Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Albert Bushnell Hart (July 1, 1854 – July 16, 1943) was an American historian, writer, and editor based at Harvard University.

  2. Albert Bushnell Hart, who succeeded Lowell as Harvard's Eaton Professor of the Science of Government and was a contemporary of many of the University’s prominent eugenicists, illustrates the ideological legacies of race science at Harvard in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, even among some of the University’s most progressive ...

  3. www.historians.org › albert-bushnell-hart › albert-bushnell-hart-biographyAlbert Bushnell Hart Biography | AHA

    Albert Bushnell Hart (1854-1943) was a teacher and editor of U.S. history, especially the writing of professional historians. He edited the 28 volume The American Nation: A History from Original Sources by Associated Scholars (1904-18), a landmark in the field. He also wrote many books on topics such as the Civil War, the founding of the nation, and the war in Europe.

  4. Albert Bushnell Hart was a historian and a professor of government and history at Harvard University who was raised in Cleveland. He wrote and edited more than 80 volumes on various topics, including slavery, Washington, and the American Revolution. He was also a member of the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention and president of the American Historical Assoc.

  5. www.historians.org › presidential-addresses › albert-bushnell-hartAlbert Bushnell Hart | AHA

    Albert Bushnell Hart (July 1, 1854–June 16, 1943) was particularly distinguished as a teacher and editor. After receiving his PhD from the University of Freiburg in 1883, he returned to America to teach at Harvard, where he was a professor of history and government until 1926.

  6. Albert Bushnell Hart (1854-1943), American historian, writer, and editor, taught history and government at Harvard University and Radcliffe College from 1883 to 1926. The Papers of Albert Bushnell Hart document the professional and personal life of A. B. Hart from the 1870s to 1943.

  7. Albert first attended the public schools in Hartford and Cleveland, Ohio, where his parents lived at University Heights; then enrolled in a private school, Anniston's Cleveland Institute.