil war -- to hold itself together. But it also struggled to find its own literary voice; to speak "American" and write "American." It struggled to break free of the European traditions that colonists and immigrants brought with them from "the old country." Even the founding fathers, while striking the Declaration of Independence and drafting the Constitution borrowed on the deep traditions and learnings of European history. As the country progessed and its identity grew, a strong and unique voice, an American voice began to emerge in its writings and letters. This new literacy was rich in the thoughts and feelings of a free people; a unique voice borne of the uniquely American experience.
This section of American Literature will focus on the rise of this new voice -- "crying in the wilderness" -- seeking to define itself. Over time, I hope to move beyond traditional
"Western American History" (e.g. the experience of the European settlers and other immigrants) and venture to include contributions from Native American Indians and African American slaves. In addition to the historical figures below, we offer
Reference Documents, an
African American Library,
Civil War Stories and
World War I Literature For all ages, we offer a collection of
American Biographies and
American Patriotic Songs
Abraham Lincoln
Daniel Webster
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Franklin D. Roosevelt
George Washington
Robert E. Lee
Theodore Roosevelt
Thomas Jefferson
Ulysses S. Grant
U.S. Congress, Senate, and States
Winston Churchill
Benjamin Franklin
Thomas Paine
Alexander Hamilton
James Madison
Henry David Thoreau
John Stuart Mill
John Locke
Frederick Douglass
Walt Whitman
Robert Frost
Louisa May Alcott
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Oliver Wendell Holmes
J. Hector St. John de Crevoecoeur
Booker T. Washington
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Charles W. Chesnutt
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Clara Barton
Ambrose Bierce
Stephen Crane
Frances Scott Key
Thomas Nelson Page
Edward Payson Roe
James Baldwin
Jack London
United States Declaration of Independence
United States Constitution
U.S. Bill of Rights
Amendments to the U.S. Constitution
Reconstruction Amendments
Emancipation Proclamation
Common Sense - Thomas Paine
The Federalist Papers - Hamilton/Madison/Jay
On Civil Disobedience - Henry David Thoreau
Two Treatises of Government - John Locke
Politics: A Treatise on Government - Aristotle
Do you have an historical figure or document in the public domain that you'd like us to add? Contact us via Facebook or Twitter
You may also be interested in the African American Library, Civil War Stories and World War I Literature
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