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The journal's offices in Bloomington, Indiana. Founded in 1895, The American Historical Review was a joint effort between the history departments at Cornell University and at Harvard University, modeled on The English Historical Review and the French Revue historique, [4] "for the promotion of historical studies, the collection and preservation of historical documents and artifacts, and the ...
The American Historical Review. 21 (2). Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Historical Association: 258– 275. doi:10.2307/1835049. JSTOR 1835049. Smith, Jeffery A. (November 1983). "Impartiality and Revolutionary Ideology: Editorial Policies of the South-Carolina Gazette, 1732-1775". The Journal of Southern History. 49 (3).
The famous opening line of Edward Bulwer-Lytton's (anonymous) novel, Paul Clifford, published this year, begins: "It was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents — except at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of wind which swept up the streets (for it is in London that our scene lies), rattling along the ...
Historians believe that the first cholera pandemic had lingered in Indonesia and the Philippines in 1830. The second cholera pandemic spread from India to Russia and then to the rest of Europe claiming hundreds of thousands of lives. [47] It reached Moscow in August 1830, and by 1831, the epidemic had infiltrated Russia's main cities and towns.
Paul Hamilton Hayne was born in Charleston, South Carolina on January 1, 1830. [1] After losing his father as a young child, Hayne was reared by his mother in the home of his prosperous and prominent uncle, Robert Y. Hayne, who was an orator and politician who served in the United States Senate.
July 2 – Robert H. Adams, U.S. Senator from Mississippi in 1830 (born 1792) August 6 – David Walker, African American abolitionist and writer (born 1796) August 9 – James Armistead Lafayette, African American slave, Continental Army double agent (born 1748 or 1760) September 24 – Elizabeth Monroe, First Lady of the United States (born 1768)
Albert Bushnell Hart (July 1, 1854 – July 16, 1943) was an American historian, writer, and editor based at Harvard University.One of the first generation of professionally trained historians in the United States, a prolific author and editor of historical works, Albert Bushnell Hart became, as Samuel Eliot Morison described him, "The Grand Old Man" of American history, looking the part with ...
The People of New Jersey (1965) [2] Italian Immigrants in Rural and Small Town America (1987, editor) [ 3 ] A Century of European Migrations, 1830–1930 (1991, editor) [ 4 ]