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Going to the Source, Volume I: To 1877 by Victoria Bissell Brown; Timothy J. Shannon - Fifth Edition, 2020 from Macmillan Student Store
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Going to the Source, Volume I: To 1877

Fifth  Edition|©2020  Victoria Bissell Brown; Timothy J. Shannon

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  • About
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About

Work like a historian

Going to the Source teaches you the importance of historical sources: what they are and how to use them as historians do. Each chapter familiarizes you with a different type of primary source—including photographs, diaries, oral histories, advertisements, political cartoons, and more—in the context of a significant historical episode.

Digital Options

E-book

Read online (or offline) with all the highlighting and notetaking tools you need to be successful in this course.

Learn More

Contents

Table of Contents

Preface  

Introduction: Historians and Their Sources

1 Monsters and Marvels: Images of Animals from the New World  

Using the Source: Images of Animals 

What Can Images of Animals Tell Us? 

checklist: Interrogating Images 

Source Analysis Table 

The Source: Images of Animals from the New World  

1. Succarath  

2. Hoga [Manatee]  

3. Whale  

4. Alligator  

5. Llama  

6. Birds and Fish of New England  

7. Animals of the Carolinas  

8. Beaver  

9. The Vampire, or Spectre of Guiana [ Vampire Bat]  

10. The Aboma Snake [Anaconda]  

Analyzing Images of Animals  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


2 Tales of Captivity and Redemption: North American Captivity Narratives  

Using the Source: Captivity Narratives  

What Can Captivity Narratives Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Captivity Narratives  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: North American Captivity Narratives  

1. Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca, 1542  

2. Father Isaac Jogues, S.J., 1647  

3. Mary Rowlandson, 1682  

Analyzing Captivity Narratives  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


3 Colonial America’s Most Wanted: Runaway Advertisements in Colonial Newspapers  00

Using the Source: Runaway Advertisements  

What Can Runaway Advertisements Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Print Advertisements  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Runaway Advertisements in Colonial Newspapers, 1747–1770  

NEW ENGLAND  

1. Boston Evening-Post, August 1, 1748  

2. Boston Evening-Post, May 19, 1755  

3. Boston Evening-Post, March 29, 1762  

MIDDLE COLONIES  

4. Pennsylvania Gazette, November 26, 1747  

5. Pennsylvania Gazette, July 8, 1756  

6. Pennsylvania Gazette, July 22, 1756  

7. Pennsylvania Gazette, August 11, 1757  

8. Pennsylvania Gazette, November 29, 1764  

CHESAPEAKE  

9. Virginia Gazette, April 11, 1766  

10. Virginia Gazette, April 25, 1766  

11. Virginia Gazette, August 10, 1769  

12. Virginia Gazette, May 31, 1770  

LOWER SOUTH  

13. Georgia Gazette, May 26, 1763  

14. Georgia Gazette, March 7, 1765  

15. Georgia Gazette, January 14, 1767  

16. Georgia Gazette, August 31, 1768  

Analyzing Runaway Advertisements  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


4 Experiencing the New Birth: Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs from the Great Awakening  

Using the Source: Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs  

What Can Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs from The Great Awakening, 1742–1785  

1. Nathan Cole’s Memoir, 1765  

2. Hannah Heatons’ Diary, 1750s  

3. John Marrant’s Memoir, 1785  

4. Nicholas Gilman’s Diary, 1742  

5. Joseph Fish’s Diary, 1773  

6. Charles Woodmason’s Journal, 1768  

Analyzing Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


5 The Sound of Rebellion: Songs in Revolutionary America  

Using the Source: Songs  

What Can Songs Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Songs  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Songs in Revolutionary America, 1767–1781  

1. "To the Ladies"  

2. "The Liberty Song"  

3. "The Parody"  

4. "The Rebels"  

5. "The New Recruit / Fare Thee Well, Ye Sweethearts"  

6. "How Stands the Glass Around"  

7. "The Epilogue"  

8. "Volunteer Boys"  

9. "To the Traitor Arnold"  

10. "The Dance"  

Analyzing Songs  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


6 Debating the Constitution: Speeches from the New York Ratification Convention  

Using the Source: The Ratification Debates  

What Can the Ratification Debates Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Political Debates  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Speeches Debating the Constitution from the New York Ratification Convention, June 21–28, 1788  

REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS  

1. Melancton Smith, June 21, 1788  

2. Alexander Hamilton, June 21, 1788  

3. Melancton Smith, June 21, 1788  

SOURCES OF CORRUPTION  

4. Robert R. Livingston, June 23, 1788  

5. Melancton Smith, June 23, 1788  

THE CONSTITUTION’S EFFECT ON THE STATES  

6. Melancton Smith, June 27, 1788  

7. Alexander Hamilton, June 28, 1788  

Analyzing the Ratification Debates  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


7 The Question of Female Citizenship: Court Records from the New Nation  

Using the Source: Court Records  

What Can Court Records Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Court Records  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: James Martin (Plaintiff in Error) v. The Commonwealth and William Bosson and Other Ter-tenants, 1805  

THE LAWYERS’ ARGUMENTS  

1. The Fourth Error Identified by James Martin’s Attorneys in Their Appeal  

2. George Blake, Attorney for James Martin  

3. Daniel Davis, Solicitor General for Massachusetts  

4. James Sullivan, Attorney General for Massachusetts  

5. Theophilus Parsons, Attorney for James Martin  

THE JUSTICES’ OPINIONS  

6. Justice Theodore Sedgwick  

7. Justice Simeon Strong  

8. Chief Justice Francis Dana  

Analyzing Court Records  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


8 Family Values: Advice Literature for Parents and Children in the Early Republic  000

Using the Source: Advice Literature for Parents and Children  

What Can Advice Literature Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Advice Literature  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Advice Literature on Child Rearing and Children’s Literature, 1807–1833  

ADVICE LITERATURE ON CHILD REARING  

1. The Mother at Home by John S. C. Abbott, 1833  

2. The Mother’s Book by Lydia Maria Child, 1831  

CHILDREN’S LITERATURE  

3. The New-England Primer, 1807  

4. The Busy Bee, 1831  

5. The Life of George Washington, 1832  

Analyzing Advice Literature  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


9 The Meaning of Cherokee Civilization: Newspaper Editorials about Indian Removal  

Using the Source: Newspaper Editorials  

What Can Newspaper Editorials Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Newspaper Editorials  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Newspaper Editorials about Indian Removal  

ELIAS BOUDINOT, EDITORIALS FROM THE CHEROKEE PHOENIX (1828–1831)  000

1. February 21, 1828  

2. January 21, 1829  

3. January 28, 1829  

4. February 18, 1829  

5. April 21, 1830  

6. November 12, 1831  

JEREMIAH EVARTS, "WILLIAM PENN LETTERS" (1829)  

7. From Letter I  

8. From Letter II  

9. From Letter V  

10. From Letter XV  

11. From Letter XXIV  

Analyzing Newspaper Editorials about Indian Removal  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


10 Challenging the "Peculiar Institution": Slave Narratives from the Antebellum South  

Using the Source: Slave Narratives  

What Can Slave Narratives Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Slave Narratives  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Antebellum Slave Narratives  

1. Henry Bibb, Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb, An American Slave, Written by Himself, 1849  

2. Solomon Northup, Twelve Years A Slave, 1853  

3. Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Written by Herself, 1861  

Analyzing Slave Narratives  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


11 Martyr or Madman? Biographies of John Brown  

Using the Source: Biographies of John Brown  

What Can Biographies Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Biographies  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Biographies of John Brown  

1. John Brown by W. E. B. Du Bois, 1909  

2. John Brown by Robert Penn Warren, 1929  

3. John Brown, Abolitionist by David S. Reynolds, 2005  

Analyzing Biographies  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


12 The Illustrated Civil War: Photography on the Battlefield  

Using the Source: Civil War Photographs  

What Can Civil War Photographs Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Photographs  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Photographs of Civil War Battlefields and Military Life, 1861–1866  

MILITARY PORTRAITS  

1. "Lieut. Washington, a Confederate Prisoner, and Capt. Custer, U.S.A.," James F. Gibson, 1862  

