Browse

For information on and instructions for the browse, click here.
Advanced users: try our Index, containing the full index of over 20,000 terms.

  • Include:

Results

A Narragansett History from 1000 b.p. to the Present
From: ENDURING TRADITIONS

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
From: The Story of King Cotton

AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES.
From: Rural Children

Agricultural Adjustment Act
From: The Jim Crow Encyclopedia

AGRICULTURE
From: Dictionary of Afro-American Slavery

Agriculture
From: Encyclopedia of Cuba, Volume 1

Agriculture
From: ENCYCLOPEDIA OF NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS

Agriculture
From: Encyclopedia of the Reconstruction Era [Two Volumes]

Agriculture, Native American.
From: The Encyclopedia of Native American Economic History

AGRICULTURE, SOUTHWESTERN.
From: The Mexican American Experience

Agriculture: Cultivating a Living out of the Environment
From: Nature and the Environment in Pre-Columbian American Life

Agriculture: Tierra y Libertad
From: Bordering the Future

BEYOND THE MAINSTREAM
From: DAILY LIFE IN THE EARLY AMERICAN REPUBLIC, 1790–1820

Bibliography
From: THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE

Bibliography to the 2003 Edition
From: THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE

Blacks in Agriculture
From: Encyclopedia of African American Business

BRAZIL
From: Migration and Immigration

Cattle Ranching
From: Encyclopedia of Cuba, Volume 1

CHAPTER 1 : THE NEW GOLDEN FLEECE
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 10 : THE WEAVER KING
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 11 : COTTON ENTERS ENGLAND
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 12 : THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 13 : BRITISH GENIUS
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 14 : KAY AND HARGREAVES 1 Chief authority: B.Woodcroft, Brief Biographies of the Inventors of Machines for the Manufacture of Textile Fabrics: London, 1863.
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 15 : ARKWRIGHT THE BARBER 1 Chief authority: E.Howe, Memoirs: New York, 1857.
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 16 : CROMPTON 1 Chief authority for Crompton: F.Wilkinson, as cited. AND CARTWRIGHT 2 Chief authority for Cartwright: E.Baines, Jr., as cited; B. Woodcroft. as cited.
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 17 : WATT AND DAVY 1 Chief authority: H.Brougham, Lives of Men of Letters and Science Who Flourished in the Time of George III: London, 1845; vol. i.
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 18 : BRINDLEY’S CANALS 1 Chief authority: H.Howe, as cited.
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 19 : GENERAL RESULTS
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 2 : THE VEGETABLE LAMB
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 20 : “CAPTAINS OF INDUSTRY”
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 21 : MALTHUS AND DARWIN
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 22 : COLUMBUS AND CORTES
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 23 : COLONIAL LIFE
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 24 : EARLY MANUFACTURE
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 25 : THE DIS-UNITED STATES
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 26 : STATES-RIGHTS AND THE CONSTITUTION 1 Chief authorities: J.Fiske, Critical Period, as cited; James Madison, Journal of the Federal Convention: Chicago, 1898 (reprinted from the edition of 1840); A.B.Hart, American History Told by Contemporaries: New York, 1908; vol. iii.
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 27 : EARLY SLAVERY
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 28 : THE SOUTH AGAINST SLAVERY
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 29 : SOUTHERN SLAVERY DECLINES
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 3 : COTTON MYTHOLOGY
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 30 : A STARTLING REVERSAL
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 31 1 Chief authorities, Chapters 31–33: Correspondence of Eli Whitney, edited by M.B.Hammond: American Historical Review, October, 1897; Memoir of Eli Whitney, by D.Olmsted: American Journal of Science, vol. xxi, 1832; Cotton and Cotton Oil, by D.A. Tompkins, Charlotte, N.C., 1901. : WHITNEY IN GEORGIA
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 32 1 See Chapter 31. : WHITNEY INVENTS THE GIN
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 33 1 See Chapter 31. : ELI WHITNEY VS. HODGEN HOLMES
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 34 : COTTON CHANGES THE SOUTH
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 35 : COTTON AFFECTS NEW ENGLAND 1 Chief authority: G.S.White, Memoir of Samuel Slater: Philadelphia, 1836.
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 36 1 Chief authority: O.L.Elliott, as cited. : PROTECTION AND FREE TRADE; ANOTHER REVERSAL
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 37 : NEW ENGLAND AND THE SOUTH
From: Cotton as a World Power

CHAPTER 38 : COTTON EXPORTS AND THE TARIFF
From: Cotton as a World Power