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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8-page paper groups 20 items into four groups of five items each, discusses the relationship among them, and why they are important to the times in which they occurred. (The items include people such as Lincoln and Jefferson; other terms such as Dred Scott, Gettysburg, and the Enlightenment, for example). Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVGroups.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
just how much we know about American history and whether we can trace the common threads among them. Considering the Terms It seems to me that the groups that
were sent in already make sense as they are; that is, the terms in Group #1 belong together already without my having to move anything. In case Im missing
something, however, lets look very quickly at each term and see if something should be shifted around. Group #1: Jefferson: third President of the U.S.; naturalist; liberal; architect
of the doctrine of Manifest Destiny (the idea that the it was somehow the destiny of the American nation to spread from the Atlantic to the Pacific-the Indians debated the
issue); doubled the size of the country when he bought Louisiana from France. The Enlightenment: The name given to the period in history (most of the 18th Century
in Europe) when scientific thought began to overcome religious superstition. John Locke: a character on "Lost" but also a British philosopher (1632-1704) who believed that men should use
reason to find truth, not merely accept what they were told (Uzgalis, 2001). Maybe the first to say "Question Authority." 4. Bill of Rights: the first ten amendments
to the U.S. Constitution. Glorious Revolution: the period 1688-1689 in England, during which time James II was deposed and William and Mary came to the throne (Glorious Revolution,
2001). Group #2: Marbury, William: sued Secretary of State James Madison to be allowed to take his office as a Justice of the Peace of Washington, D.C. (GMW,
2004). Madison, James: one of the framers of the U.S. Constitution (along with Jefferson) and fourth President of the United States. Marshall: John C. Third Chief
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