2. "Gen. Robert B. Potter and Staff of Seven, Recognized Capt. Gilbert H. McKibben, Capt. Wright, A.A.G. Also Mr. Brady, Photographer," Mathew Brady, c. 1863  

3. "Portrait of a Soldier Group," photographer unknown, c. 1861–1865  

4. "President Lincoln on Battle-Field of Antietam," Alexander Gardner, 1862  

BATTLEFIELD LANDSCAPES AND CITYSCAPES  

5. "Pennsylvania, Gettysburg 07 / 1863," Timothy O’Sullivan, 1863  

6. "Ruins of Charleston, S.C.," George P. Barnard, 1866  

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN MILITARY LIFE  

7. "Portrait of Brig. Gen. Napoleon B. McLaughlin, Officer of the Federal Army, and Staff, Vicinity of Washington, D.C.," Mathew Brady, 1861  

8. "Culpeper, Va. ‘Contrabands,’ " Timothy O’Sullivan, 1863  

9. "African American Soldiers with Their Teachers and Officers," photographer and date unknown  

BATTLEFIELD DEAD  

10. "Antietam, Md. Bodies of Dead Gathered for Burial," Alexander Gardner, 1862  

11. "A Contrast. Federal Buried; Confederate Unburied, Where They Fell on the Battle Field of Antietam," Alexander Gardner, 1862  

12. "He Sleeps His Last Sleep," Alexander Gardner, 1862  

13. "Battlefield of Gettysburg — Body of a Soldier in ‘the Wheat Field,’ Evidently Killed by the Explosion of a Shell," James F. Gibson, 1863  

14. "Field Where General Reynolds Fell, Gettysburg," Timothy O’Sullivan, 1863  

15. " . . . View of the Covered Ways inside the Rebel Fort Mahone, Called by the Soldiers ‘Fort Damnation’ . . . Taken the Morning after the Storming of Petersburgh, Va. 1865," T. C. Roche, 1865  

16. "Cold Harbor, Va. African Americans Collecting Bones of Soldiers Killed in Battle," John Reekie, 1865  

Analyzing Civil War Photographs  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


13 Political Terrorism during Reconstruction: Congressional Hearings and Reports on the Ku Klux Klan  000

Using the Source: Congressional Hearings and Reports  

What Can Congressional Hearings and Reports Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Congressional Hearings and Reports  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Testimony and Reports from the Joint Select Committee to Inquire into the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States  

WITNESS TESTIMONY  

1. Testimony of Samuel T. Poinier, Washington, D.C., June 7, 1871  

2. Testimony of D. H. Chamberlain, Washington, D.C., June 10, 1871  

3. Testimony of Elias Thomson, Spartanburg, South Carolina, July 7, 1871  

4. Testimony of Lucy McMillan, Spartanburg, South Carolina, July 10, 1871  

5. Testimony of Mervin Givens, Spartanburg, South Carolina, July 12, 1871  

COMMITTEE REPORTS  

6. Majority Report of the Joint Select Committee to Inquire into the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States, February 19, 1872, Submitted by Luke P. Poland  

7. Minority Report of the Joint Select Committee to Inquire into the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States, February 19, 1872, Submitted by James B. Beck  

Analyzing Congressional Hearings and Reports  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  

CAPSTONE Coming Together and Pulling Apart: Nineteenth-Century Fourth of July Observations  

Using Multiple Source Types on Fourth of July Observations  

What Can Multiple Source Types Tell Us?  

Source Analysis Table  

The Sources: Documents and Images Portraying Fourth of July Observations, 1819–1903  

1. Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776, Painting. John Trumbull, 1819  

2. Independence Day in Center Square, Painting. John Lewis Krimmel, 1819  

3. "Adams and Jefferson," Speech. Daniel Webster, August 2, 1826  

4. "Declaration of Rights of the Trades’ Union of Boston and Vicinity," 1834  

5. Excerpt from Diary in America, with Remarks on Its Institutions, Memoir. Frederick Marryat, 1837  

6. "Declaration of Sentiments," from the Woman’s Rights Convention, 1848  

7. "What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?" Speech. Frederick Douglass, July 5, 1852  

8. Speech, John Wannuaucon Quinney, July 4, 1854  

9. Excerpts from A Philadelphia Perspective: The Diary of Sidney George Fisher Covering the Years 1834–1871, Diary. Sidney George Fisher, 1864, 1866  

