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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Great Events by Famous Historians, Vol. 17, by Charles Francis Horne
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Title: The Great Events by Famous Historians, Vol. 17
Author: Charles Francis Horne
Release Date: November 19, 2003 [EBook #10128]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GREAT EVENTS 17 ***
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Keith M. Eckrich, Tom Allen and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
VOL. XVII
THE GREAT EVENTS BY FAMOUS HISTORIANS
A comprehensive and readable account of the world's history, emphasizing the more important events, and presenting these as complete narratives in the master-words of the most eminent historians.
Non-sectarian, non-partisan and non-sectional.
On the plan evolved from a consensus of opinions gathered from the most distinguished scholars of America and Europe, including brief introductions by specialists to connect and explain the celebrated narratives, arranged chronologically, with thorough indices, bibliographies, chronologies, and courses of reading.
Editor-in-Chief: Rossiter Johnson, LL.D.
Associate Editors: Charles F. Horne, Ph.D. and John Rudd, LL.D.
With a staff of specialists
CONTENTS of VOLUME XVII
AN OUTLINE NARRATIVE OF THE GREAT EVENTS, Charles F. Horne
(1844) THE INVENTION OF THE TELEGRAPH, Alonzo B. Cornell
(1846) REPEAL OF THE ENGLISH CORN LAWS, Justin McCarthy
(1846) THE DISCOVERY OF NEPTUNE, Sir Oliver Lodge
(1846) THE ACQUISITION OF CALIFORNIA, Henry B. Dawson
(1847) THE FALL OF ABD-EL-KADER, Edgar Sanderson
(1847) THE MEXICAN WAR, John Bonner
(1847) FAMINE IN IRELAND, Sir Charles Gavan Duffy
(1848) MIGRATIONS OF THE MORMONS, Thomas L. Kane
(1848) THE REFORMS OF PIUS IX; HIS FLIGHT FROM ROME, Francis Bowen
(1848) THE REVOLUTION OF FEBRUARY IN FRANCE, François P.G. Guizot and Mme. Guizot de Witt
(1848) REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENTS IN GERMAN, C. Edmund Maurice
(1848) THE REVOLT IN HUNGARY, Arminius Vembery
(1848) THE DISCOVERY OF GOLD IN CALIFORNIA, John S. Hittell
(1849) THE RISE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN REPUBLIC, Jessie White Mario
(1849) LIVINGSTONE'S AFRICAN DISCOVERIES, David Livingstone and Thomas Hughes
(1851) THE COUP D'ETAT OF LOUIS NAPOLEON, Alexis de Tocqueville
(1851) THE DISCOVERY OF GOLD IN AUSTRALIA, Edward Jenks
(1854) THE RISE OF THE REPUBLICAN PARTY, Abraham Lincoln
(1854) THE OPENING OF JAPAN, Matthew C. Perry
(1855) THE CAPTURE OF SEBASTOPOL, Sir Edward B. Hamley and Sir Evelyn Wood
(1857) THE INDIAN MUTINY, J. Talboys Wheeler
(1859) THE BATTLES OF MAGENTA and SOLFERINO, Pietro Orsi
(1859) DARWIN PUBLISHES HIS ORIGIN OF SPECIES, Charles Robert Darwin
(1860) THE KINGDOM OF ITALY ESTABLISHED, Giuseppe Garibaldi and John
Webb Probyn
(1861) THE EMANCIPATION OF RUSSIAN SERFS, Andrew D. White and Nikolai
Turgenieff
(1844-1861) UNIVERSAL CHRONOLOGY, Daniel Edwin Wheeler
ILLUSTRATIONS:
The mutinous Sepoys blown from the mouths of cannon by the English at
Cawnpore, Painting by Basil Verestchagin.
Charge of the Six Hundred at Balaklava, Painting by Stanley Berkeley.
AN OUTLINE NARRATIVE (Tracing briefly the causes, connections, and consequences of the great events.)
THE TRIUMPH OF DEMOCRACY, Charles F. Horne
In the year 1844 electricity, last and mightiest of the servants of man, was seized and harnessed and made to do practical work. A telegraph line was erected between Washington and Baltimore. [Footnote: See Invention of the Telegraph.] In 1846 mathematics achieved perhaps the greatest triumph of abstract science. It pointed out where in the heavens there should be a planet, never before known by man. Strong telescopes were directed to the spot and the planet was discovered. [Footnote: See The Discovery of Neptune.] Man had found guides more subtle and more accurate than his own five ancient senses. The age of figures, the age of electricity, began.
The changes were symbolic, perhaps, of the more rapid rate at which the forces of society were soon to move. Over all Europe and America great events were shaping themselves with lightning speed. Tremendous changes political and economic, social and scientific, were hurrying to an issue.
THE MEXICAN WAR
In America the Mexican War, vast in its territorial results, still more so in its effect upon society, broke out in 1846 over the admission of Texas to the United States. The superior fighting strength of the more northern race was at once made evident. Small bodies of United States troops repeatedly defeated far larger numbers of the Mexican militia. The entire northern half of Mexico was soon occupied by the enemy. Expeditions, half of conquest, half of exploration, seized New Mexico, California, and all the vast region which now composes the southwestern quarter of the United States. [Footnote: See The Acquisition of California.]
Farther south, however, the more populous region wherein lay the chief Mexican cities remained resolute in its defiance; and the Washington Government despatched against it that truly marvellous expedition under General Scott. The heroisms and the triumphs of Scott's spectacular campaign deserve to be sung in epic form. The dubious justice of the war was forgotten in its overwhelming success. From the captured Mexican capital the conquerors dictated such peace terms as added to the United States almost half the territory of her helpless neighbor. Europe at last awoke to the fact that there was but one Power on the American continent, a power with which even the mightiest monarch could ill afford to quarrel. [Footnote: See The Mexican War.] The very year in which the final treaty of peace was signed (1848) the Mormons, a religious sect, finding themselves unwelcome and out of place in Illinois, moved westward in a body. Enduring every hardship, every privation, perishing by hundreds in the trackless deserts, captured and put to torture by the Indians, they still persevered in their migration, and, halting at last in the valleys of Utah, began the settlement of the Central West. [Footnote: See Migrations of the Mormons.]
Also in that same year, gold was discovered in California. Thousands of eager adventurers flocked thither, and thus the vast wilderness that Mexico had lightly surrendered had hardly become United States territory ere it was filled with people, not listless semi-savages, but eager,