Make
Your Selection Below:
Papers On U.S. History (19th Century)
Page 24 of 48
|
|
Mark Twain’s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin -- Similar Relationships and the Definition of Blackness by Whites
[ send me this paper ]
This 5 page report discusses the ways in which Twain’s Huck and Jim’s relationship is similar to that of Eva and Tom. It also explores the ways in which it is the children’s whiteness that emphasizes and defines the adult men’s blackness. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: BWstotwa.rtf
Maroon Societies
[ send me this paper ]
This 12 page paper delves into the makeup of the societies composed of escaped slaves during the Civil War period. Slave life is compared with life in maroon communities. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Filename: SA032Mar.rtf
Mass and Maneuver in the Battle of Chickamauga
[ send me this paper ]
A 5 page discussion of the battle of Chickamauga. The author of this paper presents the thesis that mass and maneuver, coupled with leadership, determined the outcome of this battle. An overview of critical troop movement, accomplishments, and failures is used to support this thesis. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: PPchicka.rtf
Medical Conditions During the Civil War
[ send me this paper ]
A 7 page paper discussing the state of medicine
at the beginning of the US Civil War, how those conditions changed throughout the war and the
implications of those changes for medicine today. We take medicine for granted in so many ways
in today's world that a review of how conditions were only 150 years ago are nothing short of
horrifying. It truly is amazing that the injured survived many of the cures that were used at the
time, but it did contribute to the conditions that are so vastly improved today. Includes an outline
of the paper. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: KSCWmed.wps
Michael Shaara's "The Killer Angels"
[ send me this paper ]
5 pages in length. Much literary attention has been given to the Civil War, including it causes, outcome and overall impact upon American history. However, few accounts actually delve deeply, if at all, into the agonizing human concerns those three days produced. For a country that espoused benevolence and compassion, the United States had entered into one of the bloodiest battles ever to be recorded throughout history. The turning point for the American Civil War was the Battle of Gettysburg, one conflict of many that stood out as instrumental in eventually bringing the war to a close. Many people have little understanding of the Civil War's impact beyond this point, inasmuch as school history books fail to address the personal issues that ensued, which is where Shaara effectively fills in this gaping void with emotional reflections that allow the reader to gain a significantly different perspective than what is portrayed in unadorned accounts. No bibliography.
Filename: TLCklagl.rtf
Michael Shaara's Account of Gettysburg
[ send me this paper ]
A 7 page essay that examines Michael Shaara's fictionalized account of the Battle of Gettysburg as presented in his novel, The Killer Angels. In this book, Shaara takes the reader into the possible mindset of three of the principal players in that drama, Lee, Longstreet, and (for the Union) Chamberlain. The writer specifically looks at the decisions that Lee made in this battle, according to Shaara's account. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khgettys.wps
Migration and Changing Cities
[ send me this paper ]
A 10 page research paper that examines why there were huge mass movements of people in the late nineteenth/early twentieth centuries. First of all, the writer looks at immigration relative to Europe, Asia, and Latin America. Then, internal migration of people to Northern cities is discussed. Lastly, the writer discusses the development of suburbs and the social work of settlement houses. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: khmgrate.rtf
Military Recruitment Techniques: Civil War through the Present
[ send me this paper ]
An 8 page discussion of the evolution in military recruitment techniques which can be observed from the Civil War to the present. Concentrating on recruitment posters, the author contends recruiting techniques evolved from the simplistic to the complex both in terms of the image rendition and in terms of the suggestion the images were intended to make to the American psyche. This paper emphasizes that the evolution in recruiting posters from simple to complex graphics, from informative to stunning, occurred both in relation to changing in printing and other technologies and in relation to cultural changes themselves. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: PPposter.rtf
Military Strategy and Weapons in the Civil War
[ send me this paper ]
A 9 page discussion of the tactics and weapons relied on by the North and the South during the American Civil War. The North had many advantages in that it had the industrial and infrastructural features to supply its technological needs during this turbulent period in U.S. history. Bibliography lists
5 sources.
Filename: PPcwWpns.rtf
MINNESOTA’S MESABI RANGE
[ send me this paper ]
This 6 page paper discusses the development, historical and geographical, of the Mesabi Iron Ore Range in Minnesota. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: MBiron.rtf
The Paper Store Enterprises, Inc. Gladly Accepts:
Request A Free
Excerpt From Any Paper Before Ordering!
Be
sure to also visit:
Term Paper Help On
File, 12000 Papers,
Research Papers Dot Net,
Essay Site, Paper
Geeks, Paper or Essay
Finder, The Essay Page,
Reports and Papers,
Report Finders, 12000
Papers, Real Papers, E
- Coursework, Choose
a Paper,
Pick a Paper, Paper
Download, & Expert
Term Paper Advice
(Click Here For MORE Term Paper &
Research Paper Help Sites!)
|