STRANGE STORIES FROM HISTORY

STRANGE STORIES FROM HISTORYEach Post 8vo, Illustrated, with Introduction, 60 cents.AMERICAN HISTORICAL FICTION FOR BOYS AND GIRLSThese books tell thrilling stories of the personal life and heroic deeds of Americans in the great struggles of Colonial times, the Revolution, 1812, and 1861, which have welded together and built up the American nation. They are full of a close human interest and a dramatic quality which cannot be imparted in compact histories, although these tales are usually founded upon actual historical events. They enlist and hold the attention of readers, and they also clear the historical perspective and convey lessons in courage and patriotism. Mr. George Cary Eggleston’s successful “Strange Stories from History” deals in part with heroes of other nations, but these books, while similar to that in many respects, tell of those whose gallant deeds gave us the America of to-day.The following are the titles:STRANGE STORIES OF COLONIAL DAYS. ByFrancis Sterne Palmer, Hezekiah Butterworth, Francis S. Drake, G. T. Ferris, Rowan Stevens, and others.STRANGE STORIES OF THE REVOLUTION. ByMolly Elliot Seawell, Howard Pyle, Winthrop Packard, Percival Ridsdale, and others.STRANGE STORIES OF 1812. ByW. J. Henderson, James Barnes, S. G. W. Benjamin, Francis Sterne Palmer, and others.STRANGE STORIES OF THE CIVIL WAR. ByRobert Shackleton,W. J. Henderson, Capt.Howard Patterson, U.S.N.,L. E. Chittenden, Gen.G. A. Forsyth, U.S.A., and others.

Each Post 8vo, Illustrated, with Introduction, 60 cents.

AMERICAN HISTORICAL FICTION FOR BOYS AND GIRLS

These books tell thrilling stories of the personal life and heroic deeds of Americans in the great struggles of Colonial times, the Revolution, 1812, and 1861, which have welded together and built up the American nation. They are full of a close human interest and a dramatic quality which cannot be imparted in compact histories, although these tales are usually founded upon actual historical events. They enlist and hold the attention of readers, and they also clear the historical perspective and convey lessons in courage and patriotism. Mr. George Cary Eggleston’s successful “Strange Stories from History” deals in part with heroes of other nations, but these books, while similar to that in many respects, tell of those whose gallant deeds gave us the America of to-day.

The following are the titles:

STRANGE STORIES OF COLONIAL DAYS. ByFrancis Sterne Palmer, Hezekiah Butterworth, Francis S. Drake, G. T. Ferris, Rowan Stevens, and others.

STRANGE STORIES OF THE REVOLUTION. ByMolly Elliot Seawell, Howard Pyle, Winthrop Packard, Percival Ridsdale, and others.

STRANGE STORIES OF 1812. ByW. J. Henderson, James Barnes, S. G. W. Benjamin, Francis Sterne Palmer, and others.

STRANGE STORIES OF THE CIVIL WAR. ByRobert Shackleton,W. J. Henderson, Capt.Howard Patterson, U.S.N.,L. E. Chittenden, Gen.G. A. Forsyth, U.S.A., and others.

Transcriber’s Note:Minor punctuation errors (e.g. periods instead of commas) have been corrected without note. Inconsistent hyphenation and capitalization have not been corrected.Illustrations have been moved to directly after the corresponding paragraph. An advertisement has been removed from the beginning of the book, as there is an identical one at the end, and a duplicate title page has been removed from between the introduction and the beginning of Chapter I.The following corrections were made to the text:p. 32: extra hyphen removed (Tommy-Five-Canoes to Tommy Five-Canoes)p. 152: Jar to Jaar (Nieuw Jaar)p. 159: He to he (he seized a silver bowl)p. 165: thout to thou (canst thou not me trust)p. 166: missing close quote added (“There was no fun in calling on a parcel of oldvrouws,”)p. 174: extra close quote removed (lash of the slave-whip.)

Minor punctuation errors (e.g. periods instead of commas) have been corrected without note. Inconsistent hyphenation and capitalization have not been corrected.

Illustrations have been moved to directly after the corresponding paragraph. An advertisement has been removed from the beginning of the book, as there is an identical one at the end, and a duplicate title page has been removed from between the introduction and the beginning of Chapter I.

The following corrections were made to the text:

p. 32: extra hyphen removed (Tommy-Five-Canoes to Tommy Five-Canoes)

p. 152: Jar to Jaar (Nieuw Jaar)

p. 159: He to he (he seized a silver bowl)

p. 165: thout to thou (canst thou not me trust)

p. 166: missing close quote added (“There was no fun in calling on a parcel of oldvrouws,”)

p. 174: extra close quote removed (lash of the slave-whip.)


Back to IndexNext