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Archer, William, 1856-1924

"America To-day, Observations and Reflections"

Success seemed at first to be
altogether with the French; but after a while Johnson was slightly
wounded, when General Lyman, a brave colonial officer, took
command, and beat the French terribly.... Abercrombie's defeat was
the last of the English disasters. The colonists now had arms
enough, and were allowed to fight in their own way, and a series of
brilliant victories followed.... By the energy, courage, and
patriotism of her colonies, England had now acquired a splendid
empire in the New World. And while she reaped all the glory of the
war and its fruits, it was the hardy colonists who had throughout,
borne the brunt of the conflict."
The child who learns his history from Mr. Barnes may not hate England,
but will certainly despise her.
Text-books of this type, however, are already obsolescent. A committee
of the New England History Teachers' Association published in the
_Educational Review_ for December 1898 a careful survey of no fewer than
nineteen school histories of the United States, and summed up the
results as follows:
"In discussing the causes of the Revolution, text-book writers have
sounded pretty much the whole scale of motives.


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jeansy legginsy rower inwestowanie w nieruchomosci sprezyny talerzowe