Posted on 11/27/2002 11:23:19 AM PST by Green Knight
Alright, I've been meaning to buy a history book with detailed American history, but I'm leary of spending money on a Politically Correct piece of crud. So can you folks help me out, here?
I'd like A) A book which focuses specifically not only on the USA, but on the history that led up the founding of the United States, and B) A detailed look at world history (Being only one book, I can't imagine it'd be all that detailed). I'd also like C) A book detailing World War II.
Appreciate any and all help folks. Thanks.
I took a wonderful course in college called "Origins of the American Revolution" based entirely on original documents. Lots went on that you never hear about, and we spent an entire semester reading the personal correspondence, broadsides, diaries, etc. of the participants. The records of the Boston Massacre trials were particularly fascinating. John Adams was one heck of a trial lawyer -- he essentially got everybody off completely except for the man who actually fired the fatal shot, and he got his conviction reduced to manslaughter and then asserted benefit of clergy so the man was "just" burned on the hand (but compared to getting hanged that's a long step in the right direction). He also wrote wonderful letters - charming and easy reading even now.
I also have the Civil War letters of two of my great-great grandfathers. It's very funny to contrast them. One was the captain of an artillery company, a fire-breathing death-or-glory boy from the word "go" - it was his company that pulled their 6 pdr Napoleons up Snodgrass Hill chasing George Thomas until nightfall (and that obnoxious Braxton Bragg) intervened. His letters home are very flowery and full of "our glorious cause", etc. etc. He was wounded three times, but lived until 1917, and was a big UCV man and instrumental in getting the Chickamauga National Battlefield Park up and running. He even looked like Col. Sanders - beard & mustache, white suit, string tie, the works.
My other great-great grandfather was a big lanky boy from a plantation in VERY rural Alabama, so shy he hardly ever said a word even late in life. He was a University of Georgia graduate, in civil engineering, enlisted as a private in the cavalry, became a scout or "partisan ranger" and never got promoted beyond private. He saw a lot of fighting and wrote about it to my g-g grandmother in a very understated, dry, and insouciant way . . . "the boys and I got in a tight little fight around Nashville . . . I had two bullets through my coat but not hurt. Chap Murrell was hit by a spent ball . . . he shouted, 'I am hit boys but no furlough.' . . . . A mess of greens sure would taste good right now. You know I could never relish greens at home. . . . . We received your parcel yesterday and we are making your eatables SQUAT." He did get flowery on occasion but not often (he's quoted in McPherson's book Why They Fought" and naturally the prof (who used to be my professor but was on sabbatical my senior year so wasn't my thesis advisor) picked out the only flowery passage the man ever wrote . . . "how can you ask me to stand by an idle spectator while my country lies bleeding in the dust?")
Frankly of the two I think the private the more interesting and fun.
You will never be prouder of your country and the men who conceived her than when you read how hard they worked to "get it right".
One of the most influential history books in the last 25 years. You will see America and Americans in a whole new way.
Synopsis
In the first volume of his cultural history of the United States, Fischer examines four seventeenth- and eighteenth-century English-speaking immigrant groups. Puritans from "East Anglia established a religious community in Massachusetts (1629-40); royalist cavaliers . . . from the south and west of England built a highly stratified agrarian way of life in Virginia (1640-70); egalitarian Quakers of modest social standing from the North Midlands resettled in the Delaware Valley and promoted a social pluralism (1675-1715); and . . . poor borderland families of English, Scots, and Irish {settled in the} . . . American backcountry. {Fischer argues that} these four cultures, reflected in regional patterns of language, architecture, literacy, dress, sport, social structure, religious beliefs, and familial ways, persisted in the American settlements." (Libr J)
Although I am a southerner, I have the greatest respect for John Q., who was I believe a greater statesman than his father (did you hear the quip G.W. Bush made to that effect recently? :-D ) Politics is politics, it just depends on whose ox is getting gored today. But, as I told a black friend of mine who is a fellow attorney and classmate, I'm not going to condemn or desert my family members just because their political orientation is unpopular today, or even wrong. They were children of their times, just as we are, and some day something we are doing now -- probably something we don't even expect -- will cause us to be condemned out of hand by future generations. I don't want my descendants to disown me for that reason, so I won't disown my ancestors either.
I have a letter which was written by my g g father to his Son. I will not quote it at length as it would be of interest only to me but the first phrase began: "No tongue can tell the sweet pleasure that thrills through my heart as I am writing to my dear precious boy whom I have loved so long and for whom I have prayed so often and so earnestly." A little flowery and that is from memory so could be a little off but still so much better than I could do. The Son was nearly 40 years old at the time and a lawyer. BTW, ggf was a Methodist minister, and his Father was a prof, at your gggfathers school, Franklin College aka The University of Georgia.
My gg grandfather (the private) wrote the most wonderful letters to his little firstborn child, George, "as I have not heard from my wife in some time, I am resolved to write my darling little boy and see if he will answer me." He looked forward to "riding around with you and Mama to see the relations and view the crops" and told him to "be a big boy and protect Mama from all the boogers and h'ants"
Sadly, George died before his third birthday, and before my gg grandfather ever saw him. He's buried in a little tiny abandoned cemetery in Perote AL, far from his parents and his younger brothers and sisters, all buried down in Hurtsboro. I sometimes wonder if he's lonely . . .
Paul Revere's Ride is by David Hackett Fischer (Oxford University Press, 1994)
Our Reverend was such a good, holy man. I am as sure he is in Heaven as I am sure of anything. It's comforting to think that he'll sidle up to St. Peter at the appropriate time to make some comment about the weather, and then add, "By the way, this is my granddaughter coming in . . . "
Got too many titles to detail here but purcahsed 30 t0 35 books for cheap (got them for the kids to counter what they are force fed in school).
I've found that American History and Govt. books published more than 50 years ago have a very honest approach; untainted by PC Bull$hit.
Sui
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