In 1861, the storm hit. The house of the United States was split in half by a terrible war that would drag on for years. Before the Civil War ended, more than half a million soldiers would die in what would be, and still remains, the conflict that has claimed the greatest number of American lives. But when the clouds of this war of brother against brother finally cleared, nearly four million African Americans had been freed from bondage--and the divided house was whole again.
Randolf and Elizabeth Hudson were barely into their teens when they left the persecuted city of Nauvoo with their mother, Mary, and relocated to booming St. Louis.
"Examines the course of social reformation in America, from the end of the second World War to the Vietnam War." Includes picture essay on Woodstock, as well as material on...
At the same time, Doyle negotiates the conceptual slipperiness of nationalism by discussing it as both constructed and real, unifying and divisive, inspiration for good and excuse for atrocity."--BOOK JACKET.
A Nation Divided: Problems and Issues of the Civil War and Reconstruction
Recounts events leading up to the Civil War and provides insight into the economic, cultural, and educational differences of the Northerners and Southerners.
"A house divided against itself cannot stand.
Activists have long claimed that “the personal is political”, but this book posits the converse: that the political is personal.
The people of the country with broken lines now has to decide if they can trust each other long enough to work together to develop a plan to defeat an attacking China.
Can America rediscover herself? She will or she will fail. This book tells the story where America went off course and reveals the sacred principles to which she must return to find her glory. Book jacket.
Divided Nation: Cultures in Chaos & A Conflicted Church provides families and their churches biblical mandates to awaken and arise as influencers in today’s turbulent times.