10. Excerpt from The Fire of Liberty in Their Hearts: The Diary of Jacob E. Yoder of the Freedman’s Bureau School, Lynchburg, Virginia, 1866–1870, Diary. Jacob E. Yoder, 1866  

11. Fire-Works on the Night of the Fourth of July, Cartoon. Winslow Homer, 1868  

12. The Fourth of July in the Country, Cartoon. Thomas Worth, 1868  

13. The Freed Slave in Memorial Hall, Engraving. Fernando Miranda, 1876  

15. 4. July. 1903, Drawing. Amos Bad Heart Bull, 1903  

Analyzing Sources on Fourth of July Observations  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  

APPENDIX I: Avoiding Plagiarism: Acknowledging the Source  

APPENDIX II: Documenting the Source  

INDEX  

Authors

Victoria Bissell Brown

Victoria Bissell Brown (Ph.D., University of California, San Diego) is a Professor Emeritus, Grinnell College. In addition to editing Jane Addams's autobiography, Twenty Years at Hull-House for Bedford/St. Martin's, she is the author of The Education of Jane Addams and articles on Addams, on Woodrow Wilson and gender, and on female adolescents in the Progressive era. She has appeared on NPR documentaries about Chicago and on Woodrow Wilson. Brown is currently working on a social history of the American grandmother, 1920-2020


Timothy J. Shannon

Timothy J. Shannon (Ph.D., Northwestern University) is professor of history at Gettysburg College, where he teaches Early American, Native American, and British history. His books include Iroquois Diplomacy on the Early American Frontier, Atlantic Lives: A Comparative Approach to Early America, and Indians and Colonists at the Crossroads of Empire: The Albany Congress of 1754, which received the Dixon Ryan Fox Prize from the New York State Historical Association and the Distinguished Book Award from the Society of Colonial Wars. He is also coauthor with Victoria Bissell Brown of Going to the Source: The Bedford Reader in American History. His articles have appeared in the William and Mary Quarterly, the New England Quarterly, and Ethnohistory.


Work like a historian

Work like a historian

Going to the Source teaches you the importance of historical sources: what they are and how to use them as historians do. Each chapter familiarizes you with a different type of primary source—including photographs, diaries, oral histories, advertisements, political cartoons, and more—in the context of a significant historical episode.

E-book

Read online (or offline) with all the highlighting and notetaking tools you need to be successful in this course.

Learn More

Table of Contents

Preface  

Introduction: Historians and Their Sources

1 Monsters and Marvels: Images of Animals from the New World  

Using the Source: Images of Animals 

What Can Images of Animals Tell Us? 

checklist: Interrogating Images 

Source Analysis Table 

The Source: Images of Animals from the New World  

1. Succarath  

2. Hoga [Manatee]  

3. Whale  

4. Alligator  

5. Llama  

6. Birds and Fish of New England  

7. Animals of the Carolinas  

8. Beaver  

9. The Vampire, or Spectre of Guiana [ Vampire Bat]  

10. The Aboma Snake [Anaconda]  

Analyzing Images of Animals  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


2 Tales of Captivity and Redemption: North American Captivity Narratives  

Using the Source: Captivity Narratives  

What Can Captivity Narratives Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Captivity Narratives  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: North American Captivity Narratives  

1. Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca, 1542  

2. Father Isaac Jogues, S.J., 1647  

3. Mary Rowlandson, 1682  

Analyzing Captivity Narratives  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


3 Colonial America’s Most Wanted: Runaway Advertisements in Colonial Newspapers  00

Using the Source: Runaway Advertisements  

What Can Runaway Advertisements Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Print Advertisements  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Runaway Advertisements in Colonial Newspapers, 1747–1770  

NEW ENGLAND  

1. Boston Evening-Post, August 1, 1748  

2. Boston Evening-Post, May 19, 1755  

3. Boston Evening-Post, March 29, 1762  

MIDDLE COLONIES  

4. Pennsylvania Gazette, November 26, 1747  

5. Pennsylvania Gazette, July 8, 1756  

6. Pennsylvania Gazette, July 22, 1756  

7. Pennsylvania Gazette, August 11, 1757  

8. Pennsylvania Gazette, November 29, 1764  

CHESAPEAKE  

9. Virginia Gazette, April 11, 1766  

10. Virginia Gazette, April 25, 1766  

11. Virginia Gazette, August 10, 1769  

12. Virginia Gazette, May 31, 1770  

LOWER SOUTH  

13. Georgia Gazette, May 26, 1763  

14. Georgia Gazette, March 7, 1765  

15. Georgia Gazette, January 14, 1767  

16. Georgia Gazette, August 31, 1768  

Analyzing Runaway Advertisements  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


4 Experiencing the New Birth: Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs from the Great Awakening  

Using the Source: Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs  

What Can Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs from The Great Awakening, 1742–1785  

1. Nathan Cole’s Memoir, 1765  

2. Hannah Heatons’ Diary, 1750s  

3. John Marrant’s Memoir, 1785  

4. Nicholas Gilman’s Diary, 1742  

5. Joseph Fish’s Diary, 1773  

6. Charles Woodmason’s Journal, 1768  

Analyzing Diaries, Journals, and Memoirs  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


5 The Sound of Rebellion: Songs in Revolutionary America  

Using the Source: Songs  

What Can Songs Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Songs  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Songs in Revolutionary America, 1767–1781  

1. "To the Ladies"  

2. "The Liberty Song"  

3. "The Parody"  

4. "The Rebels"  

5. "The New Recruit / Fare Thee Well, Ye Sweethearts"  

6. "How Stands the Glass Around"  

7. "The Epilogue"  

8. "Volunteer Boys"  

9. "To the Traitor Arnold"  

10. "The Dance"  

Analyzing Songs  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


6 Debating the Constitution: Speeches from the New York Ratification Convention  

Using the Source: The Ratification Debates  

What Can the Ratification Debates Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Political Debates  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Speeches Debating the Constitution from the New York Ratification Convention, June 21–28, 1788  

REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS  

1. Melancton Smith, June 21, 1788  

2. Alexander Hamilton, June 21, 1788  

3. Melancton Smith, June 21, 1788  

SOURCES OF CORRUPTION  

4. Robert R. Livingston, June 23, 1788  

5. Melancton Smith, June 23, 1788  

THE CONSTITUTION’S EFFECT ON THE STATES  

6. Melancton Smith, June 27, 1788  

7. Alexander Hamilton, June 28, 1788  

Analyzing the Ratification Debates  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


7 The Question of Female Citizenship: Court Records from the New Nation  

Using the Source: Court Records  

What Can Court Records Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Court Records  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: James Martin (Plaintiff in Error) v. The Commonwealth and William Bosson and Other Ter-tenants, 1805  

THE LAWYERS’ ARGUMENTS  

1. The Fourth Error Identified by James Martin’s Attorneys in Their Appeal  

2. George Blake, Attorney for James Martin  

3. Daniel Davis, Solicitor General for Massachusetts  

4. James Sullivan, Attorney General for Massachusetts  

5. Theophilus Parsons, Attorney for James Martin  

THE JUSTICES’ OPINIONS  

6. Justice Theodore Sedgwick  

7. Justice Simeon Strong  

8. Chief Justice Francis Dana  

Analyzing Court Records  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


8 Family Values: Advice Literature for Parents and Children in the Early Republic  000

Using the Source: Advice Literature for Parents and Children  

What Can Advice Literature Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Advice Literature  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Advice Literature on Child Rearing and Children’s Literature, 1807–1833  

ADVICE LITERATURE ON CHILD REARING  

1. The Mother at Home by John S. C. Abbott, 1833  

2. The Mother’s Book by Lydia Maria Child, 1831  

CHILDREN’S LITERATURE  

3. The New-England Primer, 1807  

4. The Busy Bee, 1831  

5. The Life of George Washington, 1832  

Analyzing Advice Literature  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


9 The Meaning of Cherokee Civilization: Newspaper Editorials about Indian Removal  

Using the Source: Newspaper Editorials  

What Can Newspaper Editorials Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Newspaper Editorials  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Newspaper Editorials about Indian Removal  

ELIAS BOUDINOT, EDITORIALS FROM THE CHEROKEE PHOENIX (1828–1831)  000

1. February 21, 1828  

2. January 21, 1829  

3. January 28, 1829  

4. February 18, 1829  

5. April 21, 1830  

6. November 12, 1831  

JEREMIAH EVARTS, "WILLIAM PENN LETTERS" (1829)  

7. From Letter I  

8. From Letter II  

9. From Letter V  

10. From Letter XV  

11. From Letter XXIV  

Analyzing Newspaper Editorials about Indian Removal  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


10 Challenging the "Peculiar Institution": Slave Narratives from the Antebellum South  

Using the Source: Slave Narratives  

What Can Slave Narratives Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Slave Narratives  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Antebellum Slave Narratives  

1. Henry Bibb, Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Henry Bibb, An American Slave, Written by Himself, 1849  

2. Solomon Northup, Twelve Years A Slave, 1853  

3. Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Written by Herself, 1861  

Analyzing Slave Narratives  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


11 Martyr or Madman? Biographies of John Brown  

Using the Source: Biographies of John Brown  

What Can Biographies Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Biographies  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Biographies of John Brown  

1. John Brown by W. E. B. Du Bois, 1909  

2. John Brown by Robert Penn Warren, 1929  

3. John Brown, Abolitionist by David S. Reynolds, 2005  

Analyzing Biographies  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


12 The Illustrated Civil War: Photography on the Battlefield  

Using the Source: Civil War Photographs  

What Can Civil War Photographs Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Photographs  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Photographs of Civil War Battlefields and Military Life, 1861–1866  

MILITARY PORTRAITS  

1. "Lieut. Washington, a Confederate Prisoner, and Capt. Custer, U.S.A.," James F. Gibson, 1862  

2. "Gen. Robert B. Potter and Staff of Seven, Recognized Capt. Gilbert H. McKibben, Capt. Wright, A.A.G. Also Mr. Brady, Photographer," Mathew Brady, c. 1863  

3. "Portrait of a Soldier Group," photographer unknown, c. 1861–1865  

4. "President Lincoln on Battle-Field of Antietam," Alexander Gardner, 1862  

BATTLEFIELD LANDSCAPES AND CITYSCAPES  

5. "Pennsylvania, Gettysburg 07 / 1863," Timothy O’Sullivan, 1863  

6. "Ruins of Charleston, S.C.," George P. Barnard, 1866  

AFRICAN AMERICANS IN MILITARY LIFE  

7. "Portrait of Brig. Gen. Napoleon B. McLaughlin, Officer of the Federal Army, and Staff, Vicinity of Washington, D.C.," Mathew Brady, 1861  

8. "Culpeper, Va. ‘Contrabands,’ " Timothy O’Sullivan, 1863  

9. "African American Soldiers with Their Teachers and Officers," photographer and date unknown  

BATTLEFIELD DEAD  

10. "Antietam, Md. Bodies of Dead Gathered for Burial," Alexander Gardner, 1862  

11. "A Contrast. Federal Buried; Confederate Unburied, Where They Fell on the Battle Field of Antietam," Alexander Gardner, 1862  

12. "He Sleeps His Last Sleep," Alexander Gardner, 1862  

13. "Battlefield of Gettysburg — Body of a Soldier in ‘the Wheat Field,’ Evidently Killed by the Explosion of a Shell," James F. Gibson, 1863  

14. "Field Where General Reynolds Fell, Gettysburg," Timothy O’Sullivan, 1863  

15. " . . . View of the Covered Ways inside the Rebel Fort Mahone, Called by the Soldiers ‘Fort Damnation’ . . . Taken the Morning after the Storming of Petersburgh, Va. 1865," T. C. Roche, 1865  

16. "Cold Harbor, Va. African Americans Collecting Bones of Soldiers Killed in Battle," John Reekie, 1865  

Analyzing Civil War Photographs  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  


13 Political Terrorism during Reconstruction: Congressional Hearings and Reports on the Ku Klux Klan  000

Using the Source: Congressional Hearings and Reports  

What Can Congressional Hearings and Reports Tell Us?  

checklist: Interrogating Congressional Hearings and Reports  

Source Analysis Table  

The Source: Testimony and Reports from the Joint Select Committee to Inquire into the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States  

WITNESS TESTIMONY  

1. Testimony of Samuel T. Poinier, Washington, D.C., June 7, 1871  

2. Testimony of D. H. Chamberlain, Washington, D.C., June 10, 1871  

3. Testimony of Elias Thomson, Spartanburg, South Carolina, July 7, 1871  

4. Testimony of Lucy McMillan, Spartanburg, South Carolina, July 10, 1871  

5. Testimony of Mervin Givens, Spartanburg, South Carolina, July 12, 1871  

COMMITTEE REPORTS  

6. Majority Report of the Joint Select Committee to Inquire into the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States, February 19, 1872, Submitted by Luke P. Poland  

7. Minority Report of the Joint Select Committee to Inquire into the Condition of Affairs in the Late Insurrectionary States, February 19, 1872, Submitted by James B. Beck  

Analyzing Congressional Hearings and Reports  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  

CAPSTONE Coming Together and Pulling Apart: Nineteenth-Century Fourth of July Observations  

Using Multiple Source Types on Fourth of July Observations  

What Can Multiple Source Types Tell Us?  

Source Analysis Table  

The Sources: Documents and Images Portraying Fourth of July Observations, 1819–1903  

1. Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776, Painting. John Trumbull, 1819  

2. Independence Day in Center Square, Painting. John Lewis Krimmel, 1819  

3. "Adams and Jefferson," Speech. Daniel Webster, August 2, 1826  

4. "Declaration of Rights of the Trades’ Union of Boston and Vicinity," 1834  

5. Excerpt from Diary in America, with Remarks on Its Institutions, Memoir. Frederick Marryat, 1837  

6. "Declaration of Sentiments," from the Woman’s Rights Convention, 1848  

7. "What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?" Speech. Frederick Douglass, July 5, 1852  

8. Speech, John Wannuaucon Quinney, July 4, 1854  

9. Excerpts from A Philadelphia Perspective: The Diary of Sidney George Fisher Covering the Years 1834–1871, Diary. Sidney George Fisher, 1864, 1866  

10. Excerpt from The Fire of Liberty in Their Hearts: The Diary of Jacob E. Yoder of the Freedman’s Bureau School, Lynchburg, Virginia, 1866–1870, Diary. Jacob E. Yoder, 1866  

11. Fire-Works on the Night of the Fourth of July, Cartoon. Winslow Homer, 1868  

12. The Fourth of July in the Country, Cartoon. Thomas Worth, 1868  

13. The Freed Slave in Memorial Hall, Engraving. Fernando Miranda, 1876  

15. 4. July. 1903, Drawing. Amos Bad Heart Bull, 1903  

Analyzing Sources on Fourth of July Observations  

The Rest of the Story  

To Find Out More  

APPENDIX I: Avoiding Plagiarism: Acknowledging the Source  

APPENDIX II: Documenting the Source  

INDEX  

Victoria Bissell Brown

Victoria Bissell Brown (Ph.D., University of California, San Diego) is a Professor Emeritus, Grinnell College. In addition to editing Jane Addams's autobiography, Twenty Years at Hull-House for Bedford/St. Martin's, she is the author of The Education of Jane Addams and articles on Addams, on Woodrow Wilson and gender, and on female adolescents in the Progressive era. She has appeared on NPR documentaries about Chicago and on Woodrow Wilson. Brown is currently working on a social history of the American grandmother, 1920-2020


Timothy J. Shannon

Timothy J. Shannon (Ph.D., Northwestern University) is professor of history at Gettysburg College, where he teaches Early American, Native American, and British history. His books include Iroquois Diplomacy on the Early American Frontier, Atlantic Lives: A Comparative Approach to Early America, and Indians and Colonists at the Crossroads of Empire: The Albany Congress of 1754, which received the Dixon Ryan Fox Prize from the New York State Historical Association and the Distinguished Book Award from the Society of Colonial Wars. He is also coauthor with Victoria Bissell Brown of Going to the Source: The Bedford Reader in American History. His articles have appeared in the William and Mary Quarterly, the New England Quarterly, and Ethnohistory.


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