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Bøger af Herbert James Lewis

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  • - THE LIFE AND TIMES OF WILLIAM PHINEAS BROWNE: Pioneer of Alabama's Coal Industry
    af Herbert James Lewis
    228,95 kr.

    William Phineas Browne (1804-1869), a native of Vermont became a leading pioneer of Alabama's coal industry, and operated the state's first systematic underground coal mines near Montevallo, Shelby County, Alabama, commencing in 1851. Browne was an attorney by training but pursued many and varied business interests, including mining coal and iron ore, constructing canals, and investing in real-estate ventures. In addition to his business interests, Browne was occasionally involved in politics, serving as an alderman in Mobile in 1841, a member of the Alabama Legislature in 1845-46, and a delegate to the 1860 Democratic National Convention. Plentiful correspondence between him and his family, as well as his business associates, give an inside look at antebellum Alabama from the perspective of an industrialist, rather than that of the many cotton planters who dominated the state.

  • af Herbert James Lewis
    353,95 kr.

  • - A History of Antebellum Alabama
    af Herbert James Lewis
    378,95 - 558,95 kr.

    The name Alabama comes from the Choctaw word meaning "clearers of the thickets," inspiring the title of this fascinating new book. The volume's purpose is to examine Alabama's early history beginning with the era of European colonization and culminating with the state's controversial secession from the Union-after just 41 years as a state (recognizing, of course, that the actual history began long before this emigration, with Native American civilizations). In so doing, the author traces how Alabama emerged from a raw frontier of European settlement into a fully functioning state that provided much-needed order to its new citizens. The book begins by exploring the colonial period during which three European powers-Spain, France, and Great Britain-continually vied for control of what was to become part of Alabama. Each culture, along with the Native American communities that lived throughout most of the region, contributed to the development of the emerging territory and left its enduring stamp. Later chapters examine Alabama's territorial period, the Creek War of 1813-1814, the Constitutional Convention of 1819 and statehood, the first years of state government in Cahaba, removal of the capital to Tuscaloosa, King Cotton and the ignominy of slavery, further relocation of the capital to Montgomery as secession loomed, and social and economic advances during the antebellum period that were interrupted and stunted by the tragedy of secession and war. "Clearing the Thickets is narrative history in the grand old style-a spirited effort to make sense of the ideas, human beings, and events that came together to shape Alabama's first tumultuous decades. ... Anyone interested in antebellum Alabama will be grateful for what Lewis has accomplished." - Paul Pruitt, Jr., B.A., M.L.S., Ph.D. Special Collection Librarian, Bounds Law Library, University of Alabama Author of Taming Alabama: Lawyers and Reformers, 1804-1929 (2010) "Lewis has carefully crafted a thoughtful, deliberate, and well-balanced history of antebellum Alabama. Perhaps not coincidentally, we are now in the decade of Alabama's bicentennial. In days such as these, his book should be on the shelf of anyone interested in Alabama's early history." - James L. Noles, Jr., B.S., J.D.Chairman, Alabama Humanities Foundation

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