Early Flight: Healing Hope for Parents of the Stillborn, Miscarried or Aborted
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Early Flight: Healing Hope for Parents of the Stillborn, Miscarried or Aborted
    Jack W. Hayford
    Manufacturer: Living Way Ministries
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

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    ASIN: 0916847063

    Copperheads: The Rise and Fall of Lincoln's Opponents in the North
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Ripped from today's headlines
    • A much needed piece of history revealed.
    • Absolutely Relevant to Our Own Times
    • An extraordinary amount of original research
    • To Each Their Own
    Copperheads: The Rise and Fall of Lincoln's Opponents in the North
    Jennifer L. Weber
    Manufacturer: Oxford University Press, USA
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

    GeneralGeneral | 19th Century | United States | Americas | History | Subjects | Books
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    Similar Items:
    1. Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney: Slavery, Secession, and the President's War Powers Lincoln and Chief Justice Taney: Slavery, Secession, and the President's War Powers
    2. This Mighty Scourge: Perspectives on the Civil War This Mighty Scourge: Perspectives on the Civil War
    3. The Radical and the Republican: Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and the Triumph of Antislavery Politics The Radical and the Republican: Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and the Triumph of Antislavery Politics
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    ASIN: 0195306686

    Book Description

    If Civil War battlefields saw vast carnage, the Northern home-front was itself far from tranquil. Fierce political debates set communities on edge, spurred secret plots against the Union, and triggered widespread violence, such as the New York City draft riots. And at the heart of all this turmoil stood Northern anti-war Democrats, nicknamed "Copperheads." Now, Jennifer L. Weber offers the first full-length portrait of this powerful faction to appear in almost half a century. Weber reveals how the Copperheads came perilously close to defeating Lincoln and ending the war in the South's favor. Indeed, by the summer of 1864, they had grown so strong that Lincoln himself thought his defeat was "exceedingly likely." Passionate defenders of civil liberties and states' rights--and often virulent racists--the Copperheads deplored Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus, his liberal interpretation of the Constitution, and, most vehemently, his moves toward emancipation. Weber reveals how the battle over these issues grew so heated, particularly in the Midwest, that Northerners feared their neighbors would destroy their livestock, burn their homes, even kill them. Indeed, some Copperheads went so far as to conspire with Confederate forces and plan armed insurrections, including an attempt to launch an uprising during the Democratic convention in Chicago. Finally, Weber illuminates the role of Union soldiers, who, furious at Copperhead attacks on the war effort, moved firmly behind Lincoln. The soldiers' support for the embattled president kept him alive politically in his darkest times, and their victories on the battlefield secured his re-election. Disgraced after the war, the Copperheads melted into the shadows of history. Here, Jennifer L. Weber illuminates their dramatic story. Packed with sharp observation and fresh interpretations, Copperheads is a gripping account of the fierce dissent that Lincoln called "the fire in the rear."

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Ripped from today's headlines.......2007-09-18

    Fantastic book and amazing for its relevance today. Even the exact words used by people over a hundred years ago seemed like they are ripped from today's headlines. History really does repeat itself. Sometimes verbatim.

    4 out of 5 stars A much needed piece of history revealed........2007-09-17

    Lincoln could very well have been defeated in 1864. The military victories of the summer of 1864 resulted in victory not only for the Union military but also a continuation of the Lincoln Presidency. His opponents in the 1864 election were the Democrats with a large peace faction. This peace faction were called the Butternuts or Copperheads, and they basically wanted peace at any price. Lincoln faced these opponents and stood his ground. Slavery would be ended, and the Union reunited. This book is about his 1864 opponents and how their slavish devotion to peace at any price basically cost the Democratic Party fifty years of losing Presidential elections.

    This is a valued addition to the history collection. The author shows how the Copperheads were both a military and political threat to the Union. Lincoln managed to out manuever this movement, and reunite the country.

