The Works of Theodore Roosevelt: The winning of the WestCharles Scribner's Sons, 1889 - 19 pages V. 1, 2, 3, 4 -- The winning of the West. v. 5, 6 -- The naval war of 1812. v. 7 -- Hunting the grisly and other sketches. v. 8 -- The wilderness hunter. v. 9 -- Hunting trips of a ranchman; Hunting trips on the Prairies and in the mountains. v. 10 -- American ideals; Administration-civil service. v. 12 -- The strenuous life. v. 13, 14, 15, 16 -- Presidential addresses and state papers. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 46
Page 17
... lost in the mass of their subjects , and adopted from them their laws , their culture , and their language . As a result , the mixed races of the south - the Latin nations as they are sometimes Spread of English - Speaking Peoples 17.
... lost in the mass of their subjects , and adopted from them their laws , their culture , and their language . As a result , the mixed races of the south - the Latin nations as they are sometimes Spread of English - Speaking Peoples 17.
Page 18
Theodore Roosevelt. the south - the Latin nations as they are sometimes called - strengthened by the infusion of northern blood , sprang anew into vigorous life , and became for the time being the leaders of the European world .. There ...
Theodore Roosevelt. the south - the Latin nations as they are sometimes called - strengthened by the infusion of northern blood , sprang anew into vigorous life , and became for the time being the leaders of the European world .. There ...
Page 22
... sometimes displaced and sometimes merely overcame and lived among the natives . They also , to their own lasting harm , committed a crime whose shortsighted folly was worse than guilt , for they brought hordes of African slaves , whose ...
... sometimes displaced and sometimes merely overcame and lived among the natives . They also , to their own lasting harm , committed a crime whose shortsighted folly was worse than guilt , for they brought hordes of African slaves , whose ...
Page 23
... sometimes , even the most im- portant of them , sweeping though they were , were in parts less sweeping than they seemed . It would be impossible to overestimate the far - reaching ef- fects of the overthrow of the French power in ...
... sometimes , even the most im- portant of them , sweeping though they were , were in parts less sweeping than they seemed . It would be impossible to overestimate the far - reaching ef- fects of the overthrow of the French power in ...
Page 30
... sometimes at the expense of the natives , often at the expense of rival European races . As already pointed out the Indians themselves formed one of the main factors in deciding the fate of the conti- nent . They were never able in the ...
... sometimes at the expense of the natives , often at the expense of rival European races . As already pointed out the Indians themselves formed one of the main factors in deciding the fate of the conti- nent . They were never able in the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
5th Series Alleghanies American Archives attack backwoods backwoodsmen bands battle blood Boone Boone's Boonesborough border British buffalo cabin camp Campbell MSS Capt Cherokees Chickasaws chief Choctaws colonies command Cornstalk Creeks Cresap Cumberland Daniel Boone deeds Department MSS dians Dragging Canoe Dunmore dwelt English fight foes forest French frontier frontiersmen George Rogers Clark ground Haywood Henderson horses Huguenot hundred hunters hunting Indians Iroquois Isaac Shelby John Kanawha Kentucky killed land letter Lewis lived Logan Lord Dunmore's Lord Dunmore's war McAfee MSS miles mountains murder names nation neighbors North Carolina Northwestern Oconostota Ohio party peace Pennsylvania pioneers Pontiac's war race rifle River Robertson savages scalps settled settlements settlers Sevier Shawnees Shelby South speech Tennessee tion took tories towns traders treach treaty tribes troops tucky valley Virginia warriors Watauga West Western whites wild wilderness woods wounded wrong Wyandots young