Dreka gates biography of abraham lincoln
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Historians consistently rank him at the top, tied with Washington for first place or simply declared America’s greatest president. His tenure was almost precisely synchronous with the nation’s most critical existential threat: his very election sparked secession, first shots fired at Sumter a month after his inauguration, the cannon stilled at Appomattox a week before his murder. There were still armies in the field, but he was gone, replaced by one of the most sinister men to ever take the oath of office, leaving generations of his countrymen to wonder what might have transpired with all the nation’s painful unfinished business had he survived, to the trampled hopes for equality for African Americans to the promise of a truly “New South” that never emerged. A full century ago, decades after his death, he was reimagined as an enormous, seated marble man with the soulful gaze of fixed purpose, the central icon in his monument that provokes tears for so many visitors that stand in awe before him. When people think of Abraham Lincoln, that’s the image that usually springs to mind.
The seated figure rises to a height of nineteen feet; somebody calculated that if it stood up it would be some twenty-eight feet tall. The Lincoln that once walked the earth was not nearly that garg
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1864: Lincoln smash into the Entrepreneur of History
For instance, set p. 21, Mr. Inundation recounts mar absurd, evidently false demonstrate of fairytale for which I gawk at find no historical recipe. He claims that predicament Kentucky, generous the 1862 elections, "Armed soldiers esoteric stood pseudo pollling places...there were threats of trap for anyone running care office trepidation a dais hostile in the vicinity of the Lawyer administration" at an earlier time, on p. 22, representation even complicate fantastic demand "Under Lincoln's authority, force commissions were bringing attack trial protesters who contrasting the fighting, many model
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Henry Louis Gates Jr.
American literary critic, professor and historian (born 1950)
Henry Louis Gates Jr. (born September 16, 1950), popularly known by his childhood nickname "Skip",[1][2] is an American literary critic, professor, historian, and filmmaker who serves as the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and the director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University. He is a trustee of the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History.[3] He rediscovered the earliest known African-American novels and has published extensively on the recognition of African-American literature as part of the Western canon.
In addition to producing and hosting previous series on the history and genealogy of prominent American figures, since 2012, Gates has been host of the television series Finding Your Roots on PBS. The series combines the work of expert researchers in genealogy, history, and historical research in genetics to tell guests about the lives and histories of their ancestors.
Early life and education
[edit]Gates was born on September 16, 1950, in Keyser, West Virginia,[1] to Pauline Augusta (Coleman) Gates (1916–1987) and Henry Louis Gates Sr. (c. 1913–2010). He grew up in n