    5 out of 5 stars Absolutely Relevant to Our Own Times.......2007-07-22

    Anyone interested in the debates over Guantanamo and the state of civil liberties in the post-9/11 United States should read this book. It is extraordinarily relevant in this regard. The book is a study of the anti-Lincoln wing of the Democrat Party during the Civil War as well as a detailed look at Lincoln's response to that faction. To sum up briefly, Lincoln dealt very harshly with them, with little regard for any notion of respecting civil liberties. He threw an Ohio Senator (Clement Vallandingham, who was arrested in a midnight raid on his home by Federal troops) in prison and shut down a major newspaper (the Chicago Times). These are only two of his "crimes" (depending on your perspective) against the rights of civilians to free speech during wartime.
    Imagine George Bush throwing Harry Reid into prison or shutting down the New York Times! These might serve as a rough parallel to Lincoln's wartime actions. INTERESTINGLY ENOUGH, the Lincoln-worshippers (like Eric Foner and company) are usually on the attack when it comes to G.W. Bush's anti-civil libertarian agenda in the context of his "war on terrorism" (Foner, I might add, has absolutely no problem with Ulysses Grant's "war on terror" against the Ku Klux Klan in the 1870s). Just goes to show that leftists maintain a double standard when it comes to free speech issues. Since left-liberals generally seem to hold Lincoln and his prosecution of the war in high regard, it is worth reminding them of this rather embarrassing episode in his presidency.

    4 out of 5 stars An extraordinary amount of original research.......2007-05-26


    Weber has done her homework. The early part of the book, in particular, shows wide ranging new sources: letters, diaries, small town newspapers. This is the most important part of the book because it brings together new information and provides a basis for further scholars.

    Examples from all of the northern states (or so I think, I didn't count) show how widespread the movement was. The nature of the anecdotal material does not demonstrate how deep it was. It appears to be deep in some communities and families, but the only polling data of the time, the elections of 1862 and 1864 do not reflect that depth. Weber points out the circumstantial nature of these elections and how the Copperheads' fortunes rose and fell with success on the battlefield. I held back a star, though, because in the MANY stories of people, towns and politicians I did not find a central overview.

    The later part of McClellan's nomination and the election that follows while not so rich in new material, for me, it was an excellent read. Weber documents and explains how a "War" candidate and a "Peace" candidate came to be nominated in the same convention. She goes on to explain Lincoln's landslide.

    The description demise of the Copperheads is brief. Maybe this is all that is merited, but it would have been good to have some examples here, especially of the aforementioned communities where the Copperheads caused loss of life and property damage.

    Weber sticks with history and does not draw parallels for today. Since it is mentioned by other reviewers, I will note Weber's observation that this peace movement was one of the conservative faction of the Democratic party. Today's peace movement has its origins in the liberal faction of today's Democratic party. It seems that the only thing Copperheads have in common with those against the operation is Iraqi is being against "a" war. Weber clearly shows how racism fueled the Copperheads. This issue is not at all present in the current peace movement.

    This book is a good contribution to Civil War research. Its substance and sources will surely be used for future material.

    5 out of 5 stars To Each Their Own.......2007-05-15

    I don't quite know how to digest the notion that the Copperheads were 'the conservative element of the northern anti-war democratic party; or that (as is often noted) they were "Lincoln's opponents'.
    . . . bit of a stretch . . .

    Having noted this, I believe the book to be a thorough, accurate and well-timed history and documentary on that rabid, anti-American, treasonous remnant of the Northern democrat party.

    Good work and well-received by this Civil War historian/writer.
    Copperhead
    Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    • A GREAT CIVIL WAR SERIES
    • Great Historical Fiction of the War of Southern Rebellion
    • Good historical adventure
    • Nice contribution to the Starbuck Chronicles
    • LIKE CALICO TEARING OR A CANEBREAK BURNING...
    Copperhead
    Bernard Cornwell
    Manufacturer: Harper Paperbacks
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

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    1. Battle Flag (The Starbuck Chronicles, Book 3) Battle Flag (The Starbuck Chronicles, Book 3)
    2. The Bloody Ground (The Starbuck Chronicles, Book 4) The Bloody Ground (The Starbuck Chronicles, Book 4)
    3. Rebel (The Starbuck Chronicles #1) Rebel (The Starbuck Chronicles #1)
    4. Redcoat Redcoat
    5. The Winter King (The Arthur Books #1) The Winter King (The Arthur Books #1)

