Books Should Be Free Loyal Books Free Public Domain Audiobooks & eBook Downloads |
|
History Books |
---|
Book type:
Sort by:
View by:
|
By: John McElroy (1846-1929) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Robert Southey (1774-1843) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Margaret Sanger (1879-1966) | |
---|---|
![]() Margaret Sanger was an American sex educator and nurse who became one of the leading birth control activists of her time, having at one point, even served jail time for importing birth control pills, then illegal, into the United States. Woman and the New Race is her treatise on how the control of population size would not only free women from the bondage of forced motherhood, but would elevate all of society. The original fight for birth control was closely tied to the labor movement as well as the Eugenics movement, and her book provides fascinating insight to a mostly-forgotten turbulent battle recently fought in American history. | |
By: Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman (1852-1930) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Edward Everett Hale (1822-1909) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: New York Central Railroad Company | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Hattie Greene Lockett (1880-1962) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Frank Henderson | |
---|---|
![]() A Merchant talks about daily life inside prisons of England, describes routines and how prisoners are treated. He notes stories of how fellow prisoners came to be in prison, and his ideas about the penal system, its downfalls and ways to improve it. The reader can see similarities to the problems we still have in regarding "criminals" today. (Introduction by Elaine Webb) |
By: Lydia Maria Francis Child (1802-1880) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Kate Dickinson Sweetser (-1939) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: M. Mignet (1796-1884) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: S. Baring-Gould (1834-1924) | |
---|---|
![]() This volume is an example of Sabine Baring-Gould's extensive research into the middle ages. This volume of 12 curiosities was one of Baring-Gould's most successful publications. |
By: William H. Hudson (1841-1922) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Robert Stawell Ball (1840-1913) | |
---|---|
![]() Of all the natural sciences there is not one which offers such sublime objects to the attention of the inquirer as does the science of astronomy. From the earliest ages the study of the stars has exercised the same fascination as it possesses at the present day. Among the most primitive peoples, the movements of the sun, the moon, and the stars commanded attention from their supposed influence on human affairs. From the days of Hipparchus down to the present hour the science of astronomy has steadily grown... |
By: Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr (1831-1919) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: William Charles Henry Wood (1864-1947) | |
---|---|
![]() | |
![]() |
By: William Wood (1864-1947) | |
---|---|
![]() No exhaustive Canadian 'water history' can possibly be attempted here. That would require a series of its own. But at least a first attempt will be made to give some general idea of what such a history would contain in fuller detail: of the kayaks and canoes the Eskimos and Indians used before the white man came, and use today; of the small craft moved by oar and sail that slowly displaced those moved only by the paddle; of the sailing vessels proper, and how they plied along Canadian waterways,... |
By: George Hart (1839-1891) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Albert C. Manucy | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: T. L. (Thomas Louis) Haines (1844-) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Annie E. Keeling | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Hippolyte Taine (1828-1893) | |
---|---|
![]() | |
![]() | |
![]() | |
![]() | |
![]() |
By: John Fiske (1842-1901) | |
---|---|
![]() | |
![]() | |
![]() |
By: Francis Haverfield (1860-1919) | |
---|---|
![]() | |
![]() |
By: William C. Scully (1855-1943) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Wolfram Eberhard (1909-1989) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Charles Waddell Chesnutt (1858-1932) | |
---|---|
![]() In this novel, Chesnutt described the hopelessness of Reconstruction in a post-Civil War South that was bent on reestablishing the former status quo and rebuilding itself as a region of the United States where new forms of "slavery" would replace the old. This novel illustrated how race hatred and the impotence of a reluctant Federal Government trumped the rule of law, ultimately setting the stage for the rise of institutions such as Jim Crow, lynching, chain gangs and work farms--all established with the intent of disenfranchising African Americans. |
By: S. Weir Mitchell (1829-1914) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Charles Godfrey Leland (1824-1903) | |
---|---|
![]() | |
![]() | |
![]() |
By: Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) | |
---|---|
![]() |
By: Mary Platt Parmele (1843-1911) | |
---|---|
![]() | |
![]() | |
![]() | |
![]() |