The Civil War
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Audible会員プラン 無料体験
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ナレーター:
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Joseph Tabler
このコンテンツについて
A Dusty Tomes Audio Book
In Cooperation with Spoken Realms
THE CIVIL WAR by FREDERIC L PAXSON. HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY 1911.
FREDERIC L. PAXSON Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin. PULITZER PRIZE WINNER IN HISTORY 1925. He had undergraduate and PhD degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and a master's from Harvard University. He taught at Wisconsin (1910 to 1932) as successor to Frederick Jackson Turner and at the University of California-Berkeley from 1932 to 1947.
As a historian, he was an authority on the American frontier.
(Wikipedia)
Narrated by Joseph Tabler
Audio copyright 2024
From the Author's Preface:
This book attempts to show that the Civil War was more than a succession of battles; it was a struggle between two civilizations... The motive for secession, slavery, was indefensible in the long run...It is reasonably clear today, that the South would have discarded slavery in another generation; and that the New Nationalism would have come about without the Civil War. Yet the war dominated the American mind for forty years and is worthy of study if only on this account.
CHAPTER
I The Law of the Land
II Secession
III Abraham Lincoln
IV Civil War
V Afloat and Abroad
VI 1862: McClellan and Emancipation
VII 1862: The Mississippi Valley
VIII Ulysses S. Grant
IX Gettysburg and Reconstruction
X The Balance of Power
XI The Union Party
XII The Confederate Collapse
Audio cover picture—Book's cover picture General Grant at City Point—Library of Congress.
Dusty Tomes Audio Books are public domain books retrieved from history. If today's technology had been available when first printed, they would be audio books already. I am grateful for the opportunity to record them now. Read online at archive.org
Narrator's Note: I read only as written. These old books were once solid sellers for bookmen of their time. I believe they can shed light on their times and ours. Loving obscure and remote literature, they are a distinct pleasure for me to read to you. These turn out to be distant and unknown only so long as they remain unread or unheard. Aloha.
Public Domain (P)2024 Joseph Tabler