|
Essay heading: James Polk
Essay specific features
| Issue: |
American History |
| Written by: |
|
| Date added: |
February 3, 2002 |
| Level: |
|
| Grade: |
|
| No of pages / words: |
1 / 73 |
| Was viewed: |
0 times |
| Rating of current essay: |
|
Essay content:
List of Sources:
1. http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/jp11.html
2. http://statelibrary.dcr.state.nc.us/nc/bio/public/polk.htm
3. Presidents from Adams to Polk, 1825-1849: debating the issues in pro and con primary documents / [compiled by] David A. Smith. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2005... displayed 300 characters
 |
|
Pay now and get a FULL UNLIMITED access!
This option entitles you to get access to a huge database of 200.000 essay papers. You receive a possibility of full access and of viewing an unlimited number of essays for a fair price! Any subject, any topic and any level of difficulty of a paper - anything can be found here.
|
|
No limitations and no restrictions with EssaysBank.com, since our aim is to help you with your essay writing.
A huge database of supplementary materials for your research and for better understanding of the topic costs so few! Use your chance to make a better research and to receive a higher grade!
|
|
 |
List of Sources:
1. http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/jp11.html
2. http://statelibrary.dcr.state.nc.us/nc/bio/public/polk.htm
3. Presidents from Adams to Polk, 1825-1849: debating the issues in pro and con primary documents / [compiled by] David A. Smith. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2005... displayed next 300 characters
General issues of this essay:
Discussion:
Related essays:
| Title |
Pages / Words |
Save |
| The Life And Times Of James Joyce
In June 1904 he met Nora Barnacle, a chambermaid whose down-to-earth attitude welcomed him more so than any of the girls he met at the university did. They ran off to Europe together in October 1904... |
4 / 954 |
 |
| Dfdsfdfs
On the other hand, she is comfortable with the “familiar objects from which she had |
2 / 304 |
 |
| Joyce Eveline
She likes Frank; she thinks he “was very kind, manly, open-hearted (Joyce 5).” She wants to believe in Frank; to believe that “he would give her life, perhaps love, too (Joyce 6)... |
2 / 412 |
 |
| Hamlet 4
Her mother was ill-treated in life and Eveline vows that “she would not be treated as her mother had been (Joyce 4).” She has had a life filled with hardship and chafes under “her promise to keep the home together as long as she could (Joyce 6)... |
3 / 572 |
 |
|