
A thoughtfully assembled collection of essays brings the lives of America’s early leaders into vivid focus. Drawing on original documents and the author’s seasoned narrative skill, each piece balances scholarly detail with an engaging, readable style, making the era feel immediate for modern ears.
The opening essay turns to the fiery spirit of a young Boston physician‑turned‑revolutionary, whose brief stint as a major‑general ended on the fields of Bunker Hill. Through descriptive passages about his family farm, the modest stone house that marked his birth, and the legacy etched into its walls, listeners gain a palpable sense of the ordinary origins behind extraordinary deeds. The writer’s careful blend of anecdote and historical context invites you to explore the motivations and character of the men who helped shape the nation’s birth, without venturing beyond the first act of their stories.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (107K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Text file produced by Ted Garvin, Tonya Allen, Charles Franks, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team HTML file produced by David Widger
Release date
2005-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1822–1891
An energetic 19th-century biographer, he helped turn life writing into lively popular history. Best known for books on figures like Horace Greeley, Andrew Jackson, Benjamin Franklin, and Voltaire, he was often called a pioneer of modern biography.
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