Part 12 (1/2)
Van d.y.k.e, ”The Blending of Races,” p. 4.
De Crevecoeur, ”The American,” p. 38.
Webster, ”Imaginary Speech of John Adams,” p. 77.
Brooks, ”The Fourth of July in Westminster Abbey,” p. 89.
Van d.y.k.e, ”The Americanism of Was.h.i.+ngton,” pp. 135-137.
Jay, ”Unity as a Protection against Foreign Force and Influence,”
p. 139.
Webster, ”Liberty and Union Inseparable,” p. 158.
Lincoln, ”Gettysburg Speech,” p. 181.
Lincoln, ”Second Inaugural Address,” p. 183.
Whitman, ”Two Brothers, One North, One South,” p. 201.
Wilson, ”Spirit of America,” p. 266.
Roosevelt, ”True Americanism,” p. 270.
Wilson, ”Conscription Proclamation,” p. 283.
Hughes, ”What the Flag Means,” p. 288.
Eliot, ”Five American Contributions to Civilization,” p. 310.
Lane, ”Makers of the Flag,” p. 314.
McCall, ”America the Melting Pot,” p. 320.
Wilson, ”To Newly-Made Citizens,” p. 322.
Gibbons, ”The Republic Will Endure,” p. 340.
Eliot, ”What Americans Believe In,” p. 361.
Abbott, ”Patriotism,” p. 362.
In Foerster and Pierson's American Ideals:
Wilson, ”Conscription Proclamation,” p. 175.
Wilson, ”Americanism and the Foreign-Born,” p. 178.