Morgan Reynolds.Morgan Reynolds This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications. Alone, primary sources and sources affiliated with the subject of this article are not sufficient for an accurate encyclopedia article. 620 S. Elm St. #223, Greensboro, NC 27406 $24.95 Each morganreynolds.com Four new biographical bi·o·graph·i·cal also bi·o·graph·ic adj. 1. Containing, consisting of, or relating to the facts or events in a person's life. 2. Of or relating to biography as a literary form. guides are good solid picks for middle school grades, each offering almost two hundred pages of facts on major U.S. history figures. Earle Rice Jr.'s Ulysses S Ulysses: see Odysseus. Ulysses Joyce novel long banned in U.S. for its sexual frankness. [Irish Lit.: Benét, 1037] See : Censorship . Grant, Defender Of The Union (1931798486) and Robert E Lee: First Solider Of The Confederacy Confederacy, name commonly given to the Confederate States of America (1861–65), the government established by the Southern states of the United States after their secession from the Union. (1931-798478) each provide in-depth focus on two major leaders of the South. From childhoods to political and social influences, each book does an excellent job of going beyond adult achievements to probe the nature and interests of each leader. Calvin Craig Miller's A. Philip Randolph Asa Philip Randolph (April 15 1889 – May 16 1979) was a prominent twentieth century African-American civil rights leader and founder of the first black labor union in the United States. Early Years Randolph was born in Crescent City, Florida. And The African-American Labor Movement (1931798508) probes Asa Philip Randolph's stands against injustice. His parents always encouraged his family to resist 1900s racism: a teaching which followed him in his journey north to pursue a career as an actor, and his later full-time involvement in civil rights issues. An excellent survey of the Afro-American labor movement coincides with the biographical sketch of Randolph's life. Nancy Whitelaw's Victory In Destruction: The Story Of William Tecumseh Sherman (1031-798311) provides a survey of Sherman's early battle for survival: as an orphan orphan: see adoption; foundling hospital; guardian and ward. See widow & orphan. Orphan See also Abandonment. Adverse, Anthony finally, at middle age, discovers origins. [Am. Lit. he was given to neighbors to raise and yet graduated from West Point in 1840, the served in the army before he became a banker and developed a support for Southerners' rights to own slaves. A lively story of his beliefs and involvement in the Civil War evolves. |
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