The Shamrock and the Lily

The Shamrock and the Lily
Author: Mary C. Kelly
Publisher: Peter Lang
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780820474533

Ireland's tumultuous heritage combined with the promise of cosmopolitan New York to forge a new Irish-American immigrant identity. Between the Great Irish Famine and the creation of the Irish Free State, the New York Irish world preserved as much from the old country as it adopts from the new. The Shamrock and the Lily illuminates a set of remarkable transatlantic connections dominated by the road to Ireland's independence, in an absorbing study of a people driven from a troubled past toward freedom for themselves and for those they left behind.

Early Midwestern Travel Narratives

Early Midwestern Travel Narratives
Author: Robert Rogers Hubach
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Total Pages: 180
Release: 1998
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780814328095

First published in 1961, Early Midwestern Travel Narratives records and describes first-person records of journeys in the frontier and early settlement periods which survive in both manuscript and print. Geographically, it deals with the states once part of the Old Northwest Territory-Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota-and with Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, and Nebraska. Robert Hubach arranged the narratives in chronological order and makes the distinction among diaries (private records, with contemporaneously dated entries), journals (non-private records with contemporaneously dated entries), and "accounts," which are of more literary, descriptive nature. Early Midwestern Travel Narratives remains to this day a unique comprehensive work that fills a long existing need for a bibliography, summary, and interpretation of these early Midwestern travel narratives.

British Comment on the United States

British Comment on the United States
Author: Ada Nisbet
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 556
Release: 2001-06-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780520915824

This bibliography of more than three thousand entries, often extensively annotated, lists books and pamphlets that illuminate evolving British views on the United States during a period of great change on both sides of the Atlantic. Subjects addressed in various decades include slavery and abolitionism, women's rights, the Civil War, organized labor, economic, cultural, and social behavior, political and religious movements, and the "American" character in general.