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Heather Cox Richardson (born October 8, 1962) is an American historian. She is a professor of history at Boston College, where she teaches courses on the American Civil War, the Reconstruction Era, the American West, and the Plains Indians. She previously taught history at MIT and the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Her books and her blog posts are grounded in facts about what happened in history. Her writing is accessible while also conveying her rigorous scholarship. The new book contains some 300 footnotes ...
New Yorkers lost about 4 minutes. Those in Atlanta said goodbye to 22 minutes, historian Heather Cox Richardson wrote Sunday in her Substack "Letters from An American."
A key impetus for Lyndon Johnson's "Great Society" program to eradicate poverty was the sense that the flush economy made it possible, historian Heather Cox Richardson recently documented in her ...
The History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850 8 vol (1932), narrative, 18501909; Richardson, Heather Cox. The Greatest Nation of the Earth: Republican Economic Policies during the Civil War (1997) Robinson, William A. Thomas B. Reed, Parliamentarian 1930. Silbey, Joel H. The American Political Nation, 1838–1893 (1991) Shepard ...
Philip Aegidius Walshe (actually Montgomery Carmichael), The Life of John William Walshe, F.S.A., London, Burns & Oates, (1901); New York, E. P. Dutton (1902). This book was presented as a son’s story of his father’s life in Italy as “a profound mystic and student of everything relating to St. Francis of Assisi,” but the son, the father and the memoir were all invented by Montgomery ...
Richardson, Heather Cox (2007). West from Appomattox: The Reconstruction of America after the Civil War. Richardson, Heather Cox (2004). The Death of Reconstruction: Race, Labor, and Politics in the Post-Civil War North, 1865–1901. Riddleberger, Patrick W. (April 1959). "The Break in the Radical Ranks: Liberals vs Stalwarts in the Election of ...
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