The Works of Theodore Roosevelt: The winning of the WestP. F. Collier, 1896 - 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. |
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Page 1
... civil government and in repelling outside attack . He had been particularly successful in his dealings with the Indians , and by his missions to them had managed to keep the peace unbroken on more than one occasion when a war would have ...
... civil government and in repelling outside attack . He had been particularly successful in his dealings with the Indians , and by his missions to them had managed to keep the peace unbroken on more than one occasion when a war would have ...
Page 24
... , being thus made both civil and military com- mandant of the settlement . In common with the other Triers he undertook the solemnization of mar- riages ; and these were always held legal , which 24 The Winning of the West.
... , being thus made both civil and military com- mandant of the settlement . In common with the other Triers he undertook the solemnization of mar- riages ; and these were always held legal , which 24 The Winning of the West.
Page 46
... civil and military leader . The committee of which he was a member , 10 In honor of General Wm . Davidson , a very gallant and patriotic soldier of North Carolina during the Revolutionary The county government was established in October ...
... civil and military leader . The committee of which he was a member , 10 In honor of General Wm . Davidson , a very gallant and patriotic soldier of North Carolina during the Revolutionary The county government was established in October ...
Page 61
... civil government . Their efforts to overcome and beat back the Indians went hand in hand with their efforts to introduce law and order in the primitive communities they founded ; and exactly as they relied purely on them- selves in ...
... civil government . Their efforts to overcome and beat back the Indians went hand in hand with their efforts to introduce law and order in the primitive communities they founded ; and exactly as they relied purely on them- selves in ...
Page 63
... civil and military organi- zation . They were men of facts , not theories ; and they showed their usual hard common - sense in mak- ing a government . They did not try to invent a new system ; they simply took that under which they had ...
... civil and military organi- zation . They were men of facts , not theories ; and they showed their usual hard common - sense in mak- ing a government . They did not try to invent a new system ; they simply took that under which they had ...
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Common terms and phrases
adventurers American army attack backwoods backwoodsmen bands boat border British cabins canoe Cherokees Chickasaws chief claim Clair colonies commonwealth conquest Continental army Continental Congress convention corn Creeks creoles Cumberland deeds Department MSS Dept dians district Draper MSS Federal fight foes force forest Franklin Franklin Government French frontier frontiersmen G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS G. R. Clark Gardoqui MSS George Rogers Clark Governor Harmar Holston horses hostile hunters immigrants Indian fighters Kasper Mansker Kentuckians Kentucky killed land lawless leaders Legislature letter lived March ment militia Miro Mississippi mountains movement murder nation North Carolina Northwest officers Ohio Papers party peace pioneers possession regular Revolution river Robertson savages scalps sent separatist settled settlements settlers Sevier Spain Spaniards Spanish Tennessee territory tion tlers took town trade treaty tribes troops Union United Vincennes Virginia Wabash war bands warfare warriors West Western whites wild wilderness Wilderness Road