Yearly Archives: 2021

Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address (1865)

https://www.wevideo.com/embed/#2492269573 by Huy Trinh On March 4, 1865, a crowd the size of thirty-five to forty thousand people assembled in front of the East Portico of the Capitol, anxiously waiting for the beginning of Abraham Lincoln’s second term as the President … Continue reading

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DOUGLAS, MEN OF COLOR, TO ARMS (1863)

Since the very beginning of the United States of America there was an incredibly divisive issue at the heart of the nation. A nation built upon the ideals of equality and freedom was also built using the institution of slavery, … Continue reading

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John T. Cuddy’s Wartime Letters to his Family

John T. Cuddy Letter: July 7, 1861 John T. Cuddy Letter, January 16. 1863 From “having more fun than ever”[1] as a Union soldier in 1861 to wishing “that this ware was over”[2] in 1863, John Taylor Cuddy was a … Continue reading

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John Cuddy: An Exception to the Rule

All quotations from John Cuddy’s 1863 Letter are written exactly as they appear in his writings John Taylor Cuddy, like any teenage boy, was eager to prove himself as a worthy, capable young man at the outset of the Civil … Continue reading

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An Analysis of “The Color Line,” Frederick Douglass (1881)

“Few evils are less accessible to the force of reason, or more tenacious of life and power, than a long-standing prejudice.”[1] This powerful quote opened “The Color Line,” an article written by Frederick Douglass in 1881. As a formerly enslaved … Continue reading

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Douglass, 1876 speech

Frederick Douglass, Speech, 1876 Frederick Douglass on Lincoln and Reconstruction from The Gilder Lehrman Institute on Vimeo. This close reading will cover excerpts from Frederick Douglass’s speech at the dedication of the Emancipation Memorial in Washington, DC in April 1876.

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Sample Reflection

From US Diplomatic History, Fall 2020: A recurring theme in this chapter that I had not previously considered was the oversimplification of Stalin’s motives during the Cold War Era by the Truman administration and U.S. officials. The Truman administration seemed … Continue reading

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