
audiobook
by Thomas V. (Thomas Valentine) Cooper, Hector T. (Hector Tyndale) Fenton
Designed as a one‑stop reference for anyone curious about the evolution of American politics, this volume brings together the major parties, their platforms, and the key issues that have shaped the nation. Its non‑partisan tone lets readers see how ideas rose, clashed, and changed over more than two centuries.
The book walks through the colonial factions, the rise of the Whigs and Democrats, the turbulence of the Civil War era, and the emergence of modern movements, all arranged in clear chronological tables. Interspersed throughout are full texts of landmark speeches, from early debates on the Constitution to later addresses on civil rights and economic policy. The authors, seasoned legislators and legal scholars, drew on original records and contemporary accounts to give each entry concise, reliable detail.
Whether you’re a student, a history enthusiast, or a citizen wanting a quick factual check, the layout lets you locate a party’s stance on any issue with a single glance. It serves both as a study guide and a handy companion for informed discussion of public affairs.
Language
en
Duration
~73 hours (4207K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Philadelpia: Fireside Publishing Company, 1892.
Credits
Richard Tonsing, David Edwards, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2023-08-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1835–1909
Best known for compiling reference works that gathered facts, dates, and biographies in one place, this 19th-century American writer and editor helped make information easier to browse long before the internet. He also had a public career in Pennsylvania politics, bringing a practical, civic-minded tone to his work.
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1850–1924
Best known as a compiler of sweeping reference works on U.S. politics, this Philadelphia lawyer turned dense public facts into books meant for ordinary readers. His writing helped package election history, party platforms, and federal offices into practical volumes for a late-19th-century audience.
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