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Evarts Boutell Greene (1870–1947)

Author of American Population Before the Federal Census of 1790

11+ Works 155 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Evarts Greene, Evarts B. Greene

Works by Evarts Boutell Greene

Associated Works

The Era of the American Revolution (1965) — Honoree — 19 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1870
Date of death
1947
Gender
male
Occupations
historian
Organizations
American Historical Association (president | 1930)
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Kobe, Japan (birthplace)
Associated Place (for map)
Kobe, Japan

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
Finally! This is a great reference book, gives all aspects (education, architecture, etc) of American life before, during, & immediately after the Revolutionary War. Never heard of the "State of Franklin" before, but evidently there's a book called "The Lost State of Franklin" if I want to learn more about it! Didn't read The last chapter "Critical Essay on Authorities" since this was written in 1943, I figured there are a lot that aren't included!
Professor Greene was born in Japan as son of missionaries, obtained PhD from Harvard, and became Professor of History as well as Dean at University of Illinois.
Starts with the record of European enterprises on American soil, with the transfer of social habits and ideals, primarily but not entirely English, to American conditions.[1] Concedes that Paine in Common Sense, noted that "America is the child not of England only but of Europe", and that there were aboriginals and other European show more powers. In 1574, there were over 200 Spanish towns, with 250,000 inhabitants "ruling over perhaps five millions of civilized or partly civilized Indians {?}, a large proportion of whom were practically serfs. [2]

Understand England of 1606. Ireland was the only foreign dependency and Scotland was a separate Kingdom. Only 5 million people, yet they felt overcrowded [2], particularly by Protestant immigrants driven from the Continent by the intolerance of Philip II [3].

With a flowing accessible writing style, powers through the many colonial failures (Drake, Raleigh, Guiana, Harcourt, Hyde, Pym, Heath, Gorges, Acadia), the Virginia pioneers (1606 Hakluyt, Gilbert, Popham, Puritans, Winthrop, John Smith, Newport, Jamestown, Sandys, the importance of tobacco), the Chesapeake Colonies (1632 Baltimore, Catholicism/tolerance, Susquehannocks, Claiborne, indentured servant class, Warwick, Cavaliers taking refuge [75], 1660 Restoration, Negroes, Wood, Byrd, Berkley, Nathaniel Bacon - Rebellion, 80,000 population), New England Pioneers (Fernando Gorges' charter, 17th c Puritanism, Biblical Christianity, Calvinism, Pilgrims, Mayflower, Plymouth, Bradford, Massachusetts Bay Co. Charter 1629, Winthrop, Cotton, Harvard). ...
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Statistics

Works
11
Also by
1
Members
155
Popularity
#135,096
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
2
ISBNs
18

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