    ASIN: 006093462X
    Release Date: 2001-09-18

    Book Description

    The beloved Confederate Captain Nate Starbuck returns to the front lines of the Civil War in this second installment of Bernard Cornwell's acclaimed Nathaniel Starbuck Chronicles. It is the summer of 1862, and Nate has been bloodied but victorious at the battles of Ball's Bluff and Seven Pines. But he can't escape his Northern roots, and it is only a matter of time until he's accused of being a Yankee spy, pursued, and brutally interrogated. To clear his name, he must find the real traitor—a search that will require extraordinary courage, endurance, and a perilous odyssey through enemy territory.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars A GREAT CIVIL WAR SERIES.......2006-04-18

    I expected the Nathaniel Starbuck Chronicles to be like the Sharpe series, but I was initially disappointed when I started reading REBEL (Book 1 of the Nathaniel Starbuck Chronicles). It took about one hundred pages to introduce the characters and setting and I almost gave up. Lucky for me I didn't. The story took off and kept me enthralled throughout with Cornwell's excellent telling of the Battle of Bull Run. I continued to be entertained in COPPERHEAD, though the action and adventure were more concerned with espionage than the confusion and horror of the battlefield.

    I don't understand how some reviewers could complain that Nate Starbuck was unlikable. He grew on me as I watched him stumble and fall and learn from his mistakes to become a better person and an able officer.

    I was also happily surprised to see that Mr. Cornwell introduced us to French Colonel Patrick Lasan, the son of Richard Sharpe and Lucille Castineau. Battlescarred and wearing an eyepatch, Col. Lasan is a rogue and adventurer just like his father. I wish there had been more scenes with him and Nate in the book.

    All in all, this is a great Civil War series. I hope Mr. Cornwell will write another book in the Starbuck Chronicles.

    5 out of 5 stars Great Historical Fiction of the War of Southern Rebellion.......2005-08-19

    You have to love the hero, Starbuck, as he continues as a Yankee fighting for Virgina. The way that Cornwell developes his character Nate Starbuck, as with Sharpe in the Richard Sharpe series, is compelling. Starbuck is not a super hero, but a good man who occasionally does bad things, but more often takes the high road in his moral decisions and is a very effective warrior and leader. Starbuck is a guy you would love to have a beer with. Cornwell also developes anti-heros effectively, making them people you love to hate. As with all Bernard Cornwell novels - a great read.

    3 out of 5 stars Good historical adventure.......2005-06-06

    Bernard Cornwell is highly skilled at the historical novel, whatever the era. Here we are treated to a Yankee serving in the Confederate forces while his brother serves the Union cause.

    A few wrong words here and there and the story would simply fall apart; it is that close to being unbelievable. But Cornwell is skilled and always retains control of his material, so he succeeds at weaving his tale of battle, treason, cowardice and heroism, all based (loosely) on actual events with the occasional fictional, but believable, character thrown in for color.

    The details of the story don't really matter. Cornwell could tell any story well and keep the reader involved as he does here.

    Jerry

    4 out of 5 stars Nice contribution to the Starbuck Chronicles.......2005-03-17

    Nate Starbuck is a Captain in the Confederate Army who finds hostility on both sides of the war. Nate is a Bostonian fighting for the South. The North hates him because he is fighting against them and the South hates him because he's a Yankee. Despite this Starbuck has the makings of a good soldier. Much too good for General Falcouner, Nate's one time benefactor and now avowed enemy. Starbuck is transferred to a desk job in Richmond where due to the incmpatence of northern spies he is fingered as a Union agent. Cornwell's description of Nate captivity is gut-churning, and his dramatic storytelling keeps the reader full of suspence. His introduction of Patrick Lassan is a great nod to his Sharpe books, as Lassan is the son of Richard Sharpe and his lady widow. I thought that was neat. What I found tedious is the character of Adam Falcouner and sometimes Cornwell's description of northern and southern Christians is a little much. Not everyone is the religious fanatic he writes. I found Copperhead to be superior to Rebel in many ways but it still had its weaknesses.

