Timely and timeless, these basic documents are designed to remind us of the durable qualities of American values and traditions, and how adaptable they are to a changing world. This concise collection forcibly demonstrates that national growth and prosperity have been achieved in the face of honest and persistent differences of opinion over policy, both domestic and foreign. Included are Supreme Court decisions banning segregation of races in public schools, and President Kennedy's proclamation of a quarantine of offensive weapons to Cuba.
Richard Brandon Morris was Gouverneur Morris Professor of History at Columbia University & past president of the American Historical Association. He wrote more than 40 books spanning legal, labor, diplomatic, political & social history, including The Peacemakers: The Great Powers & American Independence, The Forging of the Union 1781-89, Witnesses at the Creation, Government & Labor in Early America & Studies in the History of American Law. He lectured throughout the world, serving as Fulbright Research Professor at the Sorbonne & Distinguished Professor at the John F. Kennedy Institute of the Free University of Berlin.
This was the first book of American documents that I picked up when I started becoming interested in politics when I was in my early twenties. It's a truly awesome book. I wish they would teach this in colleges. I had several friends who were going to college reading much larger volumes and being told what to think about them by their instructors, whom had no clue what the founding documents actually said. I truly enjoyed reading this book and I have never regretted learning what it's pages had to teach me. I only regret that I haven't been able to find anybody in the younger generation willing to take the short amount of time to learn the lessons that these documents have to teach.
It's amazing to read the actual documents upon which America is founded. I particularly love the words of the Founding Fathers. It's eye opening to hear them expound the principles of freedom, and to learn their beliefs directly.