American History Essay

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    Napoleon made his troop go from Northern Italy into Austria. John Adams is the first president to live in the White House. 1803 Louisiana Purchase was made. Tsar Paul I is assassinated. The Cumberland Road was made to improve western transportation. Johnny Appleseed start teaching pioneers how to plant apple trees. In 1800 Lewis and William Clark expedition began in 1804. Robert E. Lee attends the first West Point Academy with Ulysses S. Grant. Charles Willson Peale establishes…

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    Native American Mythology The Natives did not have the same creation stories. Although they were similar, the natives had creation stories about humans, and animals being created, or just simply why things turned out to be what they are today. There are many native mythologies that have been told on from generations to generations, three of these out of many are The Earth on the Turtles Back, The Navajo Origin Legend, and When Grizzlies Walked Upright. Three of these stories all share the same…

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    Native Americans are rarely recognized for the significant and truly fundamental impact they made in American history. For the most part, James Axtell states, Native Americans have been regarded as “exotic or pathetic footnotes to the main course of American history.”1 This idea, and the ways Native Americans have been approached in history, as either ‘heroes’ or ‘victims’, all but erase their existence. One of the approaches by historians to Native American history, the ‘contributions’ approach…

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    The American Civil War was one of the most important events in American history that forever changed the life of Americans. The war killed roughly six hundred and sixty thousand americans which is the most deaths we have ever had in our history. The war also ended slavery by giving African American slaves their rights and freedom. Another Important aspect is that even today we still have strong racism in our country that is much like the kind we had in the eighteen sixties during the Civil War.…

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    Universities, I illustrated a comprehensive knowledge of American history, especially in the nineteenth and twentieth century histories. One of my research projects at Shippensburg University was commemorating the town’s historic district by designing an exhibition that includes research about African American neighborhood that reside on Orange Street. Another research opportunity was conducting an oral history on my uncle who was the first African American student to integrate the public school…

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    Americans have always felt that liberty is of the greatest importance. All throughout American history we have protested, fought, and died for a chance at equality. Ever since European colonists and Native Americans met, they were no different from each other. Each of the groups had their own beliefs, and ideas about what liberties they were entitled to. To prove this, they were both willing to do almost anything for freedom and equality, no matter the risk. Settlers from England had to fight…

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    Technology and the Civil War A brief explanation on how the Civil War was a turning point in American history. Throughout the span of time, there have been countless events that would count as turning points in history. However, what if we just look at America’s history itself, how many turning points can you think of that were actually significant to America? There are countless significant events that have happened here in America. Nevertheless, one of these particular events sticks out in…

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    In 1941, the director of Indian Arts and Crafts Board, Rene d’Harnoncourt and Fredric Douglas, an anthropologist and curator of American Indian collections established an art exhibition, Indian Art of the United States in the Museum of Modern Art. It was organized by prehistoric art, living traditions, and modern-day Indian art. The exhibit included art from prehistoric carvers in the West, Northeast Coast, and engravers in the Arctic, sculptors of the East, hunters, woodsmen, planters and…

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    Importance of the Event Native Americans, usually comprising of the Red Indians form a paramount part of the U.S. history, considering that they were the original inhabitants of the continent. However, on the arrival of the Europeans in America, Native Americans have undergone tremendous challenges on their land. Apart from being displaced from their land, the Native Americans had other challenges confronting them, including the systematic eradication of their culture and lack of education…

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    Native Americans lived. These settlers brought different ideologies, convictions, religion and diseases, to the Indigenous peoples. There were frequent clashes between the settlers and the Natives over land rights and usage, religious and cultural differences, and, especially, broken treaties (Calloway 3). Some tribes embraced the new ideas and began to incorporate them into their own culture, while other tribes rejected them entirely (Calloway 4). It is not possible to understand the history of…

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