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| Rise of the Patriots | |
| In 1607 a small group of English travelers lands in Jamestown | |
| Thirteen years later the Pilgrims settle in New England | |
| These men and women are all driven by the promise of a new life: all face huge dangers from disease, starvation and war | |
| A diverse group of men, women and children are about to become truly American. | |
| Revolution! | |
| July 9 1776 the Declaration o... MORE | |
| Offshore 500 ships bristling with soldiers and guns are massing | |
| It is the largest British invasion force till D-Day | |
| America's thirteen colonies have taken on the might of the world's leading superpower | |
| American forces learn the hard way to master the landscape, new weapons, and unconventional battle tactics | |
| And with this elite force, forged from the blood of his soldiers, Washington saps the strength of the British Army to prevail in what has become a titanic battle of wills | |
| The British leave and The United States is born. | |
| Westward | |
| As the American nation is formed, a vast continent lies to the west of the mountains, waiting to be exploited | |
| Yet this land is not empty - Native American Indians are spread across the land mass, as are Spanish and French explorers | |
| For the pioneers who set out to confront the wilderness beyond the mountains, following trailblazers like Daniel Boone, the conquest of the West is a story of courage and hardship that shapes the character of America. | |
| Seeds of War | |
| America becomes a nation at the moment a revolution in commerce and industry sweeps across the western world | |
| This vast new country, rich in resources, experiences a rapid change - in trade, transport and manufacturing - quickly turning America into one of the wealthiest nations on earth richest nations on earth. | |
| Civil War | |
| America has reached a crossroads in history: The strict discipline and unshakeable belief in their cause have welded Robert E Lee's Confederate army into a formidable force | |
| But the tide turns during a series of pivotal events: Following the battle of Antietam, the bloodiest ever on American soil, Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation, freeing slaves forever; black men now join the Union army in droves; the industrial capacity of the North is harnessed; and new, aggressive, generals take charge | |
| The industrial might which sees the Union prevail now leaves America poised to explode on the twentieth century as a global superpower. | |
| Conquering the Plains | |
| In 1869, the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of America, more than two thousand miles apart, are linked by continuous metal rails | |
| The Transcontinental Railroad - the world's first - is the most ambitious human enterprise since the Great Wall of China, and much of it is built by Chinese laborers | |
| The railroad doesn't just change the lives of Americans, it alters the entire ecology of the continent - and there are casualties | |
| In less than a quarter of a century, the West is won - not by the gun, but by the railroad, the fence, and the plough. | |
| City | |
| In 1871 Chicago burns to the ground | |
| From the ashes of the old a new kind of city rises as architects like William Jenney maximize space by building into the air | |
| Their revolutionary designs are made possible by steel | |
| Produced on a massive scale by Scottish immigrant Andrew Carnegie, steel production undergirds the infrastructure of the modern city - drawing rural migrants and newly arrived immigrant workers | |
| Between 1890 and 1914, more than 15 million new immigrants arrive in America | |
| Powered by steel and electricity, the city begins to be tamed and defined by mass transportation; stunning bridges; electric light...and the innovative, industrious American spirit. | |
| Boom | |
| In 1910 California, a column of oil and sand 20 feet high and 200 feet wide explodes out of a derrick and flows uncapped for 18 months | |
| Los Angeles is growing rapidly, swallowing the desert and requiring an aqueduct to quench the city's thirst | |
| Abundant oil reserves in Pennsylvania, Texas and California open up a new way of life, driving a consumer revolution affecting all Americans | |
| Henry Ford's mass car production brings unprecedented individual mobility | |
| Mass production and job opportunities prompted by the First World War draw African Americans to northern cities like Detroit | |
| Such changes ignite conflict and race riots erupt in 26 cities | |
| Prohibition triggers a rise in gangster activity, with Al Capone insisting he's just supplying a public demand | |
| Speakeasies, flappers and celebrities flourish | |
| By 1928, 110 million movie tickets are sold a week to a total US population is 120 million | |
| The future seems bright, but disaster looms... | |
| Bust | |
| On 29 October 1929 the boom time of the Twenties crashes on Wall St | |
| Over 16 million shares change hands that day - a record that stands for 40 years | |
| The American Dream has become a nightmare | |
| The Crash coincides with the start of the Great Depression | |
| All but 10 of the 48 states are forced to close their banks in 1933, and $2 billion in deposits evaporate between 1929 and 1932 | |
| But new President Franklin D. | |
| Roosevelt starts to turn things around | |
| The New Deal and public works projects save millions from starvation and unemployment | |
| The Hoover Dam is constructed in the depths of the Great Depression | |
| Built by 20,000 men, it's the biggest dam project in the world when it opens - a true wonder of the industrial world. | |
| America at War | |
| America is still mired in a ten year Depression, but U.S | |
| involvement in the Second World War will make the nation economically prosperous again | |
| The nation taps into the vast manufacturing reserves that have been idle for ten years: factories, electrical plants, railroads | |
| The war gives jobs to seven million unemployed - half of them women | |
| By 1944, the US is producing 40% of the world's armaments | |
| American tactics lead to the astonishing success of D Day | |
| A new world order has been created | |
| And America is more prosperous than ever before. | |
| Chapters 11+12 | |
| America's most prominent faces; Presidents, political commentators, entertainers, athletes, technology gurus and historians share their personal perspective on the definitive moments in American history, and reflect on what has made us who we are | |
| These prominent Americans will look at the defining moments from 1945 onwards and trace them back to their antecedents in earlier American history | |
| The story of the domestic impact of the Cold War, how a new prosperity transformed domesticity, civil rights, the assassinations of Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., Vietnam, Watergate and the changing role of women | |
| Following the theme of technological innovation, these chapters will look at how the U.S | |
| landed humans on the moon and contributed to enormous technological inventions like the internet | |
| It will also memorialize September 11th and explore the groundbreaking elected of an African-American President | |
| Finally, it will look at what has endured through 400 years in the American character. | |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |