| Henry Adams - 1889 - 466 halaman
...its outlet, not through the Alleghanies to the seaboard, but by the Mississippi "River to the Gulf. Nowhere did eastern settlements touch the western....alone contact seemed easy, was still unsettled. The Indians had been pushed back to the Cuyahoga River, and a few cabins were built on the site 'of Cleveland;... | |
| Henry Adams - 1889 - 474 halaman
...its outlet, not through the Alleghanies to the seaboard, but by the Mississippi River to the Gulf. Nowhere did eastern settlements touch the western....alone contact seemed easy, was still unsettled. The Indians had been pushed back to the Cuyahoga River, and a few cabins were built on the site of Cleveland... | |
| Edward Channing - 1904 - 166 halaman
...its outlet, not through the Alleghanies to the seaboard, 15 but by the Mississippi River to the Gulf. Nowhere did eastern settlements touch the western....everywhere apart. The shore of Lake Erie, where alone 20 contact seemed easy, was still unsettled. The Indians had been pushed back, and a few cabins were... | |
| Slason Thompson - 1908 - 212 halaman
...more than a century before. "A great exception broke this rule. Two wagon roads crossed the Alleghany Mountains in Pennsylvania ; while a third passed through...into the same forests in 1800 as when the armies of Bradclock and Amherst pierced the western and northern wilderness. "Even by water, along the seaboard,... | |
| Henry Adams - 1909 - 458 halaman
...its outlet, not through the Alleghanies to the seaboard, I but by the Mississippi River to the Gulf.. Nowhere did eastern settlements touch the western....•,! held the two regions everywhere apart. The shore ' I of Lake Erie, where alone contact seemed easy, was still unsettled. The Indians had been pushed... | |
| Henry Adams - 2006 - 244 halaman
...its outlet, not through the Alleghanies to the seaboard, but by the Mississippi River to the Gulf. Nowhere did eastern settlements touch the western....alone contact seemed easy, was still unsettled. The Indians had been pushed back to the Cuyahoga River, and a few cabins were built on the site of Cleveland;... | |
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