USA Leaders & Heroes (Illustrated Edition). Wilbur Fisk Gordy. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Wilbur Fisk Gordy
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Документальная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9788027246717
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       Wilbur Fisk Gordy

      USA Leaders & Heroes

      (Illustrated Edition)

      Published by

      Books

      - Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -

       [email protected]

      2018 OK Publishing

      ISBN 978-80-272-4671-7

      Table of Contents

       CHAPTER I: Christopher Columbus and the Discovery of America

       CHAPTER II: Hernando De Soto and the Discovery of the Mississippi

       CHAPTER III: Sir Walter Raleigh and the First English Attempts to Colonize America

       CHAPTER IV: John Smith and the Settlement of Jamestown

       CHAPTER V: Nathaniel Bacon and the Uprising of the People in Virginia in 1676

       CHAPTER VI: Miles Standish and the Pilgrims

       CHAPTER VII: Roger Williams and the Puritans

       CHAPTER VIII: William Penn and the Settlement of Pennsylvania

       CHAPTER IX: Cavelier De La Salle and the French in the Mississippi Valley

       CHAPTER X: George Washington, the Boy Surveyor and Young Soldier

       CHAPTER XI: James Wolfe, the Hero of Quebec

       CHAPTER XII: Patrick Henry and the Stamp Act

       CHAPTER XIII: Samuel Adams and the Boston Tea Party

       CHAPTER XIV: Paul Revere and the Battle of Concord and Lexington

       CHAPTER XIV: Paul Revere and the Battle of Concord and Lexington

       CHAPTER XV: Benjamin Franklin and Aid from France

       CHAPTER XVI: George Washington the Virginia Planter and the Revolutionary Soldier

       CHAPTER XVII: Nathaniel Greene, the Hero of the South, and Francis Marion, the "Swamp Fox"

       CHAPTER XVIII: Daniel Boone, the Kentucky Pioneer

       CHAPTER XIX: Thomas Jefferson and the Louisiana Purchase

       CHAPTER XX: Robert Fulton and the Steamboat

       CHAPTER XXI: Andrew Jackson, the Upholder of the Union

       CHAPTER XXII: Daniel Webster, the Defender and Expounder of the Constitution

       CHAPTER XXIII: Samuel Finley Breese Morse and the Electric Telegraph

       CHAPTER XXIV: Abraham Lincoln the Liberator of the Slaves

       CHAPTER XXV: Ulysses Simpson Grant and the Civil War

       CHAPTER XXVI: Some Leaders and Heroes in the War with Spain in 1676

       FOOTNOTES

       Christopher Columbus.

      CHAPTER I

      Christopher Columbus and the Discovery of America

      [1436-1506]

       Table of Contents

      From very early times there existed overland routes of trade between Europe and Asia. During the Middle Ages traffic over these routes greatly increased, so that by the fifteenth century a large and profitable trade was carried on between the West and the East. Merchants in Western Europe grew rich through trade in the silks, spices, and precious stones that were brought by caravan and ship from India, China, and Japan. But in 1453 the Turks conquered Constantinople, and by frequent attacks upon Christian vessels in the Mediterranean made the old routes unsafe. A more practicable one became necessary.

      Already in the early part of the fifteenth century Portuguese sea-captains had skirted the western coast of Africa, and by the close of the century others of their number had rounded the Cape of Good Hope, in their search for a water route to the Indies. But Spain, at that time the most powerful nation of Europe, adopted a plan quite different from that of the Portuguese. What this plan was and how it was carried out, we can best understand by an acquaintance with the life and work of the great sea-captain and navigator, Christopher Columbus.

      More than four hundred and fifty years ago there lived in the city of Genoa a poor workingman, who made his living by preparing wool for the spinners. Of his four sons, the eldest was Christopher, born in 1436. Young Christopher was not, so far as we know, very different from most other boys in Genoa. He doubtless joined in their every-day sports, going with them to see the many vessels that sailed in and out of that famous sea-port, and listening for hours to the stories of sailors about distant lands.

      But he did not spend all his time in playing and visiting the wharves, for we know that he learned his father's trade, and in school studied, among other things, reading, arithmetic, grammar, geography, and map-drawing. We can easily believe that he liked geography best of all, since it would carry his imagination far out over the sea and to lands beyond the sea. In map-drawing he acquired such skill that when he became a man he could earn his living, when occasion demanded, by making maps and charts.

      Beyond