    5 out of 5 stars LIKE CALICO TEARING OR A CANEBREAK BURNING..........2005-02-01

    ...is the sound of the battle under the unsheathed brilliance of Bernard Cornwell. The beauty of this series (as well as Sharpe & my favorite, The Grail Quest series) is the nuance of the battle and the surprisingly well-fleshed characters. Good and evil hide in minute degrees of separation, and this is especially true in the Civil War. Cornwell completely understands this and has created a wide canopy of characters that accurately reflects the nuances of the individual morality and motivations. The closest to parody is his broadside slap to the oft maligned General McClellan's inept handling of the Army of the Potomac, however, Cornwell does at least throw a salute to the General's one saving attribute, which was his ability to organize.
    I look forward to reading Book #3, Battle Flag. I give this series my highest recommendation.
    The Limits of Dissent: Clement L. Vallandigham and the Civil War (North's Civil War Series, 8)
    Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
    • Informative read about an obnoxious character
    • Well-Researced: Highly Controversial
    The Limits of Dissent: Clement L. Vallandigham and the Civil War (North's Civil War Series, 8)
    Frank Klement
    Manufacturer: Fordham University Press
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

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    1. Dark Lanterns: Secret Political Societies, Conspiracies, and Treason Trials in the Civil War Dark Lanterns: Secret Political Societies, Conspiracies, and Treason Trials in the Civil War
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    3. The Fate of Liberty: Abraham Lincoln and Civil Liberties The Fate of Liberty: Abraham Lincoln and Civil Liberties

    ASIN: 0823218910
    Release Date: 1998-01-01

    Customer Reviews:

    4 out of 5 stars Informative read about an obnoxious character.......2006-12-01

    Frank Klement's bio of the most controversial and yet largely forgotten figure of the Civil War era is one that all scholars should read. It is also interesting enough to tickle a general history reader's fancy. The one flaw is that Klement likes his main character a bit too much. Clement L. Vallandigham was an obnoxious, negrophobic, Republican-hating gadfly (the title of one of the chapters) whose stick-it-in-your-eye attitude both in and out of Congress made him unappealing even within his Democratic party. Klement regularly refers to Vallandigham's severest critics as "bigots" (largely true), but never does he label Vallandigham with that title, even though he deserved it. Klement's explanation as to why Vallandigham lost the Ohio governor's race in 1863 is lopsided, just bad luck after the victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg and the repelling of John Hunt Morgan's raid into Ohio. Klement seems unable to admit that many people passionately hated Vallandigham, not the least of whom were the soldiers fighting in the field for the cause against which he spoke so vehemently. (Sound familiar here in 2006?) Nonetheless, Clement Vallandigham was a force during his time and became an icon to civil rights after Ambrose Burnside ordered his arrest and trial and Lincoln banished him to the South. He never accepted the fact that war might require a different approach to civil liberties. (Speaking of Burnside, there is an extraordinary error on page 122. Klement refers to Burnside's defeat Dec. 13, 1862, at the battle of Chancellorsville and repeats it further down the page. That battle, of course, was Fredericksburg. Chancellorsville occurred the following May. Forgive Klement. That kind of error is easy to make even when you know better, as he surely did. But where was the editor?)

    5 out of 5 stars Well-Researced: Highly Controversial.......2001-05-30

    Author Frank L. Klement (with tongue firmly in cheek) once told an audience that there were only two imortant central figures in the Civil War: Lincoln and Clement L. Vallandigham; the subject of this disputable biography. One must understand that Frank L. Klement is a revisionist historian with 62% of his 221 published items anti-Lincoln. Attacking Lincoln, the most sacred icon in American history, for blatant illegalities in violation of civil liberties caused a sensation in the histrorical community when it was first introduced. Klement's contention that the Copperhead movement was not a threat to the union has generally been accepted by major Lincoln scholars including James Macpherson. The question remains how far can civil liberties be protected before they endanger national security. In the case of Clement Vallandigham the outer limits were reached in a time when many, including Lincoln, felt that constitutional liberties would lose the nation. Klement's thesis has gained more respectability since the dissent of Viet Nam, but the problem presented by Vallandigham has really never been resolved. Vallandigham won two out of eight elections for congressman from Ohio. Preaching preservation of the union with slavery intact, he believed the South could not be coerced into reentering the union. The Ohio congressman was the spokesman for many in the midwest who favoured agriculture over industry, opposed equality for blacks, and wanted to continue the balance of power the midwest played in the rivalry between North and South. Had this been all to Vallandigham he would have been written off as a hopeless reactionary. But the Dayton congressman was also a liberal, speaking out against arbitrary arrests, executive usurpation, as well as supporting abolishment of capital punishment, Jewish rabbis as army chaplains and free trade. The Ohioan was also-according to James Horan-a child prodigy learning the alphabet at age two and learning to speak both Latin and Greek at age twelve. (see Horan's CONFEDERATE AGENT,PA.18). No physical coward, Vallandigham courted martyrdom by defying federal authorities. He was sentenced to two years imprisonment by General Burnside (upheld by the court in EX PARTE VALLANDIGHAM). Wisely, Lincoln dumped him over the border into Dixie, ignoring the gadfly wdhen he attended the Chicago Democratic Convention of 1864. Klement's Vallandigham comes across as an insufferable self-righteous prig who was neutralized by Lincoln. But Vallandigham-the faithful son of a Calvinist Huguenot minister-always believed he would be vindicated by history. While defending a client in a murder case Vallandigham grabbed the wrong pistol and killed himself. He has largely been forgotten by posterity. The bullet that ended Lincoln's life, on the otherhand, made him immortal. Such is the verdict of history.
    Tramping With the Legion: A Carolina Rebel's Story
    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    • Grandpa Scrugg's Civil War Stories
    • Surviving Elmira
    • amazing research
    • Tramping with the Legion
    Tramping With the Legion: A Carolina Rebel's Story
    C. Eugene Scruggs
    Manufacturer: Trafford Publishing
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

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    ASIN: 1425102336

    Book Description



    The Carolina Rebels of Company K, Holcombe Legion, were true sons of the Upstate. Brothers, cousins, and neighbors- all were well-suited for service in the independent brigade commanded by Ol’Shanks (Brig. Gen. Nathan Evans). The “boys” of Company K wore out many a set of boots “tramping” with the Legion wherever the regiment was needed- Charleston, Richmond, Malvern Hill, Rappahannock Station, Manassas Junction, Kinston, Wilmington, Jackson, Savannah and Petersburg.

    One member of Co. K tells the story of his adventures with the legion, his capture at Stony Creek, his dramatic escape from the infamous Union prison in Elmira, New York, and his harrowing trek back to Virginia through the mountains of Pennsylvania and Maryland, helped along the way by copperheads, Dunkards and Dutch.

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Grandpa Scrugg's Civil War Stories.......2007-02-02

    I enjoyed reading Grandpa Scruggs' account of his experiences in Company K, Holcombe Legion of South Carolinians fighting for their state's freedom from the tyranny of the Union. The format of night time stories told by Grandpa Scruggs to his grandchildren kept a dramatic tension in the book that helped keep me reading. We learn about the courage and commitment of Judd and other soldiers to their cause. We learn of the hardships, boredom,and horror of life as a foot soldier. The ways captured soldiers were treated changed as the war progressed. Judd experienced both ways. Because of the personal focus of this book, we also learn how the war caught up extended families and effected them. We also get glimpses of life back at home while the men were at war. I highly recommend Eugene Scruggs' book.

    5 out of 5 stars Surviving Elmira.......2007-02-01

    Eugene Scruggs has made a valuable contribution to the history of the War Between the States with his account of the exploits of his great grandfather, Judson Puryear Scruggs, as an enlisted man in the Holcombe Legion, South Carolina Volunteers. To be sure, Scrugg's book is another in the "Johnny Reb and Billy Yank" tradition of oral history accounts from the point of view of the ordinary foot soldier. However, it is given context by a body of historical research, and a truly insightful introduction to some of this conflict's enduring themes. For many readers, the most interesting parts of the narrative will be those about life under horrible conditions in the POW camp at Elmira, NY, Judson's resourceful escape therefrom, and his traverse through enemy territory to Virginia.
    In my opinion, however, as an avid student of the conflict rather than a professional historian, Scrugg's finest achievement was in his reconstruction of Judson's narrative within a quasi-fictional framework, in which he recreates not only the voice of his great-grandfather, but also that of the grandchildren who are auditors of the story. This teachnique not only creates a sense of immediacy in the flow of the narrative, but instills a kind of novelistic suspense which makes it enjoyable for the reader. This approach also permits Scruggs to render narrative as a truly "oral history," in that he has recreated the language of the period --- the regional dialect of 19th century Southerner. His handling of the artistic problem of the use of "eye dialect," moreover, is deftly handled: instead of generating pages of mangled orthography, Scruggs includes only occasional phonetic spellings, opting instead for the dialectal phrase, the idiom, and the speech rhythmns of his people. Professional historians may take issue with Scrugg's decision to treat his material in this way; other readers may enjoy it as thoroughly as I did.

    Roger Cole
    January 29, 2007

    5 out of 5 stars amazing research.......2007-01-29

    I thoroughly enjoyed Dr. Scruggs' book. It is written in such a manner that it draws the reader into the family circle while providing an amazing amount of detail into the history of the Legion and the personal recollections of Jud, the author's great grandfather.

    5 out of 5 stars Tramping with the Legion.......2007-01-16

    With the help of his older relatives, Gene Scruggs has gathered together the oral history left by his great grandfather, Sergeant Judson Scruggs, who served in South Carolina's Holcombe Legion during most of the Civil War.

    Almost nothing has been written about this effective fighting unit which was organized early in the war by Peter F. Stevens, a former superintendent of The Citadel. 'Shanks' Evans, whose brigade included the infantry regiment of the Holcombe Legion, regarded it as his best fighting unit. During Lee's 1862 campaign, the accomplished Stevens often led Evans' entire brigade on the many occasions when Evans was posted to the divisional level.

    In his stories, Judson recalls training camps around Charleston, the battles of Malvern Hill, Rappahannock Station, Second Manassas, Lee's First Maryland Campaign, Kinston (NC), and Jackson (MS). In the summer of 1864, the Holcombe Legion was detailed to guard the Petersburg & Weldon Railroad and (luckily) was not with Evans' Brigade at the Battle of the Crater. However, Judson was captured while guarding the Stoney Creek (VA) station and bridge and sent to the infamous Elmyra (NY) Prison. Perhaps Judson's most interesting stories recount his tunnelling out of prison in October 1864 and his experiences of running, hiding, and working his way home by late May of 1865.

    Gene Scruggs includes glimpses of the daily lives of his Spartanburg District ancestors as he fashions the war stories as if his great-grandfather was telling them to his grandchildren in nightly installations. This is a "good read" for anyone interested in this troubled time in American history.
    Copperheads (The Snake Discovery Library)
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Copperheads (The Snake Discovery Library)
      Sherie Bargar , Linda Johnson , and George Van Horn
      Manufacturer: Rourke Publishing
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Hardcover

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      ASIN: 0865929572
      Copperheads (Snakes)
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Copperheads (Snakes)
        James E. Gerholdt
        Manufacturer: Abdo & Daughters Publishing
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Library Binding

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        ASIN: 1562395149
        Copperheads (World of Reptiles)
        Average customer rating: Not rated
          Copperheads (World of Reptiles)
          Matt Doeden
          Manufacturer: Bridgestone Books
          ProductGroup: Book
          Binding: Library Binding

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          1. Cottonmouths (World of Reptiles) Cottonmouths (World of Reptiles)

          ASIN: 0736837310
          Heaven Will Frown on Such a Cause as This: Six Democrats Who Opposed Lincoln's War
          Average customer rating: Not rated
            Heaven Will Frown on Such a Cause as This: Six Democrats Who Opposed Lincoln's War
            Joanna D. Cowden
            Manufacturer: University Press of America
            ProductGroup: Book
            Binding: Hardcover

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            ASIN: 0761819975

            Book Description

            Antiwar protest has long been an under-reported component of the Civil War story. "Heaven Will Frown on Such a Cause as This" traces the life stories of six men in northern states who denounced the war against the Confederacy. These men were called "copperheads" by their opponents, but they labeled themselves "Peace Democrats."
            Demise of the democracy;: The Copperhead press in Iowa, 1856-1870
            Average customer rating: Not rated
              Demise of the democracy;: The Copperhead press in Iowa, 1856-1870
              David L Lendt
              Manufacturer: Iowa State University Press
              ProductGroup: Book
              Binding: Unknown Binding

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              ASIN: 0813803403
              Copperheads (Fangs! An Imagination Library Series)
              Average customer rating: Not rated
                Copperheads (Fangs! An Imagination Library Series)
                Eric Ethan
                Manufacturer: Gareth Stevens Publishing
                ProductGroup: Book
                Binding: Library Binding

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                ASIN: 0836814290

                Invested With Meaning: The Raleigh Circle in the New World (New Cultural Studies Series)
                Average customer rating: Not rated
                  Invested With Meaning: The Raleigh Circle in the New World (New Cultural Studies Series)
                  Shannon Miller
                  Manufacturer: University of Pennsylvania Press
                  ProductGroup: Book
                  Binding: Hardcover

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                  ASIN: 0812234421

                  Hobomok and Other Writings on Indians (American Women Writers Series)
                  Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
                  • Intresting at its best
                  Hobomok and Other Writings on Indians (American Women Writers Series)
                  Lydia Maria Francis Child
                  Manufacturer: Rutgers University Press
                  ProductGroup: Book
                  Binding: Paperback

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                  1. Hope Leslie: or, Early Times in the Massachusetts (Penguin Classics) Hope Leslie: or, Early Times in the Massachusetts (Penguin Classics)
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                  ASIN: 081351164X

                  Customer Reviews:

                  3 out of 5 stars Intresting at its best.......2006-11-11

                  Although for a modern reader this book might not seem very interesting it did raise provocative questions for 19th c. readers. Child discusses religious issues and of course the position of the Native Americans in regards to the puritans. However, the ending is very concervative and not realistic.
                  Native Writings in Massachusett (Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 185)
                  Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
                  • Fascinating
                  • Historical Native Texts in Photographs and Translation
                  Native Writings in Massachusett (Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 185)
                  Ives Goddard , and Kathleen J. Bragdon
                  Manufacturer: Amer Philosophical Society
                  ProductGroup: Book
                  Binding: Hardcover

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                  ASIN: 087169185X

                  Customer Reviews:

                  5 out of 5 stars Fascinating.......2002-01-26

                  ...already did a good job of describing what to expect from this fascinating book. I would just like to add a few small points.

                  A reader might have trouble finding Kathleen Bragdon's other, related publication, based on the way the earlier reviewer described it. The correct title of that book is "Native People of Southern New England, 1500-1650." It is very interesting, and it greatly expands the information given in the volume that I'm primarily discussing here.

                  Another point, which I feel prospective buyers might wish to be aware of, is that "Native Writings in Massachusett" is composed almost entirely of historical minutiae. What I mean by this is that most of the documents here are of extremely slight historical import. Don't expect major treaties, or folk literature. The writings here are fascinating precisely because of their pedestrian, mundane, quotidian nature. They include marriage vows, marginalia from old bibles, personal wills, or land deeds (an issue of overwhelming significance, to be sure, but the actual documents here tend to be of very small transactions). There are about 150 of these short documents. In every case, we first see a xerox of the original, almost always handwritten document, which is usually very faded and difficult to read. There follows a transcription of the Massachusett text. Next, there is a translation into English, or an effort to translate. Sometimes there are words that no one understands anymore...

                  Volume two is basically a guide to the grammar of the language. Be warned, volume two is written for trained linguists, so it can be difficult to make your way through the pages. There's a lot of linguistics jargon. It isn't like a Berlitz book. Still, I think you should give it a shot -- it's more than worth it. If you need help with the linguistics terminology, try using "A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics," by David Crystal

                  Beyond these issues, the other reviewer has already made all the salient points, in my opinion. I would just like to add that it really is an amazing experience to leaf through this book. If you live in Eastern Massachusetts, or went to school there, this book has serious potential to enrich your library, and your mind. I grew up mostly in Massachusetts, and I remember always being curious about some of the odd names of places I would hear. Places like Lake Hocomoc, Mount Wachusett, Lake Quinebequin, Lake Quinsigamond, the place called Mishawum... As a child I used to wonder if maybe some of these odd words were perhaps Irish in origin, at least the names of the lakes, as I had friends with the last name Quinn and knew this word to be Irish. Of course, the Irish came to Massachusetts far too late to play a major role in the naming of places. The words that so many of us find to be enthralling are, in fact, of the ancient Massachusett tongue. Today, this tongue is very difficult to find examples of.

                  It may seem odd to devote attention to the tongue that was spoken in Massachusetts for so long, before the arrival of English. I hope you try to confront this feeling of oddness, and face it down. This book evokes a certain wrenching of one's customary paradigm, when one thinks of the copper-colored folk who lived in Massachusetts for innumerable cycles of years, fishing and hunting, working and playing, living and loving, before the arrival of the English. This book helps you to feel that once Massachusetts was just a place like any other, with no broader significance in the worlds of politics, science, or education. Today the ancient Massachusett tribe exists only in the Ponkapoag band, spread out across many neighborhoods in towns to the south of Boston. Their language is preserved in these magical pages. In fact, this very book has helped a member of the nearby, more populous Mashpee Wampanoag tribe, Jessie "Little Doe" Fermino, to revitalize the almost identical lost Wampanoag tongue.

                  If you'd like to show some interest and respect for the people who walked the paths, fished the rivers, and knew the forests of Eastern Massachusetts for unknown centuries before our current civilization came into being, you could do worse than to purchase these books. I'd also like to strongly recommend that you alert your local library to its existence.

                  5 out of 5 stars Historical Native Texts in Photographs and Translation.......2000-09-27

                  Goddard and Bragdon did a great service in the compilation of this work, containing "an edition of all known manuscript writings in the Massachusett language by Native speakers." Published in two parts, this book includes photographs of historical manuscript texts with verbatim transcription and English translation. Includes an historical, anthropological, and linguistic introduction to these rare and precious documents, grammatical sketch, and separate indices for Massachusett and English words. Not only for the specialist, this book provides a fascinating glimpse into Native literacy, culture, politics, and worldview in 17th through 19th century Massachusetts. Bragdon's wonderful book, Native Peoples of New England, is well-paired with Native Writings in Massachusetts.
                  The Life and Writings of Betsey Chamberlain: Native American Mill Worker
                  Average customer rating: Not rated
                    The Life and Writings of Betsey Chamberlain: Native American Mill Worker
                    Judith A. Ranta
                    Manufacturer: Northeastern
                    ProductGroup: Book
                    Binding: Paperback

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                    ASIN: 155553564X

                    Book Description

                    During the 1830s and 1840s, Betsey Guppy Chamberlain (1797-1886), a mixed-race writer of English and Algonkian heritage, labored in the textile mills of Lowell, Massachusetts, where she penned colorful stories and sketches for two workers' magazines -- the Lowell Offering and The New England Offering. A courageous and pioneering author, Chamberlain wrote the earliest known Native American fiction and published some of the earliest prose to challenge the persecution of Native people and affirm their dignity and worth.

                    The life and works of this remarkable and multi-faceted woman are now recovered from obscurity in this volume, which collects for the first time thirty-four of Chamberlain's richly varied contributions. Organized in three thematic sections (Native Tales and Dream Visions; "The Unprivileged Sex": Women's Concerns; and Village Sketches), the captivating writings range from humorous autobiographical sketches of New England life to protest pieces that raise consciousness about the treatment of Native people, excessive mill hours and poor working conditions, and the oppression of women. Drawn from Euro-American and Native oral literary traditions, Chamberlain's fiction and other prose shed new light on nineteenth-century American working women and illuminate the multicultural roots of New England writing.

                    The volume, which features a comprehensive biographical and critical introduction based on literary detective work and meticulous research, restores to history the significant contributions of this Native American writer, feminist, and humorist.
                    Dialogue and public discourse in William Apess's Indian Nullification.(Pequot author)(Critical Essay): An article from: ATQ (The American Transcendental Quarterly)
                    Average customer rating: Not rated
                      Dialogue and public discourse in William Apess's Indian Nullification.(Pequot author)(Critical Essay): An article from: ATQ (The American Transcendental Quarterly)
                      Theresa Strouth Gaul
                      Manufacturer: University of Rhode Island
                      ProductGroup: Book
                      Binding: Digital

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                      ASIN: B0008ILTTU
                      Release Date: 2005-07-28

                      Book Description

                      This digital document is an article from ATQ (The American Transcendental Quarterly), published by University of Rhode Island on December 1, 2001. The length of the article is 8126 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

                      Citation Details
                      Title: Dialogue and public discourse in William Apess's Indian Nullification.(Pequot author)(Critical Essay)
                      Author: Theresa Strouth Gaul
                      Publication: ATQ (The American Transcendental Quarterly) (Refereed)
                      Date: December 1, 2001
                      Publisher: University of Rhode Island
                      Volume: 15 Issue: 4 Page: 275(19)

                      Article Type: Critical Essay

                      Distributed by Thomson